KANSAN
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, June 9, 1980 Vol. 90, No. 144
PETER S. TURNER
Dykes resigns, surprises KU
By Vance Hiner
Archie R. Dykes
staff reporter
From the $61.1 million Bell Memorial Hospital at the University of Kansas Medical Center, financed and constructed under his guidance, to the garden laced with thriving summer flowers surrounding his home, growth has surrounded Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Dykes so pleased the Board of Regents they recently raised his yearly salary to $75,000 plus fringe benefits, making him the highest paid chancelor in the Big Eight.
BUT ON WEDNESDAY, June 4, Dykes, whom some have called "the most popular man in the state of Kansan," shocked officials and friends at the Kansas City aschancellor as 13th chancellor of KU, effective Aug. 15.
Dykes will be chief executive officer of
Dykes Insurance Co. in Topka, the
third largest insurance company in the
country.
"After 13 years of being a university chancellor, the satisfaction that one has from being in university is felt — and that self-lectually stimulating is lost to a certain degree." Dykes said Friday. "It's a problem a person faces in every profession, keeping in mind the fact that stimulating and having a sense of satisfaction."
DYKES, 49, said he thought it was an ideal time in his life to make a change.
"I had an intuitive feeling that it would be best
for me and my family to make the change, he said.
Dykes is on the board of directors of nine businesses and organizations including Security
Center.
"I don't know precisely what my respon-
sibilities will be, but I'll be president and chief exe-
谏官."
Management of a large corporation requires some of the same skills necessary for university students.
"A great number of my responsibilities will center on working with people, the management of resources and policy decisions involving the direction of the company."
DURING HIS SEVEN-YEAR administration at the University, Dykes served on the boards of directors of ERC Corporation, Russell Stover, and the First National Bank of Kansas City. Mo
Administration reaction to Dykes' resignation was unanimous disappointment and surprise. Dykes said he had reached his decision the night before he made the announcement in Topeka.
"I was very surprised and saddened," said Richard Von Ende, executive secretary of the University. "I think he's been an outstanding chancellor. He worked tirelessly in behalf of the faculty and he virtually rehabilitated the KU Medical Center."
Von Ende said he could understand Dykes' decision to leave.
"He had achieved most of the goals he had and he was looking for new challenges." Von
TODD SEYMOUR, president of the KU Endowment Association, also praised Dykes and he said he hoped that the University could find a place for him to work with the Kansas Legislature and alumny.
Faculty evaluation of the Dykes administration was mixed, but most who were
PROTECT FIRST AMENDMENT
RIGHTS AT KU
see DYKES page 3
comment on its role at the demonstration pending a KBI investigation into allegations of police brutality at the event.
Arrests at Commencement renew free speech dispute
and Ian Simpson staff reporters
By Mark Pittman
The simmering controversy over freedom of speech at the University of Kansas bloated over at the University of Chicago, where it was
Twelve protesters, including one faculty member, who were displayed banners at the ceremonies, were arrested after scuffles with police on the top row of Memorial Stadium.
The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is looking into charges of police brutality in the incident, and the American Civil Liberties Union may file suit challenging the University's banner policy.
SEVEN OF THE arrested protesters, who were members and sympathizers of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition, were arrested by police on November 12 with criminal trespassing and two on both charges.
All 12 have pleaded not guilty. Their trials are scheduled for late August in Municipal Court.
City Prosecutor Colt Knutson said Saturday
that before his office took any action against the plaintiff he would examine the KBI report of the incident and identify the person.
Knutson dropped charges against Kuny, 1979 KU graduate, in a banner incident at Commencement last year. Kuny was involved in a lawsuit against the singing the charge of brutality against KU police.
Knutson said, "L-st year, Ron sent out invitations to the trial and posted signs all over campus. There were indications that he would use the trial to make political statements."
KNUTSON SAID he did not necessarily expect the protesters to use the same tactics. But if they do, he said that he would take steps, such as wearing a brown seating, to protect the judicial process.
Two days after this year's incident, Kuby filed a complaint with Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone against the University police. He alleged that police used excessive force against him at the demonstration, fracturing his wrist.
According to a tape of the incident made by Lawrence radio station KLZR, Kuby said, "Go ahead, break my arm. Go ahead, break my arm," followed by two screams by Kuby.
An examination at Lawrence Memorial Hospital later that night showed that Kuya had a fracture.
"It's the first time a police officer ever did anything I asked him to. Kuby said. "I'm glad I got it."
Kuby was not arrested in the incident.
MALONE TURNED the investigation of the brutality complaint over to the KBI.
The violation must be shown to have been intentional and excessive for it to be prosecuted, but not.
"The Kansas statutes say an officer may use any force reasonable in affecting an arrest." Malone said. "However in this case no arrest may be made. That poses an interesting legal question."
Malone said he and his staff had been working
Paul E. Wilson
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
KANSAS
THE KANSAS
see PROTEST back page
John B. Anderson
PETER M. BARRON
KU instructor Tim Miller becomes the first member of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition arrested at Commencement. Twelve persons were arrested in the incident.
D. H. Rowe
Anderson ticket lists KU law prof
By Tom Gress
staff reporter
Kansas now has its third vice-presidential candidate ever. He is Paul E. Wilson, KU professor of law, John Anderson's running mate on the National Unity Campaign ticket in Kansas.
ANDERSON GAVE up his bid for the Republican presidential nomination on April 24 and declared himself an Independent candidate. He is now petitioning to get on the ballot in New York, which was identified in Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Utah.
Actually, Wilson is a candidate who is not a candidate. He is only on the ticket so Anderson can be on the ballot.
North Carolina and Kansas, Mary Lou Mumphrey, Anderson's Kansas campaign coordinator, said.
Kansas law requires 2,500 signatures and Anderson had more than 6,000 signatures when he filed with the Kansas Secretary of State's office. Kansas law also requires a judge to vote vice-presidental candidate. This is where Wilson fits in.
The first Kansan to run for vice-president was Charles Curtis who ran with Herbert Hower in 1908 and 1923.
Four years ago Sen. Bob Dole ran with Gerald Ford on the Republican ticket in a losing effort.
ACTALLY, ANDERSON did not pick Wilson, his campaign workers in Kansas did and Wilson, 66, has no ties to the game.
Anderson once, when Anderson spoke on campus March Nevertheless the idea of being a temporary vice president has persisted.
"I thought it would be sort of fun," Wilson said. "My friends know I a candidate and I've had fun talking to them."
Until now Wilson's political background consisted of working on the Douglas County Republican Committee. He began supporting Anderson only a few weeks before the Kansas primary on April1, he said.
'My campaign activity consisted of wearing an Anderson button on my coat and talking to others about
See VEEP page 5
By Susan Namnum staff experien
Grad students eye exchange fee relief
staff reporter
What the Kansas Board of Regents says is not beneficial to the University of Kansas would be a blessing to Wardle Force.
Wardle, a 33-year-old doctor candidate in the curriculum and instruction department of the KU School of Education, recently watched in dismay as the Regents sent back for review a proposal for an exchange agreement between Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska that would slice out-of-station tuition fees to resilient levels for most graduate students going to a university in any of the three states.
FOR WARDLE, a father of two who commutes from his home in Kansas City, Mo., and for his wife, Ruth Benjamin, a full-time teacher in Kansas City, the Regents' action meant at least another year of putting off visits to the dentist and the clothing store.
"It's not that I entered the program thinking it would be rosy." Wardle
said. "I always knew it would be uphill. But things have been getting worse."
The proposal, which the University of Missouri and the University of Nebraska tentatively approved, would have cut Wardle's fees from $633.10 a semester to $353.10. It must take a minimum of 12 hours during private semester meetings to fulfill the KU Graduate School residence requirement.
"The board just wasn't ready to cut out all those out-of-state fees," said John Conrad, Regents executive officer. "There wasn't enough pressure from any side for the board to feel it should take strong action on this proposal."
OFFICIALS OF The University of Missouri at Kansas City seemed to think that the proposal would enhance cooperation among the three state universities.
"We were ready to go with it on January 1," said Lese Sweney, director of admissions and registrar at UMKU. "I rather imagine we'll give it a try."
see STUDENT page 11
Weather
Z
COMFORTABLE
Cooler weather will remain in Lawrence today and tomorrow, but temperatures should climb into the 90s by Thursday. Tonight's forecast calls for increasingly cloudy skies, lows in the mid 80s and a slight chance of showers. Tomorrow's skies will be mostly sunny with highs in the upper 70s. Winds will be from the south at five to 10 miles per hour.
Tomorrow night's temperature may drop in the 60s, but sunny skies and 80-degree weather is expected Wednesday. Hot and humid weather will return to Lawrence Thursday with the highs expected to reach 90 degrees.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 9, 1980
Dailv Kansan
Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
U.S. detains Cuban agitators
EL PASO, Texas—Sirky Cuban refugee, considered by federal autores们 to be agitators, arrived on a flight from Arkansas yesterday and were taken to a border detention center, where immigration officials will decide whether to return them to Cuba.
The White House announced Saturday that hardened criminals among the refugees and those who took part in insturbances at the Arkansas relocation center had been arrested.
The refugees, ranging in age from 20 to 35, were transferred here from the government processing center in Fort Cayman, Ark., following rosts at the military post June 1. One hundred refugees were arrested, four buildings burned, five persons shot and dozens more injured during the disturbances.
However, El Paso Immigration and Naturalization Service official Robert Lally said officers at Fort Chaffee had "screened out" refugees believed to be "hardened criminals" and those known to have been "heavily involved" in the Fort Chaffee riots. They were not among the group brought here, Lally said.
A few straggling boats from the "Freeedom Flotilla" anchored at Key West's main harbor yesterday. Most of the occupants were single young men. Two swimmers were in the water.
Later a slightly larger craft arrived with 83 refugees, bringing to 112,078 the number of Cubans who have flied their country since Fidel Castro opened the Cuban port of Mariel because of the takeover of the Peruvian Embassy in Havanna.
Clark urges apology to Iran
PARIS-Former U.S. attorney General Ramsay Clark, who faces possible criminal penalties for traveling to Tehran, said yesterday, "I love my country not to confuse" alleged American crimes in Iran and urged the United States to apologize for its actions there.
"We owe the Iranian people a lot." Clark said during a television interview. We have supported the Shah and he has brutalized them and he has caused the death of his family.
Clark and nine other Americans last week attended a four-day "Crimes of America" conference in defiance of a Carter administration ban on travel to the United States.
Soviets blast missile error
MOSCOW—The Soviet news media, criticizing malfunctions in the U.S. missile-warning system, said yesterday the Pentagon leadership suffered from a technical weakness.
The Pentagon acknowledged Saturday that a computer malfunction gave a false signal that the United States was under attack by Soviet missiles. It was not clear why the military had to alert the Pentagon.
In London, British Legislators demanded an emergency debate in the House of Commons over the error at the U.S. Strategic Air Command headquarters.
Tam Dalyell, chairman of the Labor Party's influential foreign affairs group, called the error "spine-chilling."
One Soviet commentary said, "This sort of technical error is fully akin to the militaristic and chauvinist fever that has been gripping America for more than a decade."
The Soviet Union has long insisted that it has no intention of attacking the United States, but has said the world is threatened by American armed might.
Pentagon spokesman Thomas B. Ross acknowledged the computer malfunction from Washington late Saturday, saying that as a result of the error, "the engines of some planes of the Strategic Air Command were turned on, since SAC responds to any warning signal."
Mavors demand federal aid
SEATTLE—Recession-ridden mayors hammered out their relief demands for President Carter and Congress yesterday at the annual mayor's convention, saying they were "critically hurt" and needed Washington to pump up the economy now.
Mayors Coleman A. Young of Detroit and Henry W. Maier of Milwaukee, both strong Carter supporters, are co-authors of the anti-recession package which is supported by the Republican Party.
The package won the approval Sunday of the Resolutions Committee, vuitually assuring it convention approval in a vote Wednesday.
"Many cities around the country already have been critically hurt by the recession and are suffering double-digit unemployment rates, a situation which threatens to worsen as the national unemployment rate rises," the mayors say. The package won the approval Sunday of the Resolutions Committee, vir-
The resolution calls for a one-month moratorium on all taxes on automobile sales "in order to assist in the economic revitalization of the beleaguered markets."
Administrative officials, who asked not to be named, said the White House eventually might provide new stimulus if unemployment increases to increase. The May jobslase event, announced last week, was 7.8 percent, up from 7 percent last month. The rate is higher in areas, such as Detroit.
The same officials said Carter planned to ask the mayors Tuesday to help get administration-supported programs through a reluctant Congress.
Carter readies ration plan
WASHINGTON—The Carter administration plans to send Congress a new standby gasoline ration plan this week, a White House official said yester-
The plan is expected to require the government to mail out monthly coupon authorizations to the owners of the country's 135 million registered vehicles.
The president could initiate coupon rationing upon receiving congressional authorization or by declaring existence of a 20 percent nationwide petroleum
In March 1979, Congress rejected another standby rationing plan and asked the administration for revisions. Those changes are to be included in the plan (2016).
Douglas Robinson, deputy chief of the Energy Department's Economic Regulatory Administration, outlined the plan last week for a Senate energy
Local businesses and banks would distribute the coupons, which could be used to buy gasoline. They could also be sold by recipients at market prices.
Coleman stays in seclusion
Administration economists have estimated that each one-gallon coupon could bring from $2 to $5 under the severe shortage required to trigger coupon
"It seems obvious to me that it's going to be necessary that she do something with regard to the media and the public," attorney Charles F. Leonard said. "I think it is important."
FORT WAYNE, Ind.-Martha Coleman has stayed in seclusion since the shooting of Vern Jordon to avoid becoming a "national figure," but she probably will have to "come forward soon to tell her side of the story herself," her attorney said Saturday.
Leonard made the remarks as he told reporters that results of a lie detector test had "absolutely eliminated" his client as a suspect in the case.
Meanwhile, the 44-year-old black civil rights leader remained in serious but stable condition at Parkview Memorial Hospital yesterday, a hospital
Jordan, the National League president, is given a good chance of making a complete recovery from the shooting May 29. He was hit by an unknown gunman after he stepped from a car in which Coleman, a 36-year-old volunteer with the local Urban League, had driven him to his motel.
Leonard said the 2 1/2-hour lie detector test, conducted by an FBI agent, included such questions as: "Do you shoot Vernon Jordan? Did you participate in the planning of the shooting of Vernon Jordan? Do you know who shot Vernon Jordan?"
CITY CENTER
Monday. June 9
The International Theatre Studies Center at the University of Kansas is sponsoring a visit by a Japanese puppet troupe at p.m. today at Murphy Hall. The show, "Nuiyo Nihon Fudda," features actors from Japan and which demonstrate folk customs of Japan. Tickets for $2.75 can be purchased at the Theatre Box Office.
On Campus
The Kansas Natural Guard will present a playing of the National Public Radio award-winning program, "Early Warnings; Voices from Three Mile Island," at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of the Missouri State Capitol by a question and answer session moderated by Pat Slick, formerly of Harriburgh, Pa.
Student Union Activities presents a comedy double feature with "Duck Poo," starring Mr. Brothers and "My Little Chickadee," starring W.C. Hill. The film will be shown at 7 p.m. Tuesday, 5 o'clock at Woodford Auditorium for $10.
Daily Kansan
David Wehr, classical pianist, will give a recital at 1 p.m. at the Spencer Art Museum. The recital is free of charge.
Non-traditional students will have an organizational lunch in the Cork II room of the Kansas Union from 11:30 to 1 p.m.
The Midnight Fraternal Order of Police is sponsoring its annual carnival at the Douglas County Fairgrounds beginning at 9 p.m.
The Baptist Student Union will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Baptist Student Center at 1699 W.19th.
Jack Weyford, candidate for 3rd District congressman, will speak to the Jaycees at the Western Sister. Jaycees at 8:13 p.m. The public is invited.
Margot Peters, University of Wisconsin at Whitewater, will give two lectures at the Spencer Research Library auditorium. "Writing Women's
Lives," will be given at 10:30 a.m. and
The Shavian Eclipse; Women and
George Bernard Shaw", will be presented at 1:30 p.m. These lectures are being sponsored by Women's Public Lives Institute.
Wednesday, June 11
The KU Sailing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlor A of the Kansas Union.
Albert Gerken, professor of music theory, will present a Carillon Recital at 7 and 8 p.m.
"Forbidden Games," an anti-war story about two children whose lives are changed by destruction is the SUA of A. P. Woodruff and Audruntor, Admission is $1.
John Williams, countertert, is the Organ Institute Recital performer at 8:30 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy.
The Lawrence Opera House brings Randy Hanson to the stage at 9 p.m. Advanced tickets are $6.50 and those bought at the door are $7.
The regular Wednesday band concert at South Park bandstand begins at 7:30 p.m.
7,500 enrolled here for summer school
Summer enrollment at the University of Kansas is expected to total 7,500 students, about the same as last year's enrolment of 7,500 according to a projection from Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records.
Although summer enrollment is usually less than a third of enrolment during the fall and spring semesters, it is difficult to say that the process is not much easier.
Some students felt that the initial stage of enrollment, the packet pick-up at Hoch, was the most difficult and time consuming task.
"It took me half an hour to get through Hoch," Cullings, Topea senior, said. "I thought it was strange, but then I went another to do everything he," said鲍。
The STUDENT ASSISTANCE CENTER presents
"There were 'to many cards to pick up, and there weren't as many people." Cummings said. "Except for Hoch, the lines were shorter."
"I went through Hoch when the crowds were thinner," Airn Sweesy, Lawrence senior, said, "so I didn't have a hard time there."
Both Sweesy and Cummings said enrollment was a little easier in summer than it had been in fall or soring.
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University Daily Kansan. June 9.1980
Page 3
Dykes . . .
from page 1
interviewed agreed that Dykes was a good administrator and had rebuilt the University's public image.
"I don't think there's any question that it (the Dykes administration) was favorable," said Richard Cole, professor of philosophy.
George Worth, professor of English and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said Dykes had been good for the University.
"There is no question that we are in better shape now than when he came in," she said. "And those advancements should go to him, especially because of his ability to entail support from alumni, the friends and friends of the University."
TIMOTHY MILLER, lecturer for religious studies, said he was glad to see Dykes stem down.
"I certainly think it's appropriate." Miller said. "I'm glad to see it.
"It was an administration more appropriate for a high school, which was good in an administrative sense." "It should provide morals or a sense of duty."
Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, was in New York when he learned of Dykes' resignation.
"I've always had faith in Archie that someday he would find his niche in life," Forer said.
DYKES HAD BEEN criticized by Forer and other faculty members for his stance on Forer's controversial trips to Iran.
Dykes has received little if any criticism of his budgetary and public relations management at KU.
The total operating budget of the
University has increased more than 150 percent during Dykes' term in office and 20 major capital improvement projects, about $150 million, were undertaken.
Faculty salaries, which now average $22.46 a year, have increased 55 percent cumulatively since 1973. Classified salaries are up 121 percent.
LAST SPRING'S enrollment was 26,000 students, a 30 percent increase over the 1973 figure.
Dykes' 28-year career in public education began in 1952 when he started teaching history at Church Hill High School in Church Hill, Tenn. In 1956 he received his M.A. degree in education from East Tennessee State University and he completed his doctorate in education at the University of Tennessee.
Dykes was superintendent of schools in Greenville, Tenn., until 1962. He then became professor of education at the University of Tennessee.
From 1967 to 1971 Dykes served as chancellor of the University of Tennessee at Martin and from 1972 to 1973 at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
RESTORATION OF PUBLIC confidence in the University and the improvement in funding of the University as the most important achievements, Dykes and
"The most difficult part was that of securing resources for the institution." Dykes said. "And it's also one of the most important.
Dykes said he was aware of mistakes he had made while in office, but he would not elaborate.
"I'd be the first to say I've made some wrong decisions as chancellor," he said, "but it doesn't serve any useful purpose to二探-guess.
Shankel may act as chancellor
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, seems the most likely candidate for acting chancellor, who will serve until a permanent replacement for Chancellor Archie R. Dykes can be found, George Worth, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee said yesterday.
By David Stipp
staff reporter
"I think the acting chancellor has to know how the whole University works," Worth said, "and that virtually rules out any other case had no experience as vice chancellor."
An acting chancellor and a search committee for a permanent chancellor probably will be appointed before July 1 by the Kansas Board of Regents, Jordan Haines, Regents chairman, said Saturday.
Glee Smith, another Regent, said Saturday that the acting chancellor would be someone "at the dean level or above" to oversee the department, who would serve from six months to a year.
BESIDES SHANKEL, who resigned as executive vice chancellor to resume teaching and research in microbiology beginning June 30, Raymond Nichols, chancellor emeritus, and Francis H. Heller, professor of law and political science, have been mentioned as potential acting chancellors.
"My age is such that I would have to say 'I'm not available,' he said. "I don't know what I say if the Regents called me, but think they should call on a younger man."
Nichols, 76, who served as acting chancellor in 1972, said his age made him an unlikely candidate.
Heller said he was flattered to be named as a potential acting chancellor.
Here are the KU chancellors. Interm chancellors are indicated by asterisks.
Archie D. Rykhe 1973-80
Raymond Nichols 1972-73
Jim Lumbers in Nurses 1960-69
W. Clarke Wesco 1960-69
Franklin D. Murphy 1951-60
*John H. Nelson 1951*
Past KU chancellors
but said, "I'm very happy doing what I'm doing."
Deane W. Malott 1939-51
Ernest H. Lindley 1920-39
Frank Strong 1902-20
William C. Spangler 1900-02
Francis C. Snow 680-649
A. L. Kleinvin 1883-89
James Marinov 1874-83
John Fraser 1867-74
Robert W. Oliver 1865-67
"The acting chancellor is charged primarily with keeping the seat warm." Heller said. "The most important consideration for the Regents is to choose someone with experience whom they won't have to break in."
"I don't know how it will be done, but I have confidence that the Board of Regents will choose someone acceptable to the University." Haines
THOUGH THE ACTING chancellor will be appointed by the Regents, there is no formal appointment procedure
Smith said the regents agreed in a conference call Thursday that the acting chancellor would not be allowed to conduct the search for a permanent chancellor. This rule was adopted to ensure that the search for a permanent chancellor would not be regarded as a more formality before making the chancellor permanent in that position.
"It would put a real chill on the search if candidates nationwide thought the search was just window dressing," Smith said.
Hanes said that because the Regents knew all the candidates they would not consult KU officials before choosing an acting chancellor, but that they might check with University officials before making the final appointment.
"I can't believe there is a potential acting chancellor at KU I don't know," Haines said.
SEVERAL KU OFFICIALS said the Regents should consult KU faculty and administrators before appointing an acting chancellor.
"We hope that faculty groups will be contacted," Evelyn Swartz, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said.
Gerhard Zuther, last year's Senate Executive Committee chairman, said the current SenEx chairman, George Worth, was "a proper point of contact by the Regents" in making their choice of actine chancellor.
Worth said," "I think the Regents would be unwise to proceed without checking with the University."
Haines said the search committee for a permanent chancellor probably would consist of 12 members, which was the committee format followed in
1972 after the resignation of Chancellor Laurence Chalmers. Of the 12, four will be faculty members, four will be faculty and four will be alumn. Hallm
"My personal conviction is that the '72 plan proved to be very satisfactory," Haines said. "Certain people will be on the search committee because of their expertise." The presidents of the student government, faculty and alumni association*.
The search committee will be asked to submit the names of five potential permanent chancellors to the Regents, Haines said. The Regents will make the final selection for chancellor from those names, he said.
SMITH SAID that that leaders of the three groups on the search committee would be asked to submit names of other search committee candidates to the Regents, who would then make final approval of search committee mem-
"I would hope the person was wellrounded—both an academician and an administrator," Haines said.
KU grad wins writing award
Kinko's
Recent KU graduate Lynn Byznski last month won the 20th annual William Randolph Hearst Foundation's National Writing Championships.
Byczynski's stories were judged best by a panel of professional journalists from some of the country's ton paper.
Byczynski, who graduated from the William Allen White School of Journalism earlier this year, now works for the Burlington, Iowa Hawk Eye.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 9. 1980
Opinion
Free KU, then speech
Who would have thought Chancellor Archie R. Dykes would quit 15 days after the married Commencement exercises on May 19?
Social activists again displayed banners at this year's Commencement exercises to the displeasure of University police. After the arrest of 12 free speech supporters, the Drenss administration vigorously detained the President of a board of Directors' banner policy in an announcement distributed to the news media the day after Commencement.
But nemesis Ron Kuby, who helped unfurl the free speech banner at this year's Commencement and suffered a broken wrist in the resulting scuffle with police, was killed earlier in his叔叔's resignation and a full investigation into what he thought was police brutality.
Dykes responded with a noon-time address on radio station KANU. Several days later members of the Academic Freedom Service to condenate the Commencement arrest.
After the media blitz of allegations and denials and re-allegations and more denials, the stage was set for another summary. Strong Hall stone-wailing and Kuby rhetoric.
Then Dykes quit.
Dykes' determination to completely control Commencement exercises by calling forth a squad of police might have created a disturbance than those holding a banner.
Personalities sometimes play a big role in controversial issues and those of radical left Kuby and conservative right Dykes often detracted, over the course of a year, from the real issue at hand—that of free expression in an academic atmosphere.
His May 13 reply to the Blue Ribbon Committee on Freedom of Expression failed to acknowledge the pressing need to change policy as was recommended by the committee.
Instead he reaffirmed the University's
position about banning all political banners at nonpolitical events. With Commencement less than a week away, the unwillingness to change or to even think about changing policy, may have frustrated some into defying that policy and created the very disturbance he had hoped to avoid.
Last year Kuby lost credibility for his causes by printin$^1$ invitations to a criminal hearing after his May 1979 arrest for raisinning in the University's involvement in South Africa.
This arrogant display and lack of respect for the judicial system was a reason given by prosecutors for dismissing the charges against him.
More importantly, though, Kuby has not been the only campaigner for free speech on campus. His 1979 arrest and his involvement in this year's Commencement followed a lengthy history of controversial incidents including a guitarist's right to play music, a Nazi exhibit during Passover, a prime minister and the hoisting of an antiabortion banner at a presidential candidate's speech.
These events and others help identify the problem of restricted speech at the University, but sometimes their significance has been overshadowed by righteous inflexibility. The most recent demonstration by the chosen and self-appointed leaders of the differing factions.
Supreme Court Justice William Brennan wrote in a 1964 decision, "Right conclusions are more likely to be gathered out of a multitude of tongues, than through any individual judgment. To many this is, and always will be folly; but we have staked upon it our all."
Now that Dykes' departure from the University is imminent and Kuby, too, will be leaving for more schooling at Cornell University this fall, perhaps less rigid thinkers who can challenge the Regents' banner policy and the University's interpretation of it.
Dykes achieved growth
A Facilities and Operations worker remembers the night he was approached by a man who asked him why several signs he measured differently from the majority.
The worker thanked the man for his help and told him he would inform his supervisor of the discrepancy.
The grounds crew worker said he thought all of the signs were uniform. The man immediately took a tape measure from his pocket and showed the worker how several signs differed in height and width.
The next day the worker was sawing off steel poles from several signs after a direct order from the chancellor of the University of Kansas.
The man was Archie R. Dykes, the 13th chancellor of KU.
His avid attention to detail may not always extend to trivial details like kettle whisks or a delectablefectionist who has accomplished the great dain in his seven years as KU's highest official.
His resignation last week caught many by surprise, but his skill at administrating the state's largest university has made him a prime private business sector for several years.
He will leave behind a whirlwind series of accomplishments.
In July of 1973 when Dykes became chancellor of the University, the operating budgets of Lawrence and Kansas City campuses totaled $88 million. After seven
years at the helm Dykes leaves an
increase of $250 million, an
increase of 159 percent.
Faculty salaries averaged $14,539 in Dykes' first year as chancellor. Now the average faculty member's salary is $18,668. Faculty also increased dramatically in seven years.
But Dykes' most noticeable contribution has been the growth of physical facilities on campus. Twenty major capital impact projects have been undertaken since 1973.
The projects undertaken total nearly $150 million in state funds. Dykes' incredible ability to gain state support has enabled the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses.
He pumped new life into the aging University of Kansas Medical Center. He helped coordinate the largest construction project ever undertaken by the state in revamping the 661.1 million Bell Memorial Hospital. The Radiation Therapy Center and the Orr-Major Hall also were recently completed.
Dykes instigated new academic programs and research activity. When other major universities suffered declines in their faculty, they used 30 percent to more than 26,000 students.
Dykes' tenure has been an active one. He has done much to insure future growth and stability for the people of Lawrence and the state as well.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
We're makes
kU remember
we're made to love you
U.S. policy toward Iran provokes criticism
Delegation tries to break
Iranian hostage stalemate
Friday, April 13
Baku, Azerbaijan
A delegation of Afghan security forces and other officials tried to break an Iranian hostage stalemate in a major city in Azerbaijan.
The delegation, consisting of a group of Afghan security officers and other officials, tried to break the stalemate by entering the city through a tunnel. The Afghan security forces and other officials were able to capture the hostage and prevent any further escape.
The delegation's efforts were successful, and they were able to prevent any further escape from the city. The Afghan security forces and other officials were able to secure the hostage and prevent any further escape from the city.
The delegation's efforts were successful, and they were able to prevent any further escape from the city. The Afghan security forces and other officials were able to secure the hostage and prevent any further escape from the city.
Former U.S. ambassador
SIR LEO BENNETT
recalls revolution in Iran
Iranian forces overthrowed the Shah's government, and the country is now in a state of political crisis.
The country's recent revolution has been marked by violence and the exodus of foreigners. The movement has been criticized for its rapid rise and has faced opposition from the secularist factions.
The revolution has also led to a shift in the country's political landscape. While the Shi'i population remains strong, there are signs of sectarian tensions among the Sunni and Shi'i populations.
The Iranian government has taken steps to address these challenges, including the deployment of military forces to combat terrorism and the establishment of a secularist state.
The revolution has also sparked international attention to Iran, with countries such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia accusing the government of being involved in the unrest.
The news comes as Iran continues to face a long-term security challenge, with potential threats from extremism and conflict with neighboring countries.
The revolution has also highlighted the importance of human rights and civil liberties in the country. As the region continues to evolve, it remains critical to ensure that these values are protected and respected.
The revolution has also raised concerns about the role of the United States in Iran's affairs. While the U.S. has provided support to the revolution, it has also been criticized for its influence on the country's politics and policies.
The revolution has also brought attention to the complex relationship between Iran and the United States. As the region continues to evolve, it remains critical to ensure that this relationship remains stable and peaceful.
The revolution has also highlighted the importance of global cooperation and dialogue in addressing the root causes of the unrest
CANADIATY DAILY
EDITORIALS
INFORMATION PUBLICATIONS DEVICES SERVICES AND
RESPONSE AGENTS
(215) 870-6397
Student basketball ticket prices
Owens proved worth
Nursing shortage easing
Spooner worthy of renovation funds
THE MIDDLE AGE PUBLIC WEEKLY, NOV. 20, 1987
NEW YORK, NY - BETWEEN 6:30 AM AND 10:00 PM, THE NEW YORK STATE UNIVERSITY OF TEMPORARY CAMPUS, IN RANGER, N.Y., HAS ADDED THE SPORTS DEPARTMENT AS AN INSTITUTION FOR FOOTBALL TEAMS.
TITLE: BETWEEN 6:30 AM AND 10:00 PM, THE NEW YORK STATE UNIVERSITY OF TEMPORARY CAMPUS, IN RANGER, N.Y., HAS ADDED THE SPORTS DEPARTMENT AS AN INSTITUTION FOR FOOTBALL TEAMS.
PROGRAM: THIS IS A FOOTBALL TEAM CAMP, WHERE TEAMS WORK TO PREPARE FOR THESE PLAYERS' EXPERIENCES. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL. THE TEAM HAS A PROGRAM OF LEVELS FOR TEAMS, INCLUDING BASKETBALL, GOLF, LACROSSE, HOCKEY, TABA, AND WATER POOL.
COURSE DESCRIPTION: THIS COURSE IS A FOOTBALL TEAM CAMP, WHERE TEAMS WORK TO PREPARE FOR THESE PLAYERS' EXPERIENCES. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL.
STUDENTS WILL BE PROVIDED WITH A COMPUTER AND ACCESS TO THE TEAM'S WEBSITE, WHERE THEY CAN ASSIST WITH THEIR REPERTOIRE AND PREPARATION. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL.
STUDENTS WILL BE PROVIDED WITH A COMPUTER AND ACCESS TO THE TEAM'S WEBSITE, WHERE THEY CAN ASSIST WITH THEIR REPERTOIRE AND PREPARATION. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL.
COURSE DESCRIPTION: THIS COURSE IS A FOOTBALL TEAM CAMP, WHERE TEAMS WORK TO PREPARE FOR THESE PLAYERS' EXPERIENCES. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL.
STUDENTS WILL BE PROVIDED WITH A COMPUTER AND ACCESS TO THE TEAM'S WEBSITE, WHERE THEY CAN ASSIST WITH THEIR REPERTOIRE AND PREPARATION. THE TEAM CONSISTS OF 12 TEAMS, IN WHICH 6 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL LEAGUE OF FOOTBALL, 4 ARE FROM THE ABA, 2 ARE FROM THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE, AND 2 ARE FROM THE AFL.
2018
A survey of 50,000 adults in the United States found that:
- 49% have a family member with dementia.
- 36% have a family member who has been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.
- 35% have a family member who is over the age of 65.
These findings suggest that families are more vulnerable to the effects of dementia than individuals without dementia. It also highlights the importance of early detection and treatment for those who may be at higher risk.
predicted to increase next year
MARKETS
HONG KONG 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
CHINA 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
JAPAN 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
MEXICO 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
URGENT RESPONSE
U.S. 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
RUSSIA 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
GERMANY 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
FINLAND 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
FRANCE 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
ITALIAN 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
BRAZIL 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
UNITED KINGDOM 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
Australia 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
Netherlands 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
Denmark 12/15/96 47.80% 33.80% 31.00%
Sweden
3.2.1.1.1.1.1
Renovation to address Watson's physical problems
MATERIALS AND PROCEDURES
1. Material selection:
- Select materials based on the requirements of the application and physical problems.
- Consider factors such as durability, corrosion resistance, thermal stability, and cost.
2. Procedure:
- Determine the application design.
- Design the material composition.
- Specify the properties of the material (such as strength, flexibility, and temperature tolerance).
- Select a suitable processing method.
- Determine the process flow and equipment required.
- Implement the process using appropriate software.
- Test the process in different conditions to ensure it meets the requirements.
3. Results:
- Obtain the results of the process.
- Analyze the results to identify any issues or areas for improvement.
- Make recommendations for future improvements.
4. Maintenance:
- Develop a maintenance schedule.
- Perform regular inspections and maintenance.
- Use appropriate tools and techniques to maintain the material.
- Establish a maintenance plan.
5. Quality Control:
- Conduct quality checks at various stages of production.
- Use quality assurance methods to ensure product quality.
- Implement quality control procedures to prevent defects.
6. Performance Metrics:
- Define performance metrics for the application.
- Use these metrics to measure the effectiveness of the process.
- Use data from these metrics to make informed decisions about the process.
7. Training:
- Provide training to users on the process.
- Ensure that users understand the importance of the process.
- Provide training to users on how to use the process effectively.
8. Support:
- Provide support to users who are new to the process.
- Provide support to users who have experienced problems with the process.
- Provide assistance to users who need help with the process.
9. Feedback:
- Collect feedback from users on the process.
- Use feedback to improve the process.
- Share feedback with users to enhance their experience.
10. Evaluation:
- Evaluate the performance of the process.
- Compare the performance of the process with other processes.
- Identify areas where the process can be improved.
11. Future Improvements:
- Explore future improvements to the process.
- Consider new technologies or techniques that could improve the process.
- Invest in research and development to find new solutions.
12. Discussion:
- Discuss the results of the process with colleagues.
- Discuss the implications of the results on the application.
- Discuss the benefits of the process.
13. Continuous Improvement:
- Continuously evaluate the process.
- Continuously improve the process.
- Continuously adapt the process to changing conditions.
14. Collaboration:
- Collaborate with colleagues to share knowledge and expertise.
- Work together to achieve common goals.
- Work together to solve complex problems.
15. Documentation:
- Create documentation of the process.
- Document the process in a clear and accessible way.
- Document the process in a format that is easy to read and understand.
16. Testing:
- Test the process using various testing methods.
- Test the process under different conditions.
- Test the process on different devices.
17. Maintenance:
- Maintain the process by performing routine maintenance.
- Maintain the process by replacing damaged parts.
- Maintain the process by cleaning and polishing the surface.
18. Safety:
- Ensure that the process is safe for users.
- Ensure that the process is safe for workers.
- Ensure that the process is safe for all users.
19. Environmental Impact:
- Consider the environmental impact of the process.
- Consider the environmental impact of the process on the environment.
- Consider the environmental impact of the process on human health.
20. Economic Benefits:
- Consider the economic benefits of the process.
- Consider the economic benefits of the process on the economy.
- Consider the economic benefits of the process on society.
21. Ethical Considerations:
- Consider the ethical considerations of the process.
- Consider the ethical considerations of the process on human rights.
- Consider the ethical considerations of the process on environmental sustainability.
22. Legal Compliance:
- Ensure that the process complies with legal requirements.
- Ensure that the process complies with regulatory requirements.
- Ensure that the process complies with laws and regulations.
23. Research and Development:
- Research new methods and techniques to improve the process.
- Research new methods and techniques to improve the process on a larger scale.
- Research new methods and techniques to improve the process on a smaller scale.
24. Social Impact:
- Consider the social impact of the process.
- Consider the social impact of the process on people.
- Consider the social impact of the process on communities.
25. Professional Standards:
- Ensure that the process adheres to professional standards.
- Ensure that the process adheres to professional standards on a larger scale.
- Ensure that the process adheres to professional standards on a smaller scale.
26. Competition:
- Consider the competition in the market.
- Consider the competition in the market on a larger scale.
- Consider the competition in the market on a smaller scale.
27. Partnerships:
- Consider partnerships with other organizations.
- Consider partnerships with other organizations on a larger scale.
- Consider partnerships with other organizations on a smaller scale.
28. Innovation:
- Consider innovation in the process.
- Consider innovation in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider innovation in the process on a smaller scale.
29. Sustainability:
- Consider sustainability in the process.
- Consider sustainability in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider sustainability in the process on a smaller scale.
30. Accessibility:
- Consider accessibility in the process.
- Consider accessibility in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider accessibility in the process on a smaller scale.
31. User Experience:
- Consider user experience in the process.
- Consider user experience in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider user experience in the process on a smaller scale.
32. Cost:
- Consider cost in the process.
- Consider cost in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider cost in the process on a smaller scale.
33. Availability:
- Consider availability in the process.
- Consider availability in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider availability in the process on a smaller scale.
34. Interoperability:
- Consider interoperability in the process.
- Consider interoperability in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider interoperability in the process on a smaller scale.
35. Customization:
- Consider customization in the process.
- Consider customization in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider customization in the process on a smaller scale.
36. Compliance:
- Consider compliance in the process.
- Consider compliance in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider compliance in the process on a smaller scale.
37. Training:
- Consider training in the process.
- Consider training in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider training in the process on a smaller scale.
38. Support:
- Consider support in the process.
- Consider support in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider support in the process on a smaller scale.
39. Evaluation:
- Consider evaluation in the process.
- Consider evaluation in the process on a larger scale.
- Consider evaluation in the process on a smaller scale.
40. Continued Improvement:
- Continue improving the process.
- Continue improving the process on a larger scale.
- Continue improving the process on a smaller scale.
41. Future Outlook:
- Examine the future outlook of the process.
- Examine the future outlook of the process on a larger scale.
- Ex examine the future outlook of the process on a smaller scale.
42. Recommendations:
- Recommend improvements to the process.
- Recommend improvements on a larger scale.
- Recommend improvements on a smaller scale.
43. Conclusion:
- Conclude the analysis of the process.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a larger scale.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a smaller scale.
44. Further Research:
- Conduct further research on the process.
- Conduct further research on the process on a larger scale.
- Conduct further research on the process on a smaller scale.
45. Recommendations:
- Recommend improvements to the process.
- Recommend improvements on a larger scale.
- Recommend improvements on a smaller scale.
46. Conclusion:
- Conclude the analysis of the process.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a larger scale.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a smaller scale.
47. Future Outlook:
- Examine the future outlook of the process.
- Examine the future outlook of the process on a larger scale.
- Ex examine the future outlook of the process on a smaller scale.
48. Recommendations:
- Recommend improvements to the process.
- Recommend improvements on a larger scale.
- Recommend improvements on a smaller scale.
49. Conclusion:
- Conclude the analysis of the process.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a larger scale.
- Conclude the analysis of the process on a smaller scale.
4a. MATERIALS AND PROCEDURES
1. MATERIALS AND PROCEDURES:
- Select materials based on the requirements of the application and physical problems.
- Consider factors such as durability, corrosion resistance, thermal stability, and cost.
- Select a suitable processing method.
- Determine the process flow and equipment required.
- Implement the process using appropriate software.
- Test the process in different conditions.
- Monitor the process and collect data.
2. PROCEDURES:
- Determine the procedure.
- Specify the properties of the material.
- Choose the process.
- Specify the parameters of the process.
- Specify the method of the process.
- Specify the environment.
- Specify the equipment used.
- Implement the process using appropriate software.
- Test the process in different conditions.
- Monitor the process and collect data.
3. RESULTS:
- Obtain the results of the procedure.
- Analyze the results to identify any issues or areas for improvement.
- Verify that the results are accurate and reliable.
- Use the results to make informed decisions.
4. QA FUNCTIONS:
- Perform quality checks at various stages of production.
- Perform quality checks on each component.
- Perform quality checks on the entire process.
- Perform quality checks on the final product.
5. RELIEF:
- Provide relief to users on the application.
- Provide relief to users on each component.
- Provide relief to the entire process.
- Provide relief to the final product.
6. SUPPORT:
- Provide support to users on the application.
- Provide support to users on each component.
- Provide support to the entire process.
- Provide support to the final product.
7. TESTING:
- Test the procedure.
- Specify the properties of the material.
- Choose the process.
- Specify the parameters of the process.
- Specify the method of the process.
- Specify the environment.
- Specify the equipment used.
- Implement the process using appropriate software.
- Test the process in different conditions.
- Monitor the process and collect data.
8. CONTINUUM:
- Continue evaluating the procedure.
- Continue evaluating the procedure on a larger scale.
- Continue evaluating the procedure on a smaller scale.
9. EXAMPLE:
- Example procedure: Dust control process for a manufacturing plant.
- Example equipment: Vacuum cleaner.
- Example parameters: Airflow rate, filter efficiency, dust reduction rate.
10. ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS:
- Additional requirements may include safety protocols, equipment specifications, or process modifications.
11. QUESTION:
- Question: What are the key factors that influence the performance of a dust control process?
Answer: Factors that influence the performance of a dust control process include airflow rate, filter efficiency, dust reduction rate, ventilation system design, and operational controls.
12. ANSWER:
- Answer: Airflow rate, filter efficiency, dust reduction rate, ventilation system design, and operational controls are key factors that influence the performance of a dust control process.
13. REFERENCE:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
14. EXPLANATION:
- The dust control process is designed to minimize dust particles from the application to the surrounding environment. It uses a combination of airflow rates, filters, and ventilation systems to control dust levels. The process also includes regular cleaning and maintenance to ensure its effectiveness.
15. CONCLUSION:
- The dust control process is effective in reducing dust levels in the manufacturing plant. It provides an efficient solution for controlling dust in industrial applications.
16. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
17. QUESTION:
- Question: What is the main benefit of using dust control technology in manufacturing?
Answer: The main benefit of using dust control technology in manufacturing is the reduction of dust particles in the environment, which helps improve the quality and productivity of products produced.
18. ANSWER:
- Answer: The main benefit of using dust control technology in manufacturing is the reduction of dust particles in the environment, which helps improve the quality and productivity of products produced.
19. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
20. QUESTION:
- Question: How does dust control technology work?
Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
21. ANSWER:
- Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
22. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
23. QUESTION:
- Question: Why is dust control important?
Answer:尘控技术是重要的,因为它可以减少或避免尘粒在工业应用中积累,从而保护环境和健康。
24. ANSWER:
- Answer:尘控技术是重要的,因为它可以减少或避免尘粒在工业应用中累积,从而保护环境和健康。
25. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
26. QUESTION:
- Question: How does dust control technology work?
Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
27. ANSWER:
- Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
28. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
29. QUESTION:
- Question: How does dust control technology work?
Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
30. ANSWER:
- Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
29. REFERENCES:
- Reference: "Dust Control Process for a Manufacturing Plant" by John A. McGinn, Anthony J. Miller, and Robert W. Baldwin.
30. QUESTION:
- Question: How does dust control technology work?
Answer: Dust control technology works by measuring the airflow rate and filter efficiency of the system. It then adjusts the airflow rate and filter efficiency according to the measured data to maintain optimal dust control.
31
small Kansas College
Views in editorial news most widely
5. 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KANSAS
MUNICIPALITY OF BROOKLYN
BROOKLYN, MASS., 05023
OFFICE OF COURT Clerk
140 E. 6TH ST.
BROOKLYN, MASS., 05023
OFFICE OF COURT Clerk
140 E. 6TH ST.
PHOTO: KANSAS INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS
(1871)
Americans still blind to foreign policy
SPECIAL EDITION
THE NEW YORK TIMES
IN CONTACT WITH THE EDITOR
JONATHAN J. BURGESS
FOR ALL INFORMATION
SPECIAL EDITION
THE NEW YORK TIMES
IN CONTACT WITH THE EDITOR
JONATHAN J. BURGESS
FOR ALL INFORMATION
I don't like this.
I don't like this.
I don't like this.
Kansan undergoes face-lift
Change has come to the University Daily Kansan. The layout changes you see in today's paper were long overdue. Other changes will come in the next few weeks as we polish our new theme. In the fall, more changes will undoubtedly be made when a new editor leads the Kansan.
One of the most striking changes in today's Kansan is the new 30-inch printing web, which makes the pages of the paper nearly one inch and one-half narrower than the pages of the old 33-inch web. The paper can now be read with greater ease.
Besides offering a more convenient size, the new papers will have a considerable amount of money in printing costs, because expensive ink can be saved by the narrower page widths.
THE NEW SIZE also gives the Kansan staff a chance to get away from makeup problems that they have had in previous years.
Kansan layout for the front page, as well as the inside pages, has been six columns of type wide since 1973. The old layouts challenged the new ones, and some days the layouts worked admirably. However, the wide expansion was too much for the staff. Such was the case on March 27, 1980 when an ocean of type appeared on the editorial page shown above on the right. On other days, the front page resulted in stimplist and unattractive layouts, above on the left, which appeared February 6, 1980.
The large pages did give reporters the chance to prominently display their writing talents.
Interesting layouts with excellent graphics and photography often filled the naces of the naer.
Recently, however, the staff of the paper came to the conclusion that a modernization was needed. Rising newspaper and labor costs, layout problems and a simple desire for a more modern and attractive layout, led to the decision to change.
TOADY'S KANSAN marks one of the largest changes in the appearance of the paper since 1970, when it changed from a tabloid. Ironically, the new five column layout of the front page is used by all newspapers in Kansan's of the 1940s and 89s used a five-column layout through resemblances between the layouts end们.
The layout changes have been in the planning stage for more than five months. Early last semester, three groups of students in newspaper articles worked on six plans. The working plants ranged from three to six-column front page layouts. Eventually, all the plans were set in prototype pages. After the prototypes were set, the pros and cons of the new layouts were discussed at the class, Kansan editors and different advisors.
A MARKET RESEARCH study was then conducted to determine the strengths, weaknesses, needs and suggestions of Kansas universities in final conferences, a final plan was agreed upon.
The Kansan flag, the banner that proclaims,
"The University Daily Kansan," in large type on
the front page has changed, an obvious break
from its previous form. It was often used in
various sizes and shaddis since 1988.
Headlines throughout the paper have also been changed to a bold, crisp type that is compatible with the typefaces.
The jayhawk weather predictor, or weather bird, has a new home at the bottom of the front page. An extended weather forecast accompanies the jayhawk.
AN ENLARGED VERSION of the old 'On Campus' listings will always appear on page two next to the "Capsules" section, which has not moved.
And the editorial page, now labeled simply,
"Opinion," has received a face-lift similar to
that of the front page, with a five, rather than
six-column layout.
To the casual Kansan reader, the layout changes may seem cosmetic. But breaks with the paper's design at the paper's role at the University of Kansas. As the new layout is perfected over the next few weeks, readers can expect news emphasis and structure in keeping with the Kansan's fresh new face.
Many aspects of today's Kansan have broken long-standing traditions. But other Kansan traditions, honest reporting, professionalism and hard work remain.
Bob Pittman, managing editor
Discipline not imposed after arrest
The University of Kansas is contradicting itself. Although police and administration officials have strictly enforced an out-dated banner policy, they have not taken disciplinary action against two freshman students who were arrested inside a professor's office.
The KU freshmen, Stan Taylor and David Hollopter, on April 20, allegedly broke into the Malot Hall office of Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry. While Douglas County has begun to actively prosecute the students, KU has turned a blind eye to the arrest.
KU POLICE CHARGED the two with attempted larceny a laceur on criminal damage to the vehicle set at $2,500.
preliminary hearing scheduled for May 23 at the Douglas County District Court.
Later, the charges were reduced to criminal trespassing by Jean Shepherd of the Douglas
WELL, THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD.
-PLUS MORE UNEMPLOYMENT, MORE WELFARE AND THEY TALK FUNN'Y, TOO.
©1980 MIAMI NEW YORK TIMES SYN.
Columnist Kathy Kase
County District Attorney's office, partly because Shepherd thought the University would also take action against the students. Still, Shepherd's amended complaint charged the students with "attempted theft, to wit the unauthorized taking of papers thought to be tests or grades."
Taylor and Holopter's fate in District Court is unknown and court proceedings continue. One thing is certain, though. Taylor and Holopter are not subject to any of KU's disciplinary sanctions such as a warning, restitution, a fine, suspension or expulsion.
According to the University Code, a student must be charged with breaking Code rules within
Why is it necessary to arrest a dozen people at Commencement on charges of criminal trespass to enforce a banner policy while up on the Hill? The authorities ignored the challenge and ignored? Alleged test-learning denotes the seamer side of academics but rambunctious favorably upon the University banners reflect favorably upon the University.
thirty days of the violation. And the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or the professor must make the complaint, according to Caryl Smith, dean of student life.
BY MAY 20, thirty days after the incident, no complaint had been filed and the statute of limitations ran out. The question that prevails is "Why?"
Possible test-learning, grade-changing and cheating, on the other hand, are not so easily justified. Better to ignore them. Unlike banners, these evils are not easily discernible to the public eye. Out of sight, out of mind, out of the University Code's jurisdiction.
The University Daily KANSAN
(UPSF 505-6440) Attended at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Tuesday during June and July except Saturday, September and Sunday. Second-class postpaid class at Lawrence, Kansas 60458. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County through the student activity fee. Students in district are a semester paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, RS 60049
Editor
Jennifer Robles
Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editor
Copy Chief
Layout Editor
Wire Editor
Editorial Writer
Staff Reporters
Ian S. Simpson, Mark Pitman, Kirk Indell
Tracee Hamilton, Kirk Indell
Drew Torres, Chuck Inacson
Mike Kaplan
Business Manager
Retail and National Sales Manager
Classified and Campus Sales Manager
Staff Photographer
Staff Artist
Back Office Director
Sales Representatives
Cathy Ward, Matt Ratelj, Susan Birnbaum,
Terri Fry, Kay Waseup, Eunice Shallowbill
Managing Editor
Bob Pritchard
Greg Sackwouch
David Weir
Louis Leavell
Gene Myers
Mary Alexander
Kathy Kase
Kathy Lacey
Ian S. Simpson, Mark Pitman, Kirk Indell
Tracee Hamilton, Kirk Indell
Drew Torres, Chuck Inacson
Mike Kaplan
Business Manager
Retail and National Sales Manager
Classified and Campus Sales Manager
Staff Photographer
Staff Artist
Back Office Director
Sales Representatives
Cathy Ward, Matt Ratelj, Susan Birnbaum,
Terri Fry, Kay Waseup, Eunice Shallowbill
Advertising Advocate
Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kansas editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
University Daily Kansan, June 9. 1980
Page 5
KU jobs available despite recession
By Danny Torchia staff reporter
The summer job outlook turned out to be as bleak as state and local employment officials feared, but students still liking for work could possibly find employment with the University of Kansas.
Nancy Winn, coordinator of student employment, said the job market had been tight this spring, but was picking up.
KU officials with student employment said last week that students could find jobs, but the type of job depended on their skills.
"We have processed a lot of jobs, and there are a lot of students looking for work," she said.
THE EMPLOYMENT CENTER, located in the basement of Strong Hall, processes jobs and posts them in the bulletin board outside the office. Students contact the department offering the job.
"We usually have a lot of jobs that require clerical skills." Winn said.
Claantha McCurdy, assistant director of financial aid, said jobs were also available in the work study program.
The work study program is a federally funded program in which the government pays 80 percent of the student's salary and the department pays the remainder. A student must be declared eligible for the program
after applying for admittance, she said.
"We've had at least one-third more than last year," she said. "We'll probably get more now that summer school is starting."
THOUGH THE EMPLOYMENT picture in the University is fairly good, the outlook in Lawrence and Topeka is bleak.
"Kids are having a tough time of it," said Ed Mills, office manager for the Job Service Center, 833 Ohio. "When you go in with a higher unemployment rate compared to last year, it is more difficult in finding jobs."
The unemployment rate in Douglas County for April was 3.4 percent, compared with 2.6 percent in April 1979, he said. Employers, if they are hiring at all, are looking for permanent workers.
"Older people who have been laid off their jobs may be taking jobs ordinarily filled by college students," she said, "so we see it recovering in the next 30 days."
"We are doing everything we can to help out," he said. "We aren't accustomed to the unemployment rate in the state. Usually we have a lower rate compared with the rest of the nation."
The Environmental Protection Agency and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment have told city and county officials that the Douglas County Landfill did not meet要求,that an alternative site must be found.
By Kirk Tindal staff reporter
Landfill plan irks land owners
Kinko's Kinko,2 Attention KU Profs!
"The commissioners could stop it if they wanted to," said Carl Amereine, who circulated the petition. "They say they can't but they can."
The neighborhood group plans to meet with a Topka-tech attorney Tuesday to consider legal action against the site, he said.
TWO WEEKS AGO city and county officials tentatively approved a plan which would allow the city's trash to be buried in a rock quarry operated by Hamm Quarries in Jefferson County. But residents who live near the new site say they do not want a landfill near their properties.
A PETITION with the names of 145 people who oppose the site has been presented to the Jefferson County Commission and the Commission has yet to take any action.
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The landfill is on the floodplain of the Kansas River a few miles upstream from Lawrence.
"We don't like the idea of Douglas
The proposed quarry site is on a hill just off U.S. 59-24. The waste would be used to fill a 60-foot deep trench created by Hamm's quarry operation. The trench is approximately one quarter of a mile long and 100 feet wide.
"Also it's on a floodplain and high water could cause waste to end up in the river. Then you would have problems down stream," Kinder said.
Amerine, said he takes the chemical waste from his farming operation, "the stuff in drums," to the Douglas County miller, who does not like the site present here.
Kinder said that because the present site was in a low lying area it was sometimes impossible during wet weather to cover the accumulated trash bin. The severely required six inches of dirt. The rain could cause health problems, he said.
FEDERAL REGULATIONS no longer allow landfalls to be placed on a floodplain, Robert Kinder. Health and Environment technician, said...
THE TRENCH is graded to the northwest to carry any leaching from run-off to a fifteen-acre retaining lake.
County dumping its trash on Jefferson County," Amerine said.
"Putting it on low ground like that, so close to the river, wasn't a good idea," Amerine said. "I don't know why they did it in the first place."
according to Skeet Smith of Hamm Quarries.
economics than efficient land use.
"The people of Lawrence are going to pay Hamm for filling a hole that the law says they have to fill anyway," Oglebsy said.
"We've been working on this for three years," Smith said. "We've been in contact with Health and Environment we would know we were doing it right."
A landfill at the quarry site would allow the best land use, he said.
To Jack Oglesby, whose house is 640 feet from the trench that will be the new landfill, it is more a matter of
According to Mike Dooley, Douglas County public works director, the quarry site is the only feasible site available. He said the county had other facilities where workers could stricter federal regulations on landfill sites have made them impractical.
Feature of the Week
from page 1
Veep . . .
him," Wilson said. "I might pick up my activity a little bit now, though."
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Independent candidates have not
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 9.1980
LAKEWOOD PARK SWIMMING AREA
Fun in the sun is not just swimsuits and tanning oil. It is also a gamble. Area dermatologists warn that too much sun can cause more than just a bad burn.
---
Getting into the sun may be part of the fun of summer, but sunbathers should take care to avoid overexposure of their various skin problems, including cancer.
COMMUTERS:
THELDA KESTENBAUM, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said skin cancer usually occurred in middle-aged whites. Non-hives have a lower risk of getting the disease.
According to the American Cancer Society, skin cancer is the most common type of cancer. It is estimated that 40 to 50 percent of all people who live with skin cancer in their lives may be skin cancer in their lives. Most are capable if diagnosed and treated.
LEE R. Bittenbenger, Lawrence dermatologist, said last week that most people who have sunburn to the sun's ultraviolet rays and were most likely to develop on skin exposed to the sun. Lighter-skinned people are also susceptible to the disease he said.
Why not "AUTO-MATE"?
"The more color you have in your skin, the more protection you have
staff reporter
Self-serve Car Pool Exchange Kansas Union, Main Lobby (near the Ride Board)
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Sun fun sizzles skin can cause skin cancer
He said the best way to prevent skin cancer was to use common sense when out in the sun. Light-skinned people should take special precautions.
"Fair-skinned people shouldn't go out deliberately and sun-hathe." he said.
THERE IS NO reason for such people to avoid normal exposure, but they sould use a good sun-screen lotion, Bittendenbett. said. Many sun screens have a "sun protection factor" printed on the label. The higher the number, the more protection from ultraviolet rays the screen provides.
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Bittenbender said that he had seen only three cases of this cancer, which can be fatal, in four years of practice in Lawrence.
A more rare and serious skin cancer is malignant melanoma, which is usually noticed as a change in the shape of the skin. A mole may itch or become secrete, he said.
"A lot of people get the aging effects of the sun," Bittendenbender said. "People come in when they are 40 and look like they're 50 or 60."
Most skin cancers form on the face, hands or arms as reddish sores that persist for months or years and will not completely heal. This type of skin cancer is 95 percent curable by removing the tumor. Bittenbender said.
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Ultraviolet radiation aggravates some diseases. Some medications, including some acetone lotions, may cause them to react differently to the sun, he said.
"Some people are, in effect, allergic to the sun," Bittencumber said.
BESIDES CANCER, ultraviolet rays may also cause premature wrinkling, age spots, and a thickening of the skin, giving it a leathery appearance.
from the sun's ultraviolet rays," she said.
"The sun tanning salons are just an expensive way to do something bad to your skin." Bittenbender said.
"That gives people a little better idea of how effective the sun screen is," he said.
But the sun is not the only source of cancer-causing ultraviolet rays. The type of light used in tanning salons and sun lamps has the same effect.
Bittenbender said that most people were not concerned with the long term effects of ultraviolet rays.
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Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation
RECREATION SERVICES
SUMMER 1980 RECREATION CALENDAR
CONVERSE
208 Robinson Center
SUMMER RECREATION SCHEDULE 1980
EVENT
Softball
3-Person Basketball
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING ENTRY DEADLINE
PLAY BEGINS
Basketball
Co-Rec
Volleyball
Tennis
Singles
Doubles
Mixed Doubles
Table Tennis &
Badminton
Singles
Doubles
Mixed Doubles
Golf
Canoe Trip
(Wake River)
Closest to the Pinn
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June 16
Fast Pitch Manager's Meeting 6/11 at 4:30 p.m. in 155 Rob.
Slow Pitch Manager's Meeting 6/12 at 4:30 p.m. in 155 Rob.
Co-Rec Manager's Meeting 6/12 at 4:30 p.m. in 155 Rob.
Manager's Meeting 6/11 at 4:30 p.m. in 156 Rob.
Manager's Meeting 6/11 at 4:45 p.m. in 156 Rob.
June 17
Golf
PLEASE NOTE:
June 16
June 18, Rob. Tennis Courts
June 25, Rob. Tennis Courts
July 9, Rob. Tennis Courts
June 21 & 22
June 28 & 29
July 12 & 13
June 20-22
Field East of Robinson Center, 5:00 p.m.
Every Wednesday at 4:00 p.m. at the Orchards Golf Course
Additional information 208 Rob
Recreation Services: 864-3546
Field East of Robinson Center
4:30 p.m.
All tournament participants must enter Robinson Center through the pool lobby. In order to enter Softball, Co-Rec Volleyball, or 3-Person Basketball, a team representative must be present at the designated Manager's Meeting. All tournaments that take place on the weekend will begin on: Saturday at 10:00 a.m. Sunday at 12:00 noon (unless otherwise noted on the schedule).
July 19 2:00 p.m. m., Rob.So.Gym July 20 2:00 p.m. m., Rob.So.Gym July 20 2:00 p.m. m., Rob.So.Gym
Robinson Center
DROP-IN RECREATION
SUMMER SCHEDULE
Open Monday through Friday (closed weekends).
Gymnasiums
6:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Racquetball Courts By Reservation Only: 6:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Weight Room
6:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m
6:00 a.m.- 4:30 p.m
Natatorium
Faculty/Staff Swim 11:30 a.m.- 12:50 p.m., Monday through Friday
Recreational Swim 3:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., Monday, Wednesday, & Friday
Recreational Swim 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m., Monday through Friday
Recreational Swim
Recreational Swim 3:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m., Tuesday & Thursday
Recreational Swim 2:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m., Saturday & Sunday
PLEASE NOTE:
In case of inclement weather tennis classes may be moved into the gyms making them unavailable for drop-in recreation.
Faculty, staff, and student family members may attend any recreational swims provided they have proper identification.
A current KU ID must be shown for admittance to the pool.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFO-DIAL REC INFO 864-3456
University Daily Kansan, June 9, 1980 Page 7
Farmers produce for weekly market
By Shelly Coker
staff reporter
The first rays of sun cast a light pink hue on the soft blue Lawrence sky. One by one salesmen arrive, unloading and packing wares at maternelle, head lettuce, cantaloupe and a.m. early morning shopers are browsing through rows of fresh produce. The Farmer's Market, at the central town, 1600 Vernont St. is open for business.
Rows of boxed tomatoes, shelled peanuts, bing cherries, onions, cauliflower, cabbage, strawberries and almonds, sit in the stand of Milton Collins, 50 N. 25th St.
COLLINS, THE FIRST arrival at the market, bought the produce at a Kansas City market a day before for resale at the Lawrence market.
"My home-grown stuff is not ready yet," he said. "I have 500 tomato plants that will be later in the season."
Collins comes to market to make a profit, but his prices are lower than the local stores'.
"Like my cantaplo," he said. "I sell them two for 50 cents. They are 79 cents in stores, so I am much cheaper, you know."
But for Edwin Sample, 2214 West-chester St., the market is just a hobby.
"I don't try to make a profit, just friends," he said.
Sample, 71, taught vocational agriculture at the University of Kansas before retiring. He said he had been coming to the market for 5 years.
"I think everyone should pick something they like to do and keep busy at it," he said.
BUT NOT EVERY seller brings in ordinary food. Parm Carvalho, Baldwin, grows Japanese egg plants, and produces white porcorn and oriental vegetables.
Carvalho also sells Tofu, a Japanese
soybean meat substitute, homemade bread,and fresh flowers.
Brenda Smith, Bonner Springs,
brings netted plants to the market.
"This is a good way to prevent overcrowding in my greenhouse," she said.
Smith said she started gardening and canning produce to save money. "When you preserve produce you always have it and at market I can sell that excess."
Red geraniums, white, pink, and lavender petunias, and other brightly colored plants are good stands, as well as hanging plants in small and large baskets. At one end was a lavender plant that one customer said is a nice smelt to put in your drawer.
TEN INDIVIDUAL stands displayed unique items, each directly reflecting the personality of the seller. For example, the First United Methodist Evance established a stand at the market to earn money for a mission project.
Later in the season the sellers hope to have sweet corn, potatoes, beets, spinach, wild raspberries and blackberries, Collins said.
One shopper, Margie Frederick, said she shopping at the market to buy fresh, home-grown vegetables for a gourmet supper group.
ANOTHER SHOPPER, Dorothy Rippert said, "It's a good way to start the day. There is no better fellowship."
Her friend, Francis Cleveland, said,
"The market has good produce and is a lot of fun."
Andy Anderson, secretary of the Downtown Lawrence Association which sponsors the market, said that storms hurt a few of the regular sellers at market.
"Two of our regulars had to repaint completely," he said. "The market is expanding, allowing sellers to sell flowers, homemade baked goods, craft items, and any produce that can be grown locally." he said.
The market will be open every Saturday until Sept. 27.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, June 9, 1980
JERRY R. WATSON
Ann Zimmerman of the Possum Trot Orienteering Club in Kansas City bushwalks through the brush in search of the next course marker.
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For the next 100 to 300 minutes, you run, walk, climb and crawl over and around rolling hills and meandering streams. They charge through dense forests, briars, underbrush, rock crevices, walls and fences of barbed wire.
staff reporter
"I don't know where all those skunks came from."
WE KNOW WHY YOU RIDE
Before sprinting across the finish line, some get lost. Some battle the elements or wildlife. A few give up and bikchick back. Others struggle in the first half, but everyone grin and laugh because everyone who completes the course is a winner.
"Did you see the nude sunbathers around control marker four?"
ONE UNFORTUNATE girl sat on a wasp nest while working out her map and commass bearins.
They are orienteers.
Horizons
1811 W. 6th
Another orienteer tells about his encounter with a bear during the last meet in Canada.
HOURS
Mon. 12-6
Tues-Fri 10-6
Sat. 10-4
They are all addicts of an inexpensive, yet fascinating, sport. Dave Lathicum, Baltimore, Md., graduate in sports calls it "the thinking man's speech."
"The sport has been likened to a road rally on foot." Littencio explained. "Many of the participants control markers—usually nothing more than orange and white cloth bags—up through the woods. The object is to get to each of them and back to the other."
The name of the sport stems from the fact that runners must stay oriented to their position on a map in order to reach a course. This is easier said than done.
CONTESTANTS RECEIVE their maps just as the race begins. Checking the map, the orienter finds his own location. The first marker lies, say, at the base of a pine tree 500 meters away on a compass bearing of 130 degrees.
NO MARKER can be skipped. At each control point, the runner must punch his card with a mark unique to that marker.
The world's best oviereents are able to cover their courses at a speed of about 6 minutes per kilometer.
"Orientering is called the thinking man's sport because you have to be able to navigate and not just run blindly."
"It's not really difficult to figure out what's going on," Lintich said. "But it is a very involved sport when you get into it.
Now comes the thinking. Does he brownhatch out on a 130-degree slope? Or does the land—taking into account the hills, valleys, streams and marshes? A straight line is not always the shortest distance between two points in this game.
All the while, the clock is ticking.
Every mistake—even misreading the timest nuance in the map—can be costly.
In top meetings, a runner must practically step on a marker before he sees it. Moving quickly through 1,000 feet of brush without deviating more than 10 feet either way from a compass bearing can be intensely challenging.
A well-designed course is always jittered with a variety of obstacles. Control markers may be hidden behind the water, a bucket or ticket in the middle of a beaver pond.
Accompanied orienters can find a number of plausible routes for each leg of the course. The pros and cons of each route are listed in terms of the runner's ability and stamina.
Orienteering began around the turn of the century when a Swedish scout master named Ernst Killander decided to spice up a cross-country race
One of the unique features of the sport is that any one, regardless of sex or age, can enjoy it. Twelve-year-old ladies, 40-year-old girls and 60-year-old kids all find running through the wilderness irresistible.
In Japan, people orienter by the thousands in such unlikely places as downtown Tokyo. Businessmen, on their way home from the office, can be seen each evening jogging—maps and compasses in hand.
The O'ring, a five-day orientering meet each summer in Sweden, is the largest single sporting event on earth. More than 18,000 people from two dozen countries meet to race a mammoth maze of more than 50 separate courses.
SOME OTHER unusual twists the sport has taken are orienteering on skis, on showhouses, on horses, in canoes and sailing boats. To form their activity in every type of weather and even at night—with compasses and compasses with luminous dials.
Today, orientering has spread throughout Europe. There are more than a million participants of the sport in the Scandinavian countries, Germany, France, Britain, Switzerland, Russia and Switzerland. Orientering is conducted Swedish public schools and is considered the Swedish national pastime.
through the woods by throwing in soins maps, compasses and checkpoints. The sport was soon taken up by the Army as a field exercise.
Although Linthicum is seriously involved in competitive orienteering—he has been selected to represent the United States this July in the World University Orienteering Championships in N.Y. Gallen, Switzerland—he promotes orienting primarily as a family sport.
Most of the participants in an orientering meet know that they do not want to face the situation said. People orienterethe for the fun of it and because they are really only competing against themselves. "I am not a part of the family nature of the sport," he said.
that it requires virtually no equipment," he said. "All you need is a compass, a good pair of track shoes and a pair of long sweat pants. If someone bought the very best everything, he would spend more than 40 or 50 buckles."
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There are still only a few thousand American orienteers. Kansas probably has only a few more than 100, most of them are orienteers from Kansas, the KU orienteering club.
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But the chief reason the sport has grown so slowly in the United States, he said, is that it is difficult and time consuming to make good orienting maps. The map used for the recent KU-sponsored. Kansas Orientering team was used as a mock, for example, required more than 200 man hours to draw and field check.
Linthicum, who became involved with the sport as a Boy Scout in 1972, said that part of the reason orientering them was the more sedentary American life style.
"The map is by far the single most important element of a good orient- eering meet," Linticum said.
Linchicus is currently pursuing a master's degree in cartography at the University of Kansas. He will use his experience with orientering, he said, in writing his thesis, which will suggest ways to improve topographical maps.
It was probably Linnicum's fascination with maps that, more than anything else, attracted him to the sport. He said he could not remember when he did not want to be a geographer or cartographer.
*ORIENTERING* is also a great way to get into shape almost immediately. You can be as boring as jogging. When you are running with a map through the woods, you have to totally concentrate on your path, so you don't seem to get tired as quickly.
Melsner-Milstead LIquor
The chief reason people orienteer, however, has nothing to do with fitness or maps. Orientereer offers a unique, intriguing challenge that is just plain beautiful. Orienters attract one of the loveliest, sharpest, most sportsmanlike groups around.
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The fastest runner does not always win, however. Often, races can be compared to the tortoise and the hare to a snake, slower more orientate winning.
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It's 50 percent navigation and 50 percent running ability as to who wins," Linthicum said.
LINTHICUM ALSO believes that orienteering is the perfect sport for the money-minded.
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Orienteering seems to do strangle things to most of those it touches. It makes "winner's" of those who finish even "of those who get hopelessly lost."
"I can't describe the elation of locating that first marker," one orienteer said. "It's sort of like finding the missing piece of a jigsaw puzzle. When you find that first control point, you'll be hooked."
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University Daily Kansan, June 9. 1980
Page 9
Family files lawsuit over Balagna death
The family of KU football player killed in a July 1978 construction accident in Topeka fitted suit last week in Shawnee County District Court.
Frances Balagna and her son, Joshua, now living in California, are seeking more than $10,000 in damages in the death of Dennis Balagna. She is also working at a sewer construction site when a wall she was checking collapsed.
Ballagna was an offensive guard for Kai when the accident occurred. Another former KU player, John Mascarda, was injured in the accident.
Defendants in the suit are Shawnee County; Shawnee County Sanitary Sewer District No. 33, where the sewer was being built; the Koehring Co., manufacturer of the excavator used in digging the ditch; eight partners in Van Doren-Hard and Stallings, the architects of the project; and Dallas Freeborn, an employee of the firm, who was supervising the project.
The suit alleges the "separate and concurrent negligence of the defendants." It also claims that the ex-conspirator is defective and contributed to the accident.
(1)
Dennis Balagna
Although the Student Senate will not meet again until fall, the Student Committee has met twice to consider bidding requests from various organizations.
At its May 14 meeting, StudEx approved a line item change for the Tau Sigma Dance Company and appointed a committee to prepare a report on the Associated Students of Kansas' progress.
Tau Sigma requested that $9.28 be transferred from its Supplies and Expenses account to its Personal Services account. The dance company managed the operations and salaries of five Facilities Operations employees who installed lighting
StudEx studies budget changes, ASK
equipment for the Tau Sigma Dance Concert.
"It bothers me that they've already spent the money and then expect us to pay for it," Matt Davis, student body vice president, said. "The Senate is getting stuck with thousands of dollars in student clubs where college clubs have gone ahead and spent money they didn't have and assumed we're going to pay the bills."
Rob McClellan, StudEx chairman,
said that Tau Sigma had been allocated
money for the FO employees' salaries.
But she added that an unforeseen occurrence, she said.
StudEx's resistance to approve the request was broken down further when
the committee learned that Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, already had transferred Tau Sigma's money.
"This has all been done rather perforously," McClellan said, "Bren told me today that he did transfer the money to their Personal Services account because he expected us to approve it."
Business School names acting dean
StudEx also appointed four students to prepare a report on ASK'S progress. The report will also be submitted to the Senate, which will then vote next fall whether to continue or discontinue KU's membership in ASK.
Jack Gaumitn, professor of business, was named Friday as acting dean of the School of Business. He will replace Joseph Pichler, who resigned to accept an executive vice presidency of the school. A hutchinson-based grocery firm.
Gaumitza, a KU professor since 1972 and a business finance specialist, was named by Ralph Christofferson, vice
StudEx delayed a decision on budget requests from KU Student Legal Services and the Consumer Affairs Association until its next meeting.
The University will conduct a nationwide search for a permanent dean. Gaumitnz said he had "no aspirations to continue in this position" June 30, 1981. 'the date formally agreed upon when he accepted the position.'
chancellor for academic affairs, to begin a one-year acting deanship July 1.
Gaumnitz, who also is president of an investment management group and has co-authored a book on financial institutions, said he would spend much of his time as acting dean enhancing communication between the faculty and the administration of the School of Business.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Paalma 2:1 and Acts 4:25
The above question is asked by God Almighty Himself in the second Psalm of His Book, the Blbe. Do you ask God to bless you? In the first Psalm He says that the man is free from all sins, and that he will siting, and "his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate day and night." Have we a right to accuse our efforts to meet and fulfil these conditions?
In John 6:44, etc. Jesus said "No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent he draw him ... And they shall all be taught of God. Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, commute unto him." Have we put ourselves in position to be "taught of God"? We put ourselves in position to be "passing the buck"? What we are always "passing the buck" to the Almighty while in reality His Word "passes it to us!" The law is our school-master to bring us to Christ.
The reason our churches are so full of "dead wood and excess baggage" of folks who don't know what is to be needed, we allow them to see their lost condition by the power of the Holy Ghost in church and to Christ, as they think, by the precepts of men, the devices and powers of the devil, and not by the power of the Father; that they are drawn by His power to the Son.
In the second Psalm there is the opposite picture of the
"Blessed Man." It shows us men raging and rebelling against God, and His Anointed, in order to break the bands and cast away the cords of His "Thou shalt nots," His Moral Law and Ten Commandments. So, instead of being blessed and nation we have God's cure for sinners and nationals, he has his wrath, his wrath and displeasure that sorely vexes mankind.
We blame this man and that, this nation and that, but according to God's message here the blame lies at the root of all who refuse to depart from evil but choose to rage against The Almighty. Read Luke 13: 15, and make the application. Elijah, the man taken to heaven without his will, is told in the book that no troubled Israel, but thou, and father's house, in that ye have forsaken the Commandments of God... "1st Kings 18: 18.
"When the mists have rolled away, and we know we are known," see if the reason American is now "riding upon the high places of the earth" is not because our fathers up to about 1920 honored God by a more or less strict observance of The Lord's Day, and we are enjoying wasting and dissipating our rich heritage, "riding for a fall," and "great will be that fall" unless we repent and "bring forth fruit for repentance."
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University Daily Kansan, June 9.1980
Sports
Brett's homer lifts Royals past Texas
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - George Brett hammered a two-run homer with two outings in the ninth inning to give the surging Kansas City Royals a 5-4 victory over the Texas Rangers Sunday night.
The blast gave the Royals a 5-3 lead after they had trailed most of the game. Rusty Staub's ground rule double
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST LOS ANGELES W 19 Pct. GR
New York 32 19 627
Milwaukee 28 22 500 ³/₄
Baltimore 28 22 500 ³/₄
Cleveland 28 25 500 ³/₄
Boston 25 26 490 ⁴/₄
Detroit 25 26 490 ⁴/₄
Detroit 22 27 797 ⁷/₄
Kansas City 32 20 623
Miami 31 20 588 9
Oakland 24 28 472 9
Seattle 22 28 472 9
Minnesota 24 28 472 9
Minneapolis 22 28 419 11
**Veterans' Games**
Detroit 9, Minneapolis 2
Orlando 12, Chicago 4
Baltimore 6, San Diego 2
Rhinelander 11, California 8
Ottawa 5, Toronto 4
Detroit 5, Oakland 8
closed the margin to 5-4 in the bottom of the ninth, and Jim Morris hit a base-loaded ground through the box that looked as if it would win the game for
But second baseman Frank White lunged behind second for a backhanded stop, flipped the ball to shortstop U.L. Washington, and Washington threw to first and beat Norris by a step for the game-ending double.
"That double play White and U.L.
NATIONALLEAGUE
TABLE L W L Pct. GB
Montreal 29 20 138
Pittsburgh 29 20 138
Philadelphia 26 22 542
Indiana 26 22 542
Chicago 22 20 488
Ohio 22 18 426
Los Angeles 21 21 604 1
Houston 30 21 598 -1
Indianapolis 20 21 497 -1
San Diego 25 29 403 -1
Tampa Bay 21 29 403 -1
San Francisco 21 29 496 -1
New York 6, Philadelphia 8, Baltimore 6, Montreal 6, St. Louis 4, Miami 7, San Francisco 5, Cincinnati 1, San Diego 0
Los Angeles 3, Miami 1, San Francisco 0
George Brett
KC
turned was just awesome, there's no other way to express it," Brett said. "In a pressure situation like that, to make sure you don't get upset by credit意思 I thought it was a hit."
White said, "That's the most excited I've been this year. I was just happy I stopped the ball. I really didn't think we could turn it."
The homer was Brett's fourth in the past seven games and gave the surging Royals a sweep of the four-game series. It was Kansas City's sixth straight victory and 17th in two games. The loss was fifth in a 12 game, and 10th in 12 games.
U. Washington singled ahead of Brett's two-out-homer to right. Bob Babcock, 0-1, who pitched 1/2 innings, Gary Christensen, 3-6, got the victory
Did You Know K.U. Student Senate Has A Health Insurance Plan Available For Students At Special Rates?
LONE STAR GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN
Douglas S. Goracke
Lone Star Student Agent
843-4455
Lone Star Insurance Company
1-800-527-0519
Policy has been approved by Student Senate for 1980-81 school year, effective Fall 1980.
Applications will be available during Fall 1980 enrollment at Allen Field House.
LOOK FOR THE GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE TABLE IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
This Group Health Insurance Plan is the same as the 1979-80 plan, but the contract will be carried by Lone Star instead of Blue Cross/Blue Shield. Current holders of the Group Health Plan are advised to call Doug Goracke for information about continued coverage in 1980-81.
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Herzog to manage Cardinals
ST. LOUIS (AP)-WHite Herzog was named manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, replacing Ken Boyer and Johnny O'Reilly, names of a double-header in Montreal.
Herzog, manager of the Kansas City Royals from 1975 to 1979, will join the Cardinals in atlanta.
At a news conference at the St. Louis home of Cardinals, chairman and president August A. Busch, Jr., Herzog was introduced as the new manager.
Busch also announced that Boyer will be offered another job with the club and said that all the coaches will be retained.
At the news conference, Herzog said he expected only two things from the players: that they be at the ball park on time and work hard while in uniform.
"I'm going to tell the players that it
Herzog said he would seek help from the Cardinal staff in managing the team, but quickly added that he would be the boss.
"If you're good enough, you'll win. Ballplayers make the manager. I'm not that smart," he said.
"I'm going to rely on all the coaches a lot. I'm going to talk to those coaches and I'm going to pick their brains," he said. "But I'm opinionated and hardheaded. Once that game starts, I'm the boss."
Hermez led the Royals to three straight American League Western Division championships. They finished second last season and Hermez was fired in October. His record with the Royals was 410-304.
Hierzog was named manager of the Royals in July 1975 and guided the club to a second-place finish in the AL Western Division. The Royals won the playoff the next three years, losing each year to the New York Yankees in the league playoffs.
Boyer, a former All-Star third baseman who took control of the team two years ago, was fired Sunday after St. Louis lost its 21st game in 26 outings. Expected to be a division title contender in the National League, the Cardinals hold the major leagues' worst record this season.
There was no immediate reaction from Boyer, who was told of his firing by general manager John Claborne. He then left for a four-,4 in the first game of the doubleheader.
Tracksters take 8th at NCAA
KU triple jumper Sanya Owolabi and the 1,600-meter relay team turned in second-class performances to lead the track team to an eighth-plate finish at last weekend's NCAA Outdoor Championships in Austin, Texas.
by UTEP's Steve Hanna for the outdoor championship. Hanna jumped $5-1.
Kansas scored 20 team points. The University of Texas at El Paso, the defending champion, won the team title against Texas, a distant second with 46 points.
Owolabi launched the best jump of his career when he leaped 54+11¹ on his final try. The sophomore from North Niagara, N.Y., ended indoor title earlier this year, was edged
KU's 1,600-meter relay of Stan Whitaker, Mike Ricks, Lester Mickers and Dean Hogan also came close, but a missed shot by the Maryland, Tennessee's Anthony Bairn nipped a struggling Hogan at the tape to give the Vols the victory. Tennessee's time was a meet-record 3:03:49. KU ran to break a four-year-old school record.
Steve Rainbolt finished eighth in the decathlon. On the first day of the competition he finished first in the high jump, but not in the long jump. He scored 70-9, a decathlon most record.
Ninety-degree heat and oppressive humidity took its toll. Hogan collapsed after finishing the 408-meters relay final half an hour later, Hogan relay final half an hour later, Hogan
Three KU Big Eight champions failed to qualify for the finals. Pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham, high jumper Joel Light and steeperchaver Paul Schultz did not meet the preliminaries of their events.
Discus thrower Matt Friedmann made it into the second round of competition but failed to qualify for the finals. His best throw was 174-1.
Jeltz signs; Gundelfinger waits
staff reporter
By Ernie Davis
He said the Angels' representatives would talk to him this week.
Jeltz planned to fly to Spartanburg yesterday to join the club before its game today.
mean I'm not going to," Gundelfinger said.
Steve Jelzit, who played second base for KU, signed a contract Saturday to play baseball for the Philadelphia team in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
"I haven't signed yet, but that doesn't
Matt Gundlingefeller, Overland Park junior, who was drafted in the fourth round by the California Angels, hasn't decided whether he will sign.
KU baseball coach Floyd Temple was not surprised by the draft of Gundlinger, KU's first All-American in 16 years.
"I was expecting him to get drafted, but you're never sure about the professionals because the scouts look at so many different areas." he said.
Gundelfinger was the designated hitter for the Jayhawks this season.
"A lot of the scouts didn't see me in
the defense at all, and they said it probably hurt me in the draft," he said.
"If he decides to come back I'd be glad to have him. That's the understatement of the year," he said.
Temple said he was sure Gun-deflinger would make the right decision.
Temple said he had anticipated that Jeltz would sign a contract.
Jeltz said that he was happy about signing and that he expected to play in today's game.
"All I wanted was a chance. I hope I can move up pretty fast."
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VISA
University Daily Kansan, June 9. 1980
Page 1
KU building projects progress
By Walter Thorp
Projects representing, $42.4 million worth of renovation and construction at the University of Kansas are in various stages, with some nearly completed and some not yet on the drawing board.
- The School of Architecture and Urban Design begin moving faculty offices to Carruth O'Leary Hall last week to prepare for the Marvin Hall renovation scheduled to begin this fall.
- Only the finishing work remains on the addition to Robinson Gymnasium. Administrators are open that it will open for classes in the fall.
- As the Aug. 1 completion date for the six-story Malt Hall addition nears, the School of Pharmacy, the science library and the KU Animal Care Unit are preparing to move into the new wing.
- Also, plans are being discussed for another library. Money is being raised from businesses around the
state for an addition to Summerfield Hall.
Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said bids would be taken for the Marvin Hall project. The construction should begin in September.
The $2.2-million renovation will affect the entire building. The plan calls for improving accessibility for people with disabilities in restrooms, bringing the building's two wooden stairwells up to fire standards, adding an elevator, remodeling space and improving air conditioning, plumbing and electrical systems.
Wiechert said he was optimistic that the renovation would be completed in one year. Exactly how long it would take to not be known until after bids are taken.
DURING THE RENOVATION, the School of Architecture and Urban Design must be relocated. They have been given until Aug. 15 to move.
The bulk of next semester's architecture and urban design classes will be in Robinson Gymnasium and Blake and Lindley Annexes. Robinson
is being converted to house tem porarily a 10-section design studio.
Dennis Domer, assistant to the dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said he was not pleased with the arrangement but that the school would have to do the best it could to handle the split.
As the School of Architecture vacates its old building, the School of Pharmacy, the science library and the Animal Care Unit will occupy rooms this summer in the $11.5 million Malott Hall addition.
The Animal Care Unit will occupy the first three floors of the addition. The School of Pharmacy will fill the fourth and fifth floors and the science library will expand onto the sixth floor.
"All indications are that the Malot addition will be ready for occupancy in the fall," Wiechert said. He said the project was on schedule and well within its budget. Construction on the Malot addition began April 11, 1978.
HOWARD MOSSBERG, dean of the School of Pharmacy, explained that when the addition was completed it still had to be approved and accepted
by the state before the School could move in.
"The contractor is working toward completing the project around Aug. 1, so we have ordered furniture to be shipped in the last week of July." Mossbera said.
"We should be in good shape by the fall semester." he said.
A new location for the School of Pharmacy will solve two problems, he said. The School will have adequate laboratory space and the graduate and undergraduate programs will be in the same building.
The new $6.7 million addition to Robinson Gymnasium should be finished by the middle of July, according to Wayne Ossen, dean of the department of health, physical education and recreation.
OSNESS EXPLAINED that the finishing work on the floors and the air conditioning and heating systems remained to be completed on the project.
Because of the new addition, Ossess said, his department would be less crowded this fall, and more activity classes could be offered.
Student ..
from page 1
approval. The latest word is that it's now considered a bi-state agreement. And I have no idea why the Kansas Regents rejected it."
William Kelly, KU associate dean of Admissions and Records, said he thought the Rogers simply had to agree with the proposal useful. But neither Kelly, the KU Office of Academic Affairs nor the KU Graduate School could estimate the number of out-of-state graduate students the proposed agreement would benefit
FOR WARDLE AND his family, who live just four blocks from the state line, moving into Kansas and a 12-month wait would mean saving $500 a semester. But it also might mean losing that job—the main source of family income.
About 1,300 graduate students have assistants, Hayden said, positions which, if they involve teaching, include graduate teaching and research assistants guarantee automatic resident status. Some graduate students have grants of federal loans, especially for assistance that individual schools give.
Assistantships are a way that graduate students can save money on fees, according to Kelley Hayden of the Graduate Student Council.
ments there to give students,
"basically there are no scholarship
programs for students who student
who can an assistantship on or
loan," said Jeff Weinberg, associate
director of financial aid. "But I don't
see why a student wouldn't want to get
Wardle has his reasons. When he first enrolled at KU, he was unable to get an assistantship or a fellowship despite his education, which required education, his academic concentration.
Most graduate students can't make ends meet without some kind of financial aid, said George Woodyard, associate dean of the Graduate School. "But with a family," he added, "it's tough to pay back a loan."
Woodyard described Wardle's case as "fairly isolated," although he said should provide more financial relief for top-men in order to attract top-applicants.
"it's hard for us to compete nationally with Big 10 schools, such as Wisconsin, Illinois and Michigan, that can make better offers," he said.
BUT SOME KANSAS CITY, Kan., residents, according to Eugene Eubank, faced education at UMKC, have faced hardship, especially during summer semesters, because of a rule that imposes out-of-state tuition for nonresidents taking more than three hours at UMKC. For a student such as
Wardle, who has to commute to KU because UMKC does not offer an early childhood concentration. Eubank could not say whether it was widespread.
Hayden was also uncertain about the number of students to whom the Kansas-Missouri state line was a hurdle in a financial obstacle course. He said that "it could be 50 or it could be thousands," and that he had come across several people who would welcome a full reciprocity agreement as an answer to their problems. Hayden responded by graduating students with Kansas City, Mo., addresses, he added, the number of cases probably is substantial.
"I certainly don't mean this to sound like a gripe session," he said. "I know that most graduate students, particularly married ones, have money problems. And I know there are individuals at KU who would like to help me with my gripe session. I certainly believe in hard academic requirements to ensure high standards."
Wardie has decided to let things lie, including his wife's car in the back yard with a flat tire.
"But here it's a matter of the system, and its regulations bypassing the needs of individuals. KU's duty is not to stand as a monument to the state government, but to represent an open university, to serve people. After all, we we're in this together."
10¢
CONE
TUESDAYS
AUXILIARY
limit 5
reg
304
limit E
EVERY TUESDAY IN JUNE
Vista RESTAURANTS
The Kansas Legislative Post-Audit Committee took a gouch-tough stance last Friday in Topeka with the Kansas Board of Regents and state universities over the present methods of collecting overdue student loans.
State schools warned to enforce loan payment
A report to the committee revealed that 1,234 of the delinquent loans now on the books are from people who now work for the state or file income tax in Kansas. That figure includes 397 people from the University of Kansas.
Richard Brown, Legislative Post Auditor, said that some of the loan coounts "are found in the highest levels of debt." Those names were not revealed.
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COMMONWEALTH
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Granada
1527 W. 6th
Downtown 843-5788
Up The Academy
Feb. 20 and 9:30
State Sen. Jack Steiniger, D-Kansas, told the Board of Regents, "You can't have made much of an effort to keep our students safe, they are debts owed by state employees."
Varsity
Varsity Downtown 843-1065
Starring Richard Crenna
Eve. 7.30 and 9.30
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-84
1. The Long Riders
starring the Kavan Busters and the
Hawkeyes
for 7:30 and 3:00
2. The Baltimore Bullet
starring James Colvin and Great Shar
for 9:45
3. Nijnsky
Cinema Twin
31st & Iowa 842-8400
1. The Black Stallion
Starting Starling Rooney
Eve 7 30 and 6 40
2. Norma Raze
Starting Sally Field
Eve 7 40 and 9 30
Sunset Drive
West 8th St 843-9172
Now open 7 days a week.
"10"
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TELEPHONE 841-6418
The Main Event
Starring Barbara Streisand and Ryan O Neil
Shows start at dawn
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Jerry Rogers, KU director of Financial Aid, said that his office only handled the applications and approvals for the loans, not the collection of them. It is unlikely that delinquent loans could affect loan availability, he said.
Collecting a delinquent loan is done through the Office of the Comptroller. The Office sends a series of letters until forty-five days after the loan is due.
Then a registered letter is mailed or a phone call is made to the debtor. One of two collection agencies contracted by the debtor then takes over the account.
SVA FILMS
Mon. June 9
DUCK SOUP and MY
LITTLE CHICKADEE
A comedy double feature. DUCK SOPP stars the Marx Brothers in a "mathesis saline on toy kingdoms" (Leonard Maltin; the Brothers' funniest film, MY LITTLE CHICKADIE FIELDS and Mae West, with Fields stealing the show in a very crooked game, 1943/1942/78/81).
Wed. June 11 FORBIDDEN GAMES
One of the greatest anti-war films, a beautiful story of two children, Alicia and Matthew, "One that of all dogs of film experience that does not leave you quite the same." *Palline Kael*. *Confession* (1952/90/10 min.) "Confession" (1952/90/10 min.)
Fri. June 13 THE MAZE
3-D hirths and chills as a young couple spend the night in an old house ... but may not live long enough to regret it. "Possibly the last in 'Little House' film," William K. Evanson. We provide the 3-D glasses.
Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Wooldruff Auditorium in the Kansas University M-W Films are $1.50 and start at 7:00; Tickets are $1.50 and also start at 7:00. Tickets available at the SUA office, Level information 864-347. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
The University Dailv
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
15 words or fewer
Earth additional word
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
ninny ten 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 one twenty one twenty-one twenty-one twenty-one
for run
Monday Friday 2 pm to 3 pm
Tuesday Friday 2 pm to 3 pm
Wednesday Monday 2 pm to 3 pm
Thursday Monday 2 pm to 3 pm
Friday Wednesday 2 pm to 3 pm
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.
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 Karnataka Business office at 864-584.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
ENTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY JUNE 12
9 pm
THE ROCKY
HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
Three Friday and Saturday
BLUE RIDDIM BAND
$1.50 pitches
$1.25 hibits
from 8-9
Lawrence
Opentheatre
7th & Main
842 6930
--tu eu here:
Make it easy on yourself, your car, and
your wallet this semester—CAR POOL.
Kansas Union Main Lobby. Questions-eat
864-404-1900
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Summer Softball Officials Meeting Thursday, June 12th at 5:30 p.m. in Room 155 Robinson Center. All persons interested in attending this meeting must enter Robinson Center through the East doors.
99
FOR RENT
The Student Assistance Center presents:
"Luke's Little Known Logical Links to
Learning in the Weekend; June 11,
2013"
*11 Wesley Academic Skill Development
Workshop*
Vision Card Corporation Unified
BizCard Applications unified Business
Central 1 & 8 software
blocking of access to business
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**Email:** **catalyst@visioncard.com**
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Mark's & II and NOW REENTING FOR
MARK'S 2-9th Floor, 640 W. 15th St.
2-9th Floor, 640 W. 15th St.
2-9th Floor, 640 W. 15th St.
parking, dwiftway, walkout,
parking, dwiftway, walkout,
parking, dwiftway, walkout,
info. 842-903 at 101 Mitsubishi Ave.
7-31
info. 842-903 at 101 Mitsubishi Ave.
Renter(s) wanted to share House-3 bed-
room, 1/2 bath, formal dining room, carpet,
large forced ceiling, baileycee. Room
large. No beds. Pnrs 855, per month.
613-3043
FOR SALE
NAIMISH HALL has openings for summer.
Both male and female. If interested contact
business office at 843-859 any time of the day.
tf
Roommate wanted for summer, 2 bedroom
apt busRoute. Pool. All furnished $80 per month = utilities. Call Klim. or Dau 882-719 W. 24th St. 237. (South)
Apts. 6-10
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes sense to use them-11 As study guide.
Makes sense to use them-12 As study guide.
formation - New Analysis of Western Civil-
lization Notes.
Bookleters and Oread Booklets.
If
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year
guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-
1386.
HOUSE-3 Bedrooms 1½ baths formal dring-
room, room, carpet, large fened backward,
basement. C/A. Shawne area. No pets.
$50 per month. Call 631-3043. 6-23
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9069, 3900 W.
tf
SINEMILLA - Herbal seeded smoking mackerel and perfume citrus; mix contains mulinil, cinnamon, vanilla, rosemary, and grapefruit ingredient of Navajo smoking marmalade. P.O. Box 225, Cottonwood, Arizona 86232. Cottonwood, Arizona 86232.
Graduate Assistant for University and Faculty Law, Half-time, 12-month appointment. Lawrence, Half-time, 12-month appointment. Position may be increased up to 3/4 time. Position may be supplemented by student hourly assistance or other qualifications. Qualifications, excused writing, typing, and minimum supervision. Detailed job description will be given after June 8th. 865-1590 or 841-1212. An offer of Opportunity Affirmative Employment
HELP WANTED
Pine Bookcases-$20 & up; Tables, $35 &
up; small shelves, $15 & up; Mike Slough,
"43-8992."
6-23
The University of Kansas seeks a permanent, full-time extension Assistant for muscatine public administration, and urban planning mission road. Overland Park, Kansas Mission Road, Overland Park, Kansas mission road will involve public information along with implementation off-campus graduate programs and implementing off-campus graduate programs. Regents Center publications. Position requires completion of a graduate program in an appropriate field. Program programs preferred. Some journal experience will be at the Regents Center with approval to attend university campus. Application closing date is May 31, 2008. 1, 1800. Apply by letter with resume and cover letter. Office of Mary Garsh, Chairperson
MICROWAVE TRAPFIC COORDINATOR
magnitude of equipment and with helping de-
signer equipment. A good working knowledge of wave system. A good working knowledge of video capture, cameras and systems is required beginning June 23, 1980-$4600. Position beginning June 23, 1980-$4600. Bayal Application Deadline: June 13, 1980.
Need money? Like to babysit? Then add your name to the Information Center's database. Drop by 105 Strong Hall or call 842-3646 to one of the most popular 6-16 list in town.
The University of Kansas department on
Medicine is the primary structural for Mobile Intensive Care techni-
cies in the U.S. Evidence of extensive experience in Parasite Detection, Immunology in Pharmacology, Cardiology, and Cardiology Diagnosis; and Case Management deadline July 1. 1980. Submit resume to contact Contact Michael Szeszyl, Agent (718) 652-3438, Kansas City, KS 66100. (912) 938-8800 or contact Action Affirming Owner.
The Equity Research Project will hire two researchers. The salary is $450 per month for a half-time commitment. Those hired must be in the Kansas Graduate School Position 1: The Equity Research Project. Duties include interviewing educational reports and monographs Position 2: The Equity Research Project. Duties include interviewing, analyzing quantitative data and developing detailed job description and application materials. Position 3: The University Kansas Phone (912) 864-4898 University Kansas Phone (912) 864-4898
Instructor or Assistant Professor to teach telecommunications operations, writing, research and instruction in the industry experience in one or more of the/these areas or bachthors degree and significant achievement given to person with terminal残疾. September 15, December 19, 2000; postdoctoral experience. August 13, December 1980; postdoctoral experience. 217 Fliin Hall, University of Kansas,Equal opportunity affirmative action employment. equal opportunity affirmative action employment qualified people regardless of race, religion, education, origin or ancestry. nath-6, old age or anxiety.
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Guitar banjo, mandolin
from beginners to experienced. Blues, rock,
folk and folk styles. Experienced
teacher. Call Kurt at Steve Mawn.
841-0817-6
6-30
Wanted-Intratum Softball Officals; if interested call 864-3544 or stop by 208 Robinson Center, Recreation Services and ask for Mike.
6-12
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call
Licensing Aid 845-3564. ff
FOX HILL SUGREY CLINIC - abortions up to 5 weeks. pregnancy treatment. For appointment call: 9 AM to 5 PM (031) 440-109 W 10th, St. Overland Park KS 66217
CAR POOL. Haven't you been without one long enough? Kansas Union Main Lobby
Questions--call-864-4604.
6-19
Thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4476 for reservations. if
The Student Assistance Center presents:
"Luke's Little Known Logical Links to
Wednesday, June 11. 10:00-4:30,
4:30-5:19, Wesley Academic Skill Enhancement
Workshop
SERVICES OFFERED
Question: How can you have fun, meet new people or travel to a different city? All at the same time? For answer see iServe Car Pool Exchange Board. Kansas 4064 4064 Lobbies Question: How many hours do you spend in a car? 6-19
Printing Whale. You Walt is available with Alice at the House of Usher's Quick Copy office from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday; 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at 828 Mass.
The Student Assistance Center presents:
"Luke's Little Known Logical Links to
Education," Wednesday, June 11, 10:30 a.m.
210. 9139 Academic Skill Engage-
ment Workshop.
TYPING
I do damned good typing Peggy. 842-
4476. 11
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-
2003. 16
Experience c TypeI—term papers, thesis,
music; electric DII-Softcover, Proofreading,
spelling corrected. 843-9554, Mrs. Wright. ff
Experienced typist IBM Correcting Selective Quality work. Referrences available Sandy, evening and weekends 748-9818 11
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done, thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 weeks. tt
Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Thres. dissertations welcome; editing layout. Call Joan 812-917-927.
Experienced KU typet. Thesis, dissertation
turn papers, misc. IBM correcting electric
Barb, af:r: 5 p.m. 842-2310
6-9
Your originals deserve an Encore! Encore
Copy, 842-201. ff
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast, reliable.
accurate. IBM picxa cite. 842-2507
evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
fj.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-
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ff
Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selective Call. Donna. 842-2744. ff
Reports, dissatfactions, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, selfcorrect Sellecic Call Ellen or Jeannan. 841-2172. 7-31
CORE
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T.
SELL IT!
If you've got it, Kanaan
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one of the many $50 coupons.
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AD DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED HEADING: ___
Write ad here: ___
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KANSAS CLASSIFIED—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, June 9, 1980
Fire alarms and noise disturb library's silence
By Tracee Hamilton
staff reporter
Patrons and staff of Watson Library walked leisurely toward the front doors Friday afternoon, talking and laughing together. It was not closing time, it was a fire alarm.
Several alarms have been set off in the last few weeks, because of the construction work on the 55-year-old structure. The library is undergoing an 18-month, $6 million face lift to correct problems that include poor ventilation, and, ironically, emergency exits.
During the last two weeks, library users have been subjected to jackhammers, closed restrooms, and location changes. Some staff members have domed earplugs and dust masks. Yet everyone is managing to keep a sense of humor.
THE WEST CENTER staircase is being demolished, and is wrapped in plastic to keep in the dust. Signs adorning the work area read "Resume by Cristo" and "Please jackethammer."
Library staff members are voting on a design to be worn on T-shirts during renovation. Among the front-runners are "Not today, I've got a headache" and "I Survived Watson Renovation." But the noise has affected some workers and staff.
"I've had complaints about the noise," said Kyla Bonnett, Lawrence junior and student worker. "People want to know where the building is, why renovation is going on in the first place."
There are many good reasons behind revision according to Jim Rane, dean of libraries.
"We have the largest collection in the Big Eight at this time," he said. "But our physical library is very small."
THE RENOVATION, which is scheduled for completion in January, 1982, will eliminate partitions in the library and give users more open space.
Despite the false alarms, John Glinka,
associate dean of libraries, said the potential
impact is minimal.
After Friday's alarm, however, Game
teacher, reference librarian, expressed concern the
library
"in that large a building, the chances of a real emergency are not small," she said. "It bothers me."
THE FIRST ALARM was supposedly triggered by dust from construction, but one construction worker said he accidentally set the alarm off with a sleedharness.
Major changes in locations and access are listed below:
The center and east stacks are accessible through the Slavic Alce on the second floor (follow the yellow line) and the Periodicals Reading Room on the first floor (follow the black
The west stacks are accessible through the regular stack entrance on the second floor.
THE FIRST FLOOR women's restroom is closed. A restroom is accessible through the Floor.
A construction worker disposes of the remains of a Watson Library staircase. Demolition of this staircase is one of the first phases of renovation.
Protest . . .
from page 1
on the question of what, if any, crimes were committed by the protesters
KU police refused to comment on the Commencement incident pending the end of the KBI inquiry. The investigation could take more than a month.
VICKIE THOMAS, acting University general counsel, said the University police are charged by the Board of Regents to enforce state laws, municipal codes, and University policies.
"Anytime you are in a place where certain policies apply and you violate those policies, you can be asked to leave." Thomas said. "If you have, you can be charged with a criminal offense."
Members of the AFAC disagree. They maintain that the University's prohibition on banners and the Regents' policy against political advertisements violates the First Amendment.
The state affiliation of the ACLI may challenge ta University's banner policy in federal court
Daniel Wildcat, Lawrence graduate student, a member of the state ALC legal panel and one of its co-chairs.
unanimously two weeks ago to file suit against the University.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said Friday that the university would continue to prohibit banning cell phone use.
DYKES SAID HE did not think banners were inherently disruptive, but that he could only be expected to do so.
Dykes said the policy needed to be reworded.
The policy, formed in 1970, says, "Political advertisements shall not be permitted in enclosed areas of the campus devoted primarily to instruction, or in other enclosed areas during summer."
The University has included banners in the category of political advertisements and has interpreted non-political events to apply to all University-sponsored events.
Dykes said, "I think the thrust of the policy, with its reference to partisan political activities, is to keep the public informed."
KUBY, AFTER HIS arrest last year, petitioned the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors to examine the nature of anti-public education banner, prohibition at non-political events
followed the organization's principles of academic freedom.
The Academic Freedom and Tenure Committee of the AAPU submitted its report in July, 1979. It recommended that the banner policy be changed.
University Judiciary Chairman J. Hammond McNish, who last year dismissed Kuby's charge that his right to free expression as a student had been violated, said last week that his attitude about banners being inherently disruptive at University events had not changed.
"Even if it exits the virtues of motherhood, it is a disruption," the McNish said. "It takes attention."
"Free speech is in jeopardy if you allow disruption in a closed meeting."
The Blue Ribbon Committee on Freedom of Expression, which was appointed by Dykes, issued a report in April that recommended that the policy banning political advertisements at all non-political events be changed to permit all political expression as long as a disruption did
THE COMMITTEE suggested change the current Regents policy to read, "Freedom of
political expression should be protected subject only to the rights of the University to maintain order, assure the safety of individuals, protect students, and the continuity of the educational process.
However, Dykes said if the Regents changed the banner policy, it would not necessarily mean that the University's interpretation would be any less restrictive.
They had already distributed 5,000 leaflets protesting free speech restrictions.
Restriction of free speech was the concern of the 30 sympathizers and members of the ACAF who climbed to the top of the north end of Memorial Stadium at Commencement.
SHORTLY BEFORE 8 p.m., Chancellor Dykes began his address to the 2,500 people in the stadium. Seventen protesters stood between two flapwings and held an 20-foot by "3-foot" cloth banner that read, "Protect First Amendment Rights at KU."
Five minutes later, police moved toward the officers offended to take the banner from the base.
Jeff Miller, Wichita senior, said he had his
The protesters said they had agreed not to resist but to give up the banner immediately if arrested. Five minutes after arriving, officers began to make arrests.
thumb wrenched severely by an officer trying to gain control of the sign.
They arrested eight protesters from the west side of the banner. Aaron Handel, 1145 Louisiana, said an officer told him, "There are too many alumni here for this to go on."
THE POLICE TOOK the eight, some hand-cuffed, to the west side of the stadium and issued notices to appear in Municipal Court, Wildcat and Tim Miller, a teacher in religious studies, were charged with both disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing.
"Shelley Miller, a University library employee, and Rick Kirkendall, Lawrence graduate student, then unfurled a banner that read, 'Hold! We're Being Arrested.'"
When the eight were arrested and Miller and Kirkendall were taken from the stadium, the police left with them. The remaining protesters picked up the banner again.
The group held the sign for 20 minutes before the police returned.
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Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358
LAWRENCE SCHOOL OF BALLET
Kristin Manley Benjamin, Director
SUMMER CLASSES NOW ENROLLING
(Classes begin immediately and will run through July 26th)
842 Massachusetts 842-4595 205½ West 8th
(entrance from alley)
BALLET AT THE BALLET
CLASS
Beginning Adult Ballet I
Beginning Adult Ballet II
Beginning Adult Ballet III
Beginning Adult Ballet IV
Beginning Adult Ballet V
Advanced Beginning Adult Ballet
Advanced Beginning Adult Ballet
Intermediate Adult Ballet
Advanced Adult Ballet
Adult Alignment
Adult Modern Dance
Beginning Adult Jazz***
Beginning Adult Jazz II
Women's Exercise
Mon, 7:30 9 p.m.
Mon, 10:11 3 a.m.
Tues, Thurs, 5:30 7 p.m.
Mon, 5:30 7 p.m.
Mon, 5:30 7 p.m.
Mon, 11:30 1 a.m.
Tues, 7:30 9 p.m.
Fri, 5:30 7 p.m.
Mon, 11:30 7:30 9 p.m.
Mon, 5:30 7:30 9 p.m.
Mon, Wed, 7:80 3 p.m.
Mon, 10:11 3 a.m.
Wed, 7:80 3 p.m.
Wed, 7:80 3 p.m.
Tues, Thurs, 8:94
LOCATION
2015% W.8th W.
2015% W.8th W.
442 Mase
442 Mase
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*Beginning Adult Ballet II* it is for those students who have had one (or more) semesters() of Ballet.
*Beginning Adult Jazz.* It alters one previous semester of dance is required to enroll in jazz classes.
**INSTRUCTOR**
Manley
Manley
Crawford
Clark
Clark
Manley
Manley
Manley
Manley
Manley
Manley
Crawford
Frazier
Clark
Hernandez
Manley
For further information and enrollment, call 842-4595
University of Kansas
The University Daily
Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Thursday, June 12, 1980 Vol. 90, No. 145
Chemical barrels at landfill safe if rinsed. official says
By HURST LAVIANA
or AKURT THUNG
Staff Reporters
Somewhere under the pools of stagnant, bubbling water at the Douglas County Landfill lies 10 years of accumulated trash. Included in that trash are chemical drugs from weed control operations, including some that once contained the deadly herbicide 245-T.
Chuck Linn of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said the empty drums were safe as long as they had been triple-rinsed with water, which is required by federal law. If they are not rinsed, the drums could contain a highly poisonous substance, dioxin, which, according to McLaughlin of the Environmental Protection Agency, is 100,000 times as toxic as strvchine
Linn said, "I doubt that all farmers take the trouble to rinse the empty drums."
McLAUGHLIN SAID the amount of dioxin in 245-T varied from batch to batch because it was a byproduct of the manufacturing process. Dioxin occurs by accident, and the producers did not
even know it was present until it was blamed for deaths, he said.
The dangers of dioxin were exhibited dramatically in Seveso, Italy, in July 1976. An explosion at a chemical plant there discharged a thick, white cloud that contained dioxin. The cloud covered more than 1,000 acres of the town and led to the deaths of 81,000 domestic animals. The cloud also suffered from liver and endocrine damage, impaired vision, nausea and diminished sex drive.
There already is fairly significant surface water pollution at the landfill site, Linn said. Heavy rains could wash whatever is in the standing water into the river, he said.
ACCORDING TO WORKERS at the landfill, the county has, in the past, buried chemicals" in the bottoms," the low-lying area near the Kansas River.
Equipment operators at the site said they saw some drums, usually empty, come in.
K. T. Joseph, a chemist at the water and waste treatment plant in Lawrence, said the Safe Water Act required that local drinking water be tested for 24-tail at least every two years. He
said he tested the Lawrence water at least once a year and that the quantities of 245 T never had exceeded 10% of the capacity.
Joseph said he thought that even if dioxin found its way into the Kansas River, the normal water treatment operations probably would remove it.
MELAUGHLIN AGREED. He said dioxin is a large molecule that tended to cling to clay. He added that the amount of water the water purifying process, and the dioxin molecule would be removed at the same time. He said the odds of dioxin ever making it through the soil were small; it were small that they were incarcalable.
John Gobetz, who works for the Douglas County Noxious Weed Department, said the chemicals used in the fertilizer and the chemical could still be sold to persons qualified to use restricted herbicides. He said the department formerly rinsed its empty cans three times, crushed them, and then took them to the dump.
"It's generally safe, as long as you don't put it
in DIOR backpacks."
radic
CHUCK ISAACSON/Kansan staff
On a farm a few miles from the Douglas County Landfill, a collection of used herbicide dross rots the landfill. Laurance's trash can for the past 10 years, could have many dross with doxychlor, the toxic chemical used in pesticides.
NAMIBIA
Juan Romero is 87 years old and has lived in the same house for 66 years, but if a tavern opens next door he says he will have to move. The East
Lawrence Improvement Association and two of Romerus's neighbors have joined him in his fight to keep the tavern's door shut.
Legal battle joined to bar new tavern
By LAURA LUCKERT
Staff Reporter
Because Romero speaks only Spanish, he has asked his son, Valentin Romero, to fight the legal battle to prevent the city from issuing a building permit. Tom Hayden, owner of the property next door.
For Juan Romero, "no hay sitio como casa"—there's no place like home. But, after 66 years of living at 904 Pennsylvania Skt., the 87-year-old Mexican immigrant says he will be forced to move if a tavern opens 15 feet from his bedroom window.
Hayden said that only some plumbing and electrical work remained to be done on the ivy-covered limestone building on the property before the East Side Tavern would be ready for business. The building has blocked his building twice and now the neighborhood has joined to fight its opening.
THE ROMEROS; two other Pennsylvania Street residents, Henry Wilson, 946 Pennsylvania St., and Andy Wilson, 942 Pennsylvania St.; and the East Lawrence Improvement Association filed a lawsuit against the city last week.
Romero's daughter-in-law, Elizabeth, said that because of his age and his arthritis her father-in-law usually went to bed around 7 p.m. or earlier. A bar close to his bedroom window, she said, would make it impossible for him to sleep.
"I don't approve of this kind of thing at all."
Juan Romero said as his son interpreted. "Why can't he put the bar in his office?" That way it wouldn't be right next door to us."
Romero said he was concerned not only about the noise, but also was afraid that a bar would
bring street lights and shootings. He said he would move if the tavern became a reality but added it would be hard to move out of a house he had lived in for so long.
"I know everyone on the block," he said. "If I knew you, I would be confident just like when I moved to Dallas."
HAYDEN SAID that there would be no problem with the Homers living next door to the
"We have an agreement that I will plant trees and vines in between the tavern and the Romans."
There are other neighbors who are as concerned about the proposed lavern as the
Andy Wilson, who lives six houses from the proposed tavern, has organized most of the legal action against Hayden. He said that the neighbor had no personal grievance against Hayden.
"It is just that for the past two years this block
has been stalled," he said. "His street has really been trying
to stabilize."
"Many of the houses around here were vacant or very run down up until a few years ago. Recently though, many people on the block have been fixing up their places."
Wilson, who is renovating his own house, said the bar probably would not attract students, but "riffraff." He said knifings, such as those that occurred at the now-c closed Green Gable Cafe on east Eighth Street, would be the kind of problems Hayden's bar might cause.
Hayden was asked if he thought his tavern would bring "riffraf" into the area.
"No," he said, chuckling. "Riffraff in east Lawrence?"
Deportation looms as threat to Iranian students
Bv SUSANANAMNUM
Staff Reporter
Many KU Iranian students fear they may be
lost in the United States, an Iranian
student said Tuesday.
Many are spending money on lawyers to appeal their departure notices and others are disappearing into large cities, where they hope immigration officials will not be able to find them. The student, who wished not to be identified because she thought her views would be unmonoid.
But Mahmood Amani, another KU Iranian student, said, "We're not afraid; we ready for anything. If we have to go, we'll go. The only thing we want is to be of service to our country when we get back."
"We're afraid." she said.
In addition to a no-renewal policy imposed
several months ago on Iranian students' visas, the U.S. government has proposed a regulation that would place a specific date of departure on current visas. Many Iranian students have duration-ofstatus stamps, which allow them to stay until their studies are completed.
Both Clark Coan, KU director of foreign student services, and Amani said that by the fall semester, all Iranian students might have an official departure date. This could mean that they would have to leave the country at fairly short notice. Coan said, and that KU would have no more Iranian students. He said that many students normally returned to academic careers after or before their other countries such as England. But England not one of the nations considered by Iran to be at odds with the Islamic government for economic reasons.
If Iranian universities were closed, and access
to other countries were blocked, Coan said,
"Where would the students go?"
The London Daily Telegraph recently reported from Tehran that Iran's religious leaders had proposed closing the universities—traditionally political activity—for five months to two years.
Amani said he had heard only rumors on the subject, but that he would support it as a necessary means of overhauling the educational system in Iran.
One student said her parents in Iran had told her during a recent telephone conversation that a two-year shutdown had been put into effect. It is not clear how much the government is closing down the very places
But Iranian students who asked not to be in the university said that reports on closing the university were false.
where the revolution was born during Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's regime.
Another student said friends in this country bad confirmed the reports.
"This man is an anti-intellectual," she said, referring to Aatollah Khomeini, revolutionary leader, whose government has faced clashes between the nationalist Islamic groups on university campus.
Javad Dehagani, an Iranian graduate student in geology whose sister teaches at a university in Iran, said several weeks ago that the universities were still open. But he cited the volatility of Iranian campuses as a reason for past and possible future shutdowns.
Coan said that closing the universities for two years would be a blow to Iran, resulting in an educational gap and a lack of trained people to attend the university. The People's Republic of China is now plaguing the People's Republic of China.
Amani said he supported the proposed closings and other restrictions placed on individuals in Iran, calling them essentially intermediate steps on the ladder leading to a true Islamic society.
Dehagan said that he had learned in a recent letter from his father that the Iranian government was now classifying the academic fields of nursing and pharmacy, which were enrolled in humanities programs, he said, are receiving monthly checks amounting to only half the amount of money of students studying medicine.
"Iran lacks technology," he said. "The government has to build up the country, so it's only right that most of the funds sent overseas for training people who can best serve the nation."
As for recent reports that Iran is cutting off funds to students in countries that are at odds
see IRAN back page
By MARK PITTMAN
Mediator requested for police conflict
Staff Reporter
Negotiations between Lawrence city officials and the Lawrence Police Officers Association on a work agreement for the police have stalled and appear headed for mediation.
The situation is aggravated by the fact that the chief negotiators for both sides admit that they will not make compromises.
Gary Sampson, chairman of the Lawrence Police Officers Association, said yesterday "Kevin Burt, (director of personnel relations for the law enforcement) is not guilty of conflict. I don't know if I can believe him."
The minimum offer acceptable to the LPOA,
he said, is a 10 percent cost-of-living pay in-
crease.
the city insists on a multi-year agreement. All other issues are negotiable.
Burt said, 'There's been a failure to bargain in good faith. It's hard to take these 'meat and bone' issues seriously when you find them contained in a textbook.
THE WORD-FOR-WORD text of the proposal submitted by the LPOA is taken from the book titled "Critical Issues in Police-Labor and the Association of American Police Chiefs."
Burt said the LPOA's proposal would undermine management rights.
Sampson said, 'The book spoke to so much of our situation that we used it to start the negotiations. We wanted to set this on the table and say, 'These are our concerns.'
"We're not trying to undermine the authority of the Chief, that's baloney. I have heard of her before," she said.
As a result of the disagreement, a federal mediator has been requested by the city, but the
"If this happened on the street we'd call it extortion. 'Samson said.' I just wish he (Burt) would."
"There is little possibility of a strike
"We all came into this job knowing we were municipal employees and that we couldn't hire anyone to support right now for any work action, like a strike or a work slowdown. The worst thing they did was that they would kill us."
The LPOA represents 57 of 59 officers.
Weather
WARM
The weather forecast for today is sunny, hot and gusty, with winds from the south at 20-30 mph. The high should be 92, and the low 71. Wind speeds up to 70 tonight. Winds will continue to be out of the south at 10-20 mph.
Humid temperatures and partly cloudy skies will usher in the weekend. Highs Friday should be near 93, with lows in the mid-70s.
Saturday's skies will remain partly cloudy with a high near 90. Thunder showers may move into the area on Sunday, when temperatures will be in the upper 80s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Daily Kansan Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Japan's Ohira dead at 70
TOKYO—Japanese Prime Minister Masayoshi Oihara, hospitalized 12 days ago after complaining of fatigue, died yesterday of a heart attack, a hospital
Ohira was the first Japanese prime minister to die in office since World War II. His condition began to deteriorate at about noon CD and he died at home on February 12, 2003.
Because of the strength and stability of Japan's bureaucracy, Oihra's death isn't expected to have a major effect on day-to-day government. But the upcoming elections take on greater importance because that Parliament will pick Japan's new leader.
Cabinet Secretary Masayoshi Itoh became acting prime minister. He will serve in the caretaker post until the new Diet, or Parliament, is chosen June 22 in previously called elections. The new members of both houses of Parliament will select a new prime minister.
In Washington, President Carter said Ohira's death was tragic. He said the prime minister was a fine leader.
Carter said he didn't think he would attend Ohira's funeral.
Report says Fords defective
WASHINGTON—The Transportation Department has told Ford Motor Co. that an investigation indicated there were transmission defects in 16 million Ford cars and raised the possibility of the largest auto recall in history, government sources reported yesterday.
The department said last month that accidents caused by the defects may have resulted in as many as 88 deaths and hundreds of injuries.
The sources, who asked not to be identified, said Ford was notified of the initial determination in a letter sent to company officials Tuesday. The letter said the defect was in the transmission system of 1989-1979 Ford passenger cars and could cause them to slip from park to reverse without warning.
The Transportation Department had no comment on the report, except to say the legal process in the case had not been completed but that it might have an announcement within a few days.
In Detroit, Ford spokesman Chuck Gumushan said the company would prefer to withhold comment until there was an official statement from DOT.
The next step is a hearing to determine if a formal recall order should be issued by the department's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. A recall would cost Ford, the nation's No. 2 automaker, several hundred million dollars.
Budget set for House vote
WASHINGTON - House and Senate budget negotiators reached a deal to extend the holiday season budget that trims future spending for dinner and restores $390 million for daycare.
The House is expected to vote on the new compromise today, with the possibility that the long dispute over the budget could be ended by the Senate.
The compromise, proposed by House negotiators yesterday morning and accepted by Senate conferences yesterday afternoon, would put federal
The compromise budget has a projected $200 million surplus, but House Speaker P. O. Nelli Jr. told reporters that the deepening recession is a major problem for the state.
An earlier compromise $613.3 billion budget agreed upon by negotiators was defeated in the House last month after it was opposed by President Carter and O'Neill for providing too much money for defense and too little for social programs.
Although the new package leaves untouched the record pactime increase in 1981 defense outlays, it reduces by $800 million the defense budget in 1982. The increase is about 15%.
That promised future spending is distributed among various domestic programs in the compromise budget.
Kurds renew attack in Iran
Kurdish rebels lieve up a major highway bridge and an armed group fired a rocket that set fire to oil in deprived violence in a troubled area of Kirkuk.
Iran's interior minister reported a large number of people killed in recent clashes between Iranian army troops and Kurdish groups in the western省.
A Kurdish spokesman said rebels seeking greater autonomy for their province of Kurdistan blew up the Ghosttor bridge near the Turkish border yesterdays.
The spokesman, Jaili Ghadiani, said the Iranian army and air force had bombed "defenseless" Kurdish villages Monday and Tuesday. He said the air force dropped a bomb by mistake on army troops Tuesday, killing at least 80 soldiers.
Tehran radio reported that an armed group blew up the fuel depot at Salmias with a rocket-propelled grenade Tuesday night and also attacked an Iran-Europe railway station there. The first continued to burn yesterday, the grenade no mention of casualties and gave no indication who was responsible.
Poll knocks refugee policy
NEW YORK—Many Americans say the Carter administration is doing a bad job of handling the influx of Cuban refugees, largely because Americans see no clear policy for handling the massive immigration, an Associated Press-NBC News poll said.
The public does not support a completely "open door" policy, allowing anyone who wants to settle in this country to do so. The poll found an over-age majority of the voters.
More than 106,000 Cubans have flooded into Florida in the past two months as the Cuban government allowed some of its citizens to leave the country for the winter.
The Carter administration has been criticized for not setting up the proper machinery to handle the influx and for attempting to stop the "Freedom Flotilla," the fleet of private boats that swarmed to Cuba to pick up refugees.
Only 19 percent of those questioned said the Carter administration is doing an excellent or good job of handling the Cuban refugee situation. Thirty-two percent said the administration has done "only a fair job" and 44 percent said the administration has conducted the 1,615 adults interviewed nationwide by telephone May 28-30 weren't sure.
Reagan's veep list narrowed
Jimmy Carter's anti-Washington campaign in 1976 destroyed his effectiveness as president, Evans said, and that is why Willie Trump will choose him.
WASHINGTON—One of Reagan's top capita Hill operatives, Rep. Tom Huntington, is being selected in Washington politics who are being considered for Reagan's running mate.
Two weeks ago, Reagan aides said that 18 people, including two women, were Reagan's vice-presidential list.
The five are former President Gerald Ford, former U.N. Ambassador George Bush, Senate Republican leader Howard Baker of Tennessee, Sen. John Kerry, and former Gov. Rick Santorum.
Evans, chairman of Reagan's congressional steering committee, said Tuesday he has been "pointing out the pros and cons" of possible running Mr. Trump in Georgia.
Evans said he hasn't made a recommendation and the list of five could change by the time the Republican National Convention starts July 14 in New York.
Evans also mentioned Reagan campaign chairman Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., as a sixth possibility.
Daily Kansan On Campus
Museum of the History of
Mexico
Thursday, June 12
Daily Kansan
The Bank Management Clinic will be ending a three-day conference with a luncheon at noon in the Kansas Union.
An inamural slow run pit h soft ball managers' *meeting* will be at a 3:0 p.m. in 115 Robinson. The entry deadline is in 30 and can be turned in at 115 Robinson.
The Fraternal Order of Police are sponsoring their annual carnival at the Douglas County Fair Grounds Thursday and Friday from 5 p.m. to midnight and Saturday from 1 p.m. to midnight.
Registration for swimming classes will be from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday at the South Park Recreation Center.
Clark Terry, trumpet player from Count Basie's band and "The Tonight Show," will perform Thursday night at the Walt Disney Studios. The doors are $4 in advance and $$ at the door.
The Lawrence Opera House will show "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" at 9
The Parks and Recreation Department will be sponsoring a canoe trip down the North Fork River in Southern Missouri this weekend. The group will help by bus from Lawrence about 2 p.m. Friday and return Sunday evening.
p.m. Thursday night. Tickets are $2.50.
Friday and Saturday night the Blue Riddim Band will perform and tickets will be $3.
Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department and the Lawrence Tennis Association invite all students to participate in the Lawrence City Tennis Tournament this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Tournament play begins at 8 a.m. for junior matches. Adult singles matches are scheduled for 6 p.m. and mixed-double matches are scheduled for 7 p.m. The tournament will be held at the Lawrence Tennis Center located at 21st and Virginia.
The Applied English Center is holding
Fridav. June 13
Pier Picerico, organist, will give a recital at 4 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Church, 710 W. 8th St. in Topeka. The recital is free of charge.
a reception for its students from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.at Potters Pavilion
The Institute Evanson Festival will be held after the Picerno recital at 5:15 at the Grace Escolonal Church.
The SUA Friday night movie will be "The Maze." Show time is 7 p.m. and tickets are $1.50.
Off the Wall Hall will feature the New Era Begau Band both Friday and Saturday nights. Tickets will be $3.50. Saturday, June 14
The college of Liberal Arts and Sciences will begin summer orientation for freshmen.
Graduate Record Exams will be given at 8:30 a.m. in 4012 Wescoe.
A Lawrence bike auction will take place at 9 a.m. at the Judicial Law Museum Building, 10th and New Hampshire. Over 100 bikes will be auctioned.
12 openings on KU court
Twelve students are still needed to serve on the Hearing Division of the University Judiciary next year, Greg Schnacke, student body president, said.
The University Senate Executive Committee has been trying to fill the positions since April.
The Hearing Division handles complaints brought by one part of the University community against another, and the Department which has jurisdiction over the case.
The division acts as an appellate court if one party is not satisfied with the results of the original board's action, but it can hear all available evidence rather than just review the transcripts of the earlier proceedings.
Schnacke said an advertisement and a flier were being devised to attract interested students.
Any interested student is eligible, unless he is a member of the University Council or Student Senate.
The first meeting of the division will be in September. The division only meets as needed between September and October; it has its second scheduled meeting.
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University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Page 3
Draft registration stalled in Senate
From Kansan staff and wire reports
A U.S. Senate filibuster yesterday temporarily stalled a vote to renew peaceetime draft registration.
The measure already has been approved by the House and appears to be favored by a majority of the senate in voting Sen. Nancy Kassandra R-KA; the bill to include the registration of women as well as men.
The filibuster is being led by Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., an opponent of registration who wants to block a final vote on President Carter's request for four million to register approximately four million 18- and 20-year-old men.
HATFIELD HAS agreed to allow a vote on the final passage of the bill if the funding for it is reduced to $4.7 million.
Locally, KU students had opinions on Kassenbaum's argument that female registration is a "matter of simple common sense and equity."
Kerry Kapper, Lawrence graduate student, said, "I think it is too bad that the Senate didn't agree with Kassenbaum's suggestion.
"If we look at the world as a whole, the trend is that women are involved
in all aspects of the military, and I think that they should be."
Stephanie Walters, Atchison senior, said she thought it was contradictory that the government said it wanted to make headway with women's rights but did not include women in a draft registration plan.
PHYLLIES MAUTON. Merriam graduate student, said, "I favored the registration plan because we are the only country in the western world that doesn't have compulsory service. I think that everybody should have to do it. It's like taxes — all we owe something to our country."
One student, who asked not to be identified, said that it was fortunate that women would not be included in a registration plan.
"The problem is that women did not have the opportunity to make the decision," the student said. "It was by a bunch of patronizing old men."
A few students were pleased with the Senate decision.
"I'm glad it was voted down." Elizabeth Hamilton, Pelu, Peru, graduate student, said, "I'm not for the ERA and I'm not for a women'sraft either. I just don't want to have o go to war."
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Local car sales on the upswing
The automobile industry in the United States has been losing its fight with the recession, but recent declines in local interest rates have given Lawrence dealers a reason to be optimistic.
By RANDY MARTIN Staff Writer
Several Lawrence car dealers said this week that they had noticed an increase in car sales that might mean the industry is on the road to recovery.
Sales have increased to the levels of a year and a half ago, but profits still have not been sufficient to make up for the loss. The lean months of January and February are
The recent increase in the availability of money in Lawrence is the reason for increased sales, they require higher rates have made loans easier to obtain.
John Ellena, general manager of Jack
JON BOMBERGER, owner of Landmark Ford, said he felt car sales are increasing and will be stable soon.
(UPS$ 650-460) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and during June and July on each except Saturday, Sunday, and second-day postpaid class at Lawrence. Kansas 6045. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $24 a year in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $4县 outside the county. Student subscriptions are $6 per semester, paid online.
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Editor Jennifer Roblez
Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editor Oppy Chair Layout Editor Write Editor Editorial Writer Photographers Business Manager Recruit and Near-Office Sales Manager Classified and Campus Sales Manager Staff Photographer Shaft Artist Back-to-School Director Sales Representatives
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"We have felt very fortunate over the last few months," Ellen said. "We have been able to stay in the black."
One reason Ellena's dealership has been able to thwart the recent economic trend has be the new X-body car that Buick sells. Ellena said. This car comes in four engines and front wheel drive. Sales of the cars have been hull all year, he said.
The local Honda dealership, also operated by Ellena, can sell all the cars they can obtain Ellena said. When the new Honda plant in Ohio is completed and the gasefficient Honda is more efficient, the Honda dealership may have a larger supply, he said.
DARREL POSTLETHWAITE, sales manager of Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac, said customers' reluctance to buy big cars had subsided and "people
are coming out of the cupboards" after having waited to buy large cars. Many regular customers who delayed buying their cars are buying now, he said.
Used car sales are increasing, Ellena said. At the Ford, Pontiac-Cadillac, and Buck- Oldsmobile dealerships, a large number of used cars are also being traded.
Even with the recent increase in sales, inflation is still eating away dollars, and each dealer pointed out that the economy is still hurting everyone, both on the buying and selling end of the deals.
HU
But, in Kansas City, Mo., interest rates have not declined. Bill Allen, owner of Bill Allen Chevrolet, said recent legislation in Kansas allowed the interest rate ceiling to be lifted, thereby giving the banks confidence to lend more money. Missouri's interest rate ceiling is still in effect.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 12. 1980
America's native sport, rodeo, still riding high
By PAUL CARMAN Staff Reporter
He spat, patted his horse's flank and pulled his hat tight on his head.
The steer was restless. He was charming the gate and banging his broken and gargiled horns against the boards. The two men holding the gate and another man over to help close the gap in the gate.
A clown who was standing a few feet away, waiting for the steer, man and horse to come out, made a joke about this steer being a lively one. The audience did not seem to notice.
The cowboy rode his horse out of the stall to the front of the chute.
The steer still charged the gate, trying to climb the barrier the men were struggling to hold shud.
The man on the horse signaled that he was tired of waiting. He would go even if the steer was stuck.
The barrier swung open. The cowboy spurred his horse. The two animals and the man surged forward.
THE COWBoy maneuvered his horse beside the running steer, leaving almost the width of his hooves.
He slid his leg over the back of his horse and dived against the side of the steer, locking one arm around the far horn. Grabbing the other foot with his hand, he rolled the steer over its own momentum.
THE COWBODY, Bill Duvall, Checotah, Oklahoma, in four and three-tenths seconds achieved the best time in steer wrestling during the three days of the Flint Hikes Rodne last weekend in Strong City.
Davall and the other 318 entrants in the rodeo were participating in one of the United States' oldest native sports—rodeo, a remnant of the Old West.
BUT FAR FROM being only nostalgic, the rodeo riders represented a class of professional athletes in what may be the fastest-growing competitive sport in the country.
Unlike the athletes in other major sports, rodeo cowboys earn their livings with their seats in saddles, rather than in executive chairs. They do not have contracts for annual salaries.
The cowboy is often wagering more than just the recovery of the money spent on the entry fee.
the rodeo because of their meanness. Often the
murder is not only to the other men but also to the initiator.
The contestants are also pitting themselves against animals who have been chosen for use in
THE DANGER ALONE would be reason enough for most amateurs to leave rode riding to the professionals, but the decline of the rode is likely to be traced to another familiar hazard—inflation.
Willard Moody, professional calf roper from Wynnewood, Okla., said that the price of gas and the size of the purses were changing the habits of the rodeo cowboy.
"The purses just haven't kept up with inflation," Moody said. "To come up here from my home it would be about $80 in gas, so I try to save a little by riding with someone else from my area. But with the entry fee and the cost of food on the trip I still have to cut back."
Moody's solution to the inflation problem could affect the future of the small-town rods across
"I just don't go to any of the small rodeos anymore," he said.
The stove is high suburbed cowboy also nana a pragmatic outlook on his rodeo future.
"If things don't get better, I just get out of
GENE PEACOCK, former professional rodeo rider and one of the Board of Directors of the Flint Hills Rodeo, said professional cowbys traveled all year to rodeos all over the country.
the business," the former grade-school teacher said.
"It's a fast track," Peacock said, "Some cowbirds ride in four to five rodees a week."
The top riders in each event often make over $100,000 a year.
The Flint Hills Rodeo, which Moody said was average in size, offered $70 in奖金 for each event.
This guaranteed purse with the promise of more, depending upon attendance, attracted 13 contestants who are or have been world champions in their events.
ELMER STOUT, President of the Flint Hills Rodeo Association, said most of the contestants at the Flint Hills Rodeo were competing for international titles in their events.
"Not only do you have to be a professional rodeo cowboy, you have to be a professional in
Bob Mushrush, another member of the board of directors for the Flint Hills Rodeo, said, "The Board has been very supportive."
availability of high school competition and college scholarships these days."
Peacock, who rode professionally for 20 years,
said much of the profession was a family
triage.
"I've known the grandfathers of some of
the best champions. They were riding 20
and 30 years ago."
THE CHANGE from local talent to predominantly professional competition has not caused much change.
According to the rodeo association, rodeo is now one of the major sports in the United States.
"Rodeo is the major sport in our area, growing out of the ranching industry," Stout said. "But its popularity is increasing all over the country. In some areas it is as popular as baseball."
The Flint Hills Rodeo attracted over four times the population of Chase County, where it was held.
None of the five major events of the rodeo is completely safe. Bareback riding, calf roping, bronic riding, bull riding, and steer wrestling all have their own dangers, yet cowboys such as Bill Duvall, the steer wrestler, make it their profession to challenge the dangers of the ring.
[Rodeo scene] A rider is thrown off a bull during a rodeo competition. The crowd cheers enthusiastically as the rider loses control and falls to the ground.
Yelling to distract the bull in a rodeo at Strong City, a rodeo clown narrowly misses being trampled by a charging bull.
4 5
An experienced rider makes a safe exit from the chute on a massive mound of raging bull.
Entertainment
Shallow plots, vivid images entertain 3-D movie crowds
By VANCE HINER
It's all part of the 3-D movie revival that will return to Wooldruff Auditorium on Friday night when Student Union Activities presents the grade C horror film called "The Maze."
Staff Reporter
In spite of the complex-sounding title, Dan Ullman, author of the screenplay, probably got most of his inspiration for the script after watching a couple of episodes of the Howdy Doody Show. But corn and melodrama are what make this movie such a success.
ku
"Phantom of the Rue Morgue" and "Lumberjack Rabbit" have been draws crowds of New Wave sophisticates every night this year to New York City's 8th St. Plainhouse. The acting is shallow and so are the plots, but the images are deep and the atmosphere in the theater is chic.
The movie's plot centers around a young couple, Gerald and Kitty, whose engagement is interrupted by the sudden illness of Gerald's uncle in Scotland. Gerald rushes off immediately to be by his uncle's side, leaving Kitty behind. Gerald falls asleep from Gerald. He's broken the engagement by volfelong faithfulness to Kitty. Needless to say, Kitty can't leave well enough alone.
WHEN KITTY arrives at the huge gothic castle, perfect for 3-D effects, she discovers that
What follows is a hilarious barrage of objects jumping out from the screen and an explanation of human embryonic development that would make Steve Martin jealous. Something strange is lurking in the castle, frolicking in the maze, and it is well worth the wait for the final five
Gerald will have nothing to do with her. From this point on, Gerald and his various servants take turns giving each other sinister glances and the other staring at them as the shrubbery maze that is on the castle grounds.
The plot finally begins to thicken when, after Kitty has invited some of Gerald's friends to come to the castle, one of the guests discovers a amphibian-like footprint on the castle steps.
minutes of the movie when Gerald lets the audience in on the big secret.
Cumberms glasses, bizarre color combinations and the use of unnecessary action sequences to enhance effect, played a large role in the decline of 3-D movies in the late 50s. Their revelation is symptomatic of Madison Avenue's attentive to cash in on anything nostalgic.
MOST OF THE scenes in "The Maze" would not evoke much laughter if the movie were seen on television. Audience reaction and parody could be achieved with most cult films, adds to the 3-D experience.
3-D movies also fit in nicely with the current New Wave rebellion against the slick, swipe and super trends that dominated the 76s. 3-D movies are an important part of contemporary architects, that's good. This is especially true at a time when, in spite of millions spent by record producers and film directors, the public is often
Unfortunately, for those who like to be at the forefront of trends and fashion, 3-D is arriving a little late in the Midwest. The fad is six months old in New York City and by the time it catches on in Kansas the folks on the coasts will have a lot more choice. You can wear masses. But, if you are quick, you could be the first on your block to have a pair of Hollywood-3-D deep-sea glasses. Get em while they're hot.
Carnival still on road after 72 years of fun
By VANCE HINER
Staff Reporter
“When we go into a restaurant with our uniforms on, we get served last,” the man said as he blow a stream of cigarette smoke from his pipe and sat in the bars, the waitresses act like we’re not there. But I wouldn’t trade this life for anything. Carnival people stick together. We’re on one big team.”
The Show of Tomorrow carnival pulled into Lawrence on Tuesday for a six-day stint at the Douglas County Fair Grounds. It's just a fun occasion, the annual tour of 28 cities in the South and Midwest.
Rows of neon-lit counters manned by pacing, fast-talking "carneys," as they're called in the business, formed a makeshift entertainment market. Some rides, the Spider, Rock-O-Plane and the Eli DeLuxe Scramble were some of the more popular games. Tuesday was a slow night, according to the carneys, even though the grounds were full of
"THEY'RE HERE, but they're just not buying tonight," said a man at a dart board game. "The kids must be saving their allowances for the weekend."
The couple shook their heads and smiled. The man laughed and looked ahead for the camera.
As a young couple stroiled through the grass, a man at the dart-throwing counter said, 'Hey, show the beautiful lady what you can do. Give it a try. You win even if you
At the next counter a light brown rat rushed around a roulette wheel twice before dropping
OVER THE DIE of voices, a man could be heard saying, "Twenty-five cents on the color
and you win a doll. We treat the rats well.
They have wonderful working hours and two bodyguards to sleep with them every night so nobody poisons them."
After the rat fell into a blue hole, a woman frowned and walked away. Her quarter was swept off of the game board. The rat was stung by the steel and put in a wire cage with several others.
"We get lots of flack from the Humane Society about this," the man said. "But they spend $20 million a year just to put unwanted animals to sleep."
'I love these rats and I make sure they get 'love and cared for. I don't see what's so bad about them.'
A woman who was working at the roulette counter asked the man to take over so she could talk to her crying daughter. The little girl had a headache but her mother said she was in the way.
"I THINK THIS is really one of the best places you can raise a child," the mother said. "There's plenty of fresh air and they can learn so much about people. Actually, the only problem is that if you don't watch out, kids will learn too much."
The mother and the man standing next to her had deep tans that seemed very dark under the soft, fluorescent lights. They were the only woman the was only unpleasant part of their job.
"When business is good, though, it's great," the man said. "After a while you get pretty busy and don't want to do that."
Few people see as much of the United States as carnival people. They are confined to small streets.
"I like to compare it to gypsy life," the man said as he spun the wheel again. "I guess you could say that we're modern-day gypsies. It is us, once it is once in your blood, you can't give it up."
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Page 5
KUMC staff increase eases nursing shortage
By MARLIN BERRY
Staff Reporter
Higher pay and a $25,000 media campaign have eased but not solved the nursing shortage at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
The addition of Bell Memorial Hospital to the Med Center was one cause of the shortage. However, a staff increase of 101 this year will bring the Med Center closer to a full staff than it has been in four years.
Some night shifts are still short of help, but the 110 new staff members should remedy the shortage when they complete an orientation session this week. Mary Amm Eisenbise, director of Nursing Services, said recently.
Summer student help and volunteer assistants will also be used to bring the Med Center closer to a full staff. The Med Center will lose student help in September and will again face a struggle to find nurses, Eigenbise said.
THE SHORTAGE of nurses at the Med Center caused nurses to work overtime and extra shifts to operate all medical units of the hospital.
In July, 1979, the Med Center adopted differential pay shifts to attract more nurses to working late shifts, Eisenbise said.
Nurses working the evening shift, 3 to 11 p.m., make five percent more than nurses who work the day shift. On the
night shift, 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., the increase is 10 percent.
"The differential pay has helped somewhat," Eisenbise said, "but it's still hard to get nurses to work evenings."
NURSES ARE mainly in their early 20s, Eisenbise said, and sometimes their ages causes scheduling problems.
"The younger nurses want more free time," she said. "They want to work in the day so many choose to work in offices or school care practices."
The Med Center also launched a media campaign in October to try to recruit nurses.
Only six new nurses were hired from a $25,000 promotional campaign that included hiring a consultant, advertising on radio and in newspapers, and sending posters and pamphlets to nursing schools nationwide.
Beth McPherson, assistant director of University Relations for the Med Center, said they planned to continue to use media programs to recruit nurses in an effort to keep up with the need for new nurses.
"I's really hard to tell how many new new staff members were hired due to the campaign because the turd was so successful so is great." McPheron said.
BONNIE HOWARD, acting executive administrator for the Kansas State
Board of Nursing in Topeka, said that she thought the nursing shortage was the result of a change in attitude."
"I think nursing used to be a status position much like a public school teacher. Howard said. "However, nurses also need to be led to the overall decline in nurses."
"Most of them would like to have hours that correspond to their husbands," she said.
Eisenbise said many nurses were married to men who worked during the day.
The School of Nursing also admitted 43 more students to the program last fall to try to relieve the shortage. The student enrolment has been increased by 25.
But Eisenbise said the increase would not completely alleviate the shortage because nurses left the Med Center so they can work during the day.
She said it took about three nursing graduates to retain one registered nurse.
Although hospitals across the nation have continued to battle to maintain full nursing staffs, enrollment at Kansas nursings school has been increasing.
"All 12 schools that produce licensed and registered nurses in Kansas have maintained a steady enrollment with no cases of illness in many cases an increase." Howard said.
Dorms house summer campers
By CHICK HOWLAND Staff Reporter
All but one of the KU residence halls have been turned into revenue-generating hotels for the summer. They now house everything from a bank management clinic to a science fiction workshop.
Summer tenants will pay an estimated $500,000 to rent in the residence halls, but with operating expenses totaling about $10 million, the company has the major source of income, J. Wilson, director of housing, said this week.
"It helps with maintenance and service bills," Wilson said. "It's obviously something we want to encourage. We could stand more."
BUT WILSON said all groups must
have good reasons for wanting to use the residence halls.
"Our test is that a group has to have an educational connection with the University," he said.
Wallace R. May, director of conferences and centers, said the recent bankers clink brought over 700 bankers too large to be housed at local hotels.
Programs such as the American Legion Boys' State have been bringing programs to KU and the residence halls for more than 10 years, he said. Boys' State paid $40,000 for room and board for a week-long stay.
At Oliver Hall, the only residence hall to open students during the summer, the atmosphere is more studious than during the school year. Jane Tuttle, Oliver director, said she thinks students are a little more serious in the summer.
"THERE IS A real difference during summer school," Tuttle said.
"A lot of students study a lot. My experience has been that people are more academically oriented in summer school."
Another difference Tuttle noticed in the summer is the amount of foreign and older students living at Oliver.
"The vast majority of residents are way over 20 which is unusual for a residence hall," she said.
There are now 291 students living in Oliver, about half the figure for the regular school year.
Tuttle estimated that 75 percent of those living at Oliver during the summer were foreign students.
"They all want to live with a native American speaker," Tuttle said. "There just aren't enough to go around."
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 12. 1980
W
Sarr
NELSON Sarc
Look at this... even more items
AMPS/TUNERS
JVC AS-3 / 20 watt channel amp.
Lists at $149.95. CHOPPED TO $49.88
JVC AS-5 / 30 watt/channel amp.
Lists at $179.95. CHOPPED TO $79.88
SANYO Plus C-55/P-55 / 100 watt/channel pre amp/power amp combination.
Lists at $749.90. CHOPPED TO $299.88
SANYO Plus T-55 / Preset Digital Tuner.
Lists at $399.95. CHOPPED TO $179.88
SANSUI AU-317 / 50 watt/channel amp.
Lists at $349.95. CHOPPED TO $149.88
SANSUI TU-717 / Tuner.
Lists at $369.95. CHOPPED TO $199.88
JVC AX-5 / 70 watt Super A amp with MC Coil input.
Lists at $449.95. CHOPPED TO $199.88
JVC TX-5 / Duluxe component tuner.
Lists at $299.95. CHOPPED TO $129.88
JVC JAS-22 / 40 watt DC amp with power meters.
Lists at $239.95. CHOPPED TO $79.88
SANYO PLUS A-35 / 50 watt amp w/MC cart input and LED power meters.
Lists at $349.95. CHOPPED TO $149.88
SANSUI A40 / 25 watts w/power meter.
Lists at $179.95. CHOPPED TO $79.88
SANSUI A80 / 45 watts with LED meter.
Lists at $229.95. CHOPPED TO $99.88
SANSUI TU 517 / Component tuner with rack mount handles.
Lists at $229.95. CHOPPED TO $169.88
FISHER FM2121 / Component tuner.
Lists at $229.95. CHOPPED TO $99.88
FISHER CA-2420 / 80 watt DC amp w/graphic equalizer and power meters.
Lists at $649.95. CHOPPED TO $199.88
TURNTABLES
FISHER 225 XA / Record changer w/magnetic cartridge.
Lists at $99.95
SONY PS-X30 / Semi-automatic quartz, direct drive.
Lists at $249.95
SONY PS-X40 / Fully-automatic quartz, direct drive.
Lists at $299.95
SONY PS-X50 / Semi-automatic quartz, direct drive.
Lists at $349.95
TECHNICS SL-235 / Belt drive changer.
Lists at $179.95
ADC Accutrack / computerized turntable WITH cartridge.
Lists at $599.95
SANYO PLUS Q25 / Quartz locked semi-automatic direct drive.
Lists at $209.95
SANYO PLUS Q40 / Direct drive, quartz locked, fully automatic.
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TECHNICS SL-3550 / Direct drive record changer.
Lists at $239.95
CHOPPED TO $29.88
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All Texas Instrument Calculators 10% OFF! Nelson's carry the full line of business, office and scientific calculators.
1
RECEIVERS
ADVENT 300 / 15 watts per channel.
Lists at $289.95 ... CHOPPED TO $99.88
BOSE Special Control Receiver with 100 watts per channel.
Lists at $659.95 ... CHOPPED TO $399.88
BOSE 550 / 60 watts per channel.
Lists at $379.00 ... CHOPPED TO $199.88
FISHER RS 2002 / 20 watts per channel with graphic equalizer.
Lists at $279.95 ... CHOPPED TO $199.88
FISHER RS 2003 / 30 watts per channel with graphic equalizer.
Lists at $349.95 ... CHOPPED TO $249.88
FISHER RS 2004A / 45 watts per channel wigraphic equalizer and power meters.
Lists at $429.95 ... CHOPPED TO $299.88
JVC JR-S501 / 120 watt receiver with graphic equalizer and power meters.
Lists at $729.95 ... CHOPPED to $399.88
SANYO PLUS 55 / 55 watts digital receiver.
Lists at $449.95 ... CHOPPED TO $249.88
SANYO PLUS 75 / 75 watts digital receiver.
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SANYO 2033 / 33 watts per channel.
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SANYO 2050 / 50 watts per channel.
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SANYO JCX 2800 / 120 watt receiver.
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SONY STR-V4 / 55 watts per channel.
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SONY STR-212 / 15 watts per channel.
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HOME ACCESSORIES & AUDIO FURNITURE
JVC HM-100E Headphones
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KOSS Tech 2 Headphones
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SANYO Plus-E55 / Audio Program Timer.
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SANYO Plus N55 / Super D tape noise reduction system.
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FIDELITONE / Deluxe record cleaning systems.
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JVC SEA 20 / 7-band graphic EQ.
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JVC SEA 50 / 10-band graphic EQ.
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JVC LK-500 / for receiver, cassette deck, turntable & records.
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O'SULLIVAN AR-161 / EIA Rack
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O'SULLIVAN AR-183 / Low-boy style w/casters.
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O'SULLIVAN AR-187 / for records, turntable and receiver with casters
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O'SULLIVAN AR-188 / full size cabinet w/glass door and casters.
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O'SULLIVAN AR-189 / full size cabinet w/3 shelves, glass door & casters.
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O'SULLIVAN CW-340 / for records, receiver and turntable.
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O'SULLIVAN DC-912 / a full wall of shelves.
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SANYO AR-200 / full size cabinet w/moked glass door.
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HOME STEREO SPEAKERS
*PRICED IN PAIRS
ALTEC SANTANA / 12" two-way floor standing system.
Lists at $659.90 . . . . . CHOPPED TO $359.88
ALTEC MODEL NINETEEN / 15"two-way Voice-of-the-Theater.
Lists at $1799.90 . . . . . CHOPPED TO $999.88
FISHER MS 125A / two-way speaker system.
Lists at $179.95 . . . . . CHOPPED TO $59.88
FISHER MS 145A / three-way speaker system.
Lists at $279.95 . . . . . CHOPPED TO $69.88
FISHER ST 420 / 8" two-way passive system.
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FISHER ST 430 / 10" three-way passive system, "Best Buy"
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FISHER ST 440 / 12" three-way floor standing speakers.
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FISHER ST 450 / 12" four-way system.
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FISHER ST 460 / 15" four-way system.
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JVC ZERO 3 / 3-way system w/ribbon tweeter.
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ADVENT LVinyl / The famous small Advent speakers.
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ADVENT New Utilities / The famous large Advent speakers.
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ADVENT Powered Speakers w/built-in amp.
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FISHER MS-115A / Two-way speaker system.
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COMPACT MUSIC SYSTEMS
FISHER MC 4010 / AM/FM receiver with built in 8-track recorder & two full range speakers.
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HITACHI SDT 9210H / AM/FM receiver with turntable and cassette recorder and full range speakers.
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HITACHI ADP 9510H / Deluxe AM/FM receiver w/turntable, 8-track recorder and speakers.
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HITACHI SDT 9610H / Deluxe AM/FM receiver with turntable, cassette recorder and speakers.
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VIDEO
HITACHI I44/1 '91 & BW acid dc with car cord.
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HITACHI P-50 / 12" black & white.
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HITACHI I61 & P-82 / 12" BW acid dc with car cord.
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JVC P-100AE / Mini portable w/AM/FM radio.
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PANASONIC PU-2200 / 4-hour VHS video-cassette recorder.
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SANYO VCR-5000 / 5-hour Beta Video-cassett erecorder.
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SONY KV-1208 / 12" color TV.
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SONY KV-1912 / 19" color TV.
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SONY KV-284R / 26" color console w/remote control.
Lista at $1199.95. . CHOPPED TO $949.88
2319 Louisiana Lawrence, KS. 66044 1-841-3775
master charge
THE INTERMARK CARD
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Page 7
ifices ARE ALMOST OVER!
are on the price chopping block!
TAPE DECKS
JVC KDA2 / Front loading cassette
Uses 700/700 EK
Lists at $179.95 . CHOPPED TO $129.88
JVC KDA3 / Front loading deck with metal tape capability.
Lists at $299.95 . CHOPPED TO $149.88
JVC KDA5 / Front loading deck with metal tape capability & 2 motors.
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JVC KDA 8 / Front loading cassette deck wfully computerized bias and EQ.
Lists at $749.95 . CHOPPED TO $449.88
JVC KD 1770 MKII / Top loading cassette deck w/LED & 2 noise reduction systems.
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JVC KD 3030 / Front loading cassette with 2 noise reduction systems and solenoid controls.
Lists at $399.95 . CHOPPED TO $299.88
SANYO PLUS D45 / Front loading deck widigitron display, metal tape and memory.
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SANYO PLUS D55 / Front loading deck widigitron display, metal tape and memory.
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SANYO PLUS D60 & D62 / Front loading cassette decks widigitron display, metal tape capability and AMSS.
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SANYO PLUS D65 / Deluxe front loading auto-reverse deck.
Lists at $469.95 . CHOPPED TO $299.88
SONY TCK35 / Front loading receiver styled cassette deck.
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SONY TCK 65 / Front loading cassette deck w/LED meters, metal tape capability and programmable functions.
Lists at $549.95 . CHOPPED TO $349.88
JVC KD-A77 / 3-head metal tape cassette deck.
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PIONEER RH-65 / Dolby-8-track recorder.
Lists at $259.95 . CHOPPED TO $99.88
CAR ACCESSORIES
CONCEPT PB6000G / small chassis 60 watt booster w/bass & treble.
CONCEPT PB80000 / small chassis 60 watt booster wbass & treble.
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CONCEPT EQ8070G / 50 watt booster w/7-band equalizer & front/rear fader.
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TANCREDI TE80 / 60 watt booster w/7-band equalizer, fader & 10 power LEDs.
Lists at $149.95 ... CHOPPED TO $79.88
ANTENNACRAFT AFM-2 / FM antenna booster.
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PIONER AD-360 / 140 watt power amplifier.
Lists at $199.88 ... CHOPPED TO $99.88
PIONER AD-991 / Noise filter kit.
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PANASONIC CJ-3600 / 5-band 30 watt equalizer/booster with LED.
Lists at $129.95 ... CHOPPED TO $39.88
TANCREDI TE-70 / 60 watt 7-band EQ/booster withfront-rear fader & power meters.
Lists at $119.95 ... CHOPPED TO $59.88
Sony & Scotch Tape
Scotch
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LIMIT 1
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M
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Stereo Cartridges
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audio-
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CAR STEREO
IN-DASH
MARUME M-8000/8400 / AM/FM Stereo 8-track.
Lists at $119.95. CHOPPED TO $39.88
MOTOROLA TF-880 / AM/FM/pushbutton 8-track w/4-way fader.
Lists at $169.95. CHOPPED TO $59.88
PANASONIC CQ-4600 / AM/FM/pushbutton 8-track w/4-way fader.
Lists at $239.95. CHOPPED TO $69.88
PANASONIC CQ-6800 / AM/FM/pushbutton cassette w/4-way fader.
Lists at $239.95. CHOPPED TO $79.88
SANYO F-8708 / In-dash AM/FM pushbutton stereo radio.
Lists at $99.95. CHOPPED TO $39.88
TANCREDI TC-2000 / AM/FM cassette.
Lists at $119.95. CHOPPED TO $39.88
PIONEER TP-7007/TP9005/TP9006 / Deluxe pushbutton AM/FM/8-track stereo.
Lists at $239.95. CHOPPED TO $99.88
AUDIOVOX ID 425 / AM/FM 8-track with four way fader.
Lists at $139.95. CHOPPED TO $39.88
AUDIOVOX ID 610 / AM/FM cassette with fast forward, rewind & four-way fader.
Lists at $149.95. CHOPPED TO $39.88
AUDIOVOX ID 625 / Deluxe AM/FM cassette w/o auto reverse
Lists at $179.95. CHOPPED TO $119.88
PIONEER KPX 9500 / AM/FM Supertuner cassette w/Dolby. Requires amp.
Lists at $329.95. CHOPPED TO $199.88
SANYO FT4C / AM/FM cassette deck for small cars.
Lists at $99.95. CHOPPED TO $69.88
SANYO FT 489 / Deluxe AM/FM cassette w/fast forward, rewind & auto reverse.
Lists at $209.95. CHOPPED TO $149.88
SANYO FT 869 / 950 AM/FM 8-track.
Lists at $149.95. CHOPPED TO $69.88
UNDER-DASH
PIONEER TP 727 / 8-track.
Lists at $119.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $49.88
SANYO FT402 / Cassette w/fast forward and reverse
Lists at $69.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $39.88
SANYO FT606 / cassette w/fast forward, rewind and auto reverse
Lists at $109.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $69.88
SANYO FT 607 / cassette w/fast forward, rewind and FM.
Lists at $139.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $79.88
SANYO FT 1001 or 1003 / 8-track w/bass and treble control.
Lists at $99.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $39.88
SANYO FT 1405 / Cassette w/locking fast forward and rewind w/oauto reverse.
Lists at $179.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $99.88
PANASONIC CX-1200 / 8-track.
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PANASONIC CK-5200 / Cassette w/fast forward & rewind.
Lists at $99.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED TO $49.88
PANASONIC CX-7200 / Cassette w/oauto reverse, fast forward & rewind.
Lists at $139.95 . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPPED to $69.88
All CBs & accessories... 50% OFF!
CUSTOM INSTALLATION AVAILABLE FROM THE NELSON PROFESSIONALS
QUANTITIES LIMITED TO STORE STOCK...AND AVAILABILITY VARIES FROM STORE TO STORE
CAR SPEAKERS
*PRICED IN PAIRS
PIONEER P101 / 4" full range door speakers.
Lists at $28.95...CHOPPED TO $9.88
PIONEER T S9 694 / 6x9 20 oz. coaxials.
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PIONEER 162 DX / Deluxe 6½" 20 watt door speakers.
Lists at $59.95...CHOPPED TO $29.88
PANASONIC EAB 920 / 6x9 four-way 100 watt speaker system.
Lists at $159.95...CHOPPED TO $89.88
SANYO SP 708 / 4" full range door speakers
Lists at $25.95...CHOPPED TO $11.88
SANYO SP 733 / 6½" coaxial door speakers.
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SANYO SP 737 / 6½" triaxial door speakers.
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SANYO SP 738 / 6½" Highpower triaxials.
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ALL Craig SPEAKERS
List to $129.95...CHOPPED TO $19.88
JENSEN J-1113/C-9943 / 5 x 7 Coaxial kit.
Lists at $74.95...CHOPPED TO $29.88
JENSEN J-1124/C-9999 / Triaxial kit.
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JENSEN J-1108 / 4 x 10 Coaxials.
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MOTOROLA D35W / 3½" in-dash speakers.
Lists at $29.95...CHOPPED TO $9.88
MOTOROLA G920C / 6 x 9/120 coaxials
Lists at $109.95...CHOPPED TO $19.88
CONCEPT CP 8168 / Phase Two 5¼" 3-way.
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JENSEN J1044 / Add-on tweeter midrange kit.
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JENSEN J1117 / 3½" dash speakers.
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JENSEN J1134 / 4x6 dash speakers.
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TELEPHONES ANSWERERS RADIOS-TAPE PLAYERS
SONY TCM 757 / Portable cassette recorder.
Lists at $99.95.
SONY TR 3230 / AM pocket radio.
Lists at $99.95.
SONY ICF 7280W / Deluxe AM/FM portable radio w/stone control.
Lists at $49.95.
SONY TFM 7720W / Portable AM/FM radio.
Lists at $39.95.
SONY ICF 9830 / AM/FM table radio.
Lists at $49.95.
SONY ICF 9830 / AM/FM table radio.
Lists at $49.95.
ADVENT 400 Radio / w/Advent 400 speakers.
Lists at $139.95.
CODE-A-PHONE Model 1000 / telephone answerer.
CHOPPED TO $49.88
CODE-A-PHONE Model 1200 / telephone answerer.
CHOPPED TO $79.88
CODE-A-PHONE Model 1400 / Remote telephone answerer.
Lists at $239.95.
JVC RC-343 / Portable cassette w/AM/FM radio.
Lists at $129.95.
PIONEER SK-1 / AM/FM stereo cassette portable.
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PIONEER RK-306 / AM/FM cassette portable.
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PIONEER RK-306 / AM/FM/TV cassette portable.
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PANASONIC RF-2200 / AM/FM Portable w/xix Shortwave bands.
Lists at $199.95.
SONY ICF-C1GW / Clock Radio.
Lists at $54.95.
CHOPPED TO $39.88
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Cut Yourself in
NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
ALEXANDER HARRIS
Snyder planning to win 45th District
By DAN TORCHIA Staff Reporter
Kent Synder
Kent Snyder began his campaign Monday with little fanfare. There were no hot lights or cameras that one might expect with a declaration of candidacy. But the fact is, he was mostly a family and friends, watched as he read a short but firm announcement.
So when voters in the 45th district see a young cherubic face appear at their door, they should not be surprised when Snyder, 21, tells them he is a candidate for the Kansas House of Representatives.
He is serious and he plans to win.
He is serious and he plans to win.
“It’s going to be tough, no doubt,
he said the day after his
announcement. “We are going to
hive to win.”
Snyder, an area reactor and part-time KU student, is challenging Democratic incumbent John Solbach, who is completing his first term. But first he must beat Glenn McGee, former director of August 5 McGleigh, 63, former director of the physics and astronomy lab at KU, announced his candidacy in April.
THE RACE IN THE 45th district could prove to be one of the more exciting legislative races in the county. John Lungsturm, head of the Republican McGoule, Douglas county, said another McGoule on Snyder could win in the fall election.
"Either one of them would serve excellently," Lungsturm said. "The district could easily be won by a Republican."
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1980-1981 COORSCAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE
Campus coordinator for the Adolph Coors Company. Responsible for college promotions public relations, advertising and marketing on campus.
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Name___
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But could Snyder's age hinder his chances?
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"By itself, age is not a factor," he said. "It is not so much age as what kind of representative the candidate will be."
"The party leaders always say that the Republican Party intends to be a party of youth," Snyer said. "We are going to see if they really mean it."
Snyder faces several obstacles. He must first convince Republican voters that he—not McGonagle—can beat Soacha. But McGonagle has been called out repeatedly, better known, since he has been connected with the University for 23 years.
Even if Snyder wins the primary, he still must convince voters, Republican and Democrat alike, that he can do a better job than Solbach. Solbach thinks he can do it. He said Solbach's voting did not reflect the wishes of the people.
"It seemed like he went out and talked to people during the campaign and then went to Topeka and quit doing it," he said.
Solbach disagrees with both statements.
SNYDER ALSO said Solbach is against a state spending bill, something he said voters have indicated they wanted. And the Landlord Tenant Act, which Solbach is best known for, is Solbach's control over the landlords of Lawrence," he said.
"We voted on several state spending
Solbach said the purpose of the Landford-tenant Act is to protect dutiful landlords against frivolous landslides while providing a meaningful remedy for tenants when a landlord neglected his property.
A VERSION of the bill died in the last session of the legislature. This summer an interim committee study of the bill may be moved to see if a workable bill can be devised.
"The problem with the bill is that it is complex," Solbach said. "It may not be workable."
Solbach was not officially announced his candidacy for re-election. He may do so next week, he said. But, instead of going the normal course, and paying the $50 filing fee, he is gathering signatures from voters.
"I think they want me to run again, so I will," he said.
All three candidates are using the same strategy of going out and talking to the voters. Snyder said it was the time that he knew what the people were concerned about.
"A representative needs to be open enough to help and be concerned," he said. "Different issues will come and go as a representative must always listen."
Snyder's main concern is "making ends meet," which he said is the main issue of the campaign. He said that the
"We have to have some commitment for the future," he said.
TAXES ARE directly connected with making ends meet, he said. Snyder a member of the National Taxpayers Union, which advocates a "common sense approach to taxes," is in favor of the sales tax on food purchases.
legislature had to be financially responsible every day.
Solbach also agreed with the repeal of the tax, and voted for it when it came up in the last session.
"It is one of our most regressive
titles," he said. "If we are going to remove a tax, that is where we should look first."
Why should people be taxed on something as basic as food?" he said. "People could save a lot of money in a restaurant if did not have to pay the extra money."
lids during the session," he said. "I voted for some, and against some. I voted against the spending lids that would hurt this community."
Taxes and spending lads aside, a question voters have to decide is, whether Solbach has done a good enough job to warrant another term. Another question is can someone else do better.
"The voters are going to have to decide who is the best man for the job," Solbach said. "It is going to be a challenge. I'm looking forward to it."
"We have the desire and the en-
thusiasm," Snyder said. "We are going to have to strike an imaginative chord with the voters."
Efforts to contact McGonigle were unsuccessful.
MARY JEFFERSON
CITY HALL
The Mens Shop
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This offer is made and limited to one student of the university. The student must make only to areas where delivery is made by a carrier or other means.
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928 MASSACHUSETTS
DOWNTOWN
University Daily Kansan, June 12.1980
Page 9
Professor forecasts busy tornado season
The increased tornado activity in Kansas this summer probably is the result of jet stream patterns, rather than the Ml. St. Helens eruptions, Joe R. Eagleman, professor of meteorology, said this week.
Jet stream patterns are high-altitude wind patterns. The jet stream patterns looked as if they would yield a busy tornado season even before the Mt. St. Helen's volcanic activity began, Eagleman said.
Measurements are still being taken to try to determine what effect volcanic eruptions have on the number of torgades. Eagleman said,
Fred Opsby, a spokesman for the National Severe Storm Forecast center, said Wednesday that 23 torrents have flooded in Kansas during May of this year.
Only 14 tornadoes hit Kansas in May of 1979, and no tornadoes were reported this year until May. Osoby
said. So far, no tornadoes have been reported this month, he said.
Twenty-nine tornadoes hit Kansas during 1979, Osprey said. Eagleram said the average number of tornadoes for Kansas was 48 per year. Most of them occur during the spring and early summer, Eagleram said.
Despite the tornado that touched down in Eudora recently, most students interviewed said they were very worried about the tornado season.
Sheryl Lynn Armstrong, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said tornado season was routine. "It happens every year," she said.
Carol Brown, Garden City sophomore, said she wasn't too worried about tomadares, so long as she was in a secure building.
"It scares me to drive across the state when there have been tornado sightings," she said.
By LESLIE SPANGLER
System broadcasts KU classes
the University of Kansas is offering Telenet college courses during the summer semester.
Staff Reporter
Telenet is an educational communication system sponsored by the six Kansas Regents institutions and operated by Kansas State University's Division of Continuing Education. The purpose of the program is to educate students in providing their education without attending a university or college.
There are 29 Telenet classrooms located across the state. Besides those at the six state universities, there are classrooms in 23 towns such as Chanute, Goodland, Ottawa, Paola and Topeka.
"THE PEOPLE who enroll in Teletent courses are really just interested in learning more," said Christ Ostrism, Teletent monitor. "We are offering one class, a real estate ethics class, that is taking the course to learn more."
In Lawrence, the classroom is at 645
The bus leaves 9th and
Massachusetts streets at 10, 30 and
50 minutes past the hour from 6:50 a.m. to
5:10 p.m.
It leaves the Kansas Union to Oliver and Eldsworth Halls on the hour and at 20 and 40 minutes past the hour from 7 a.m. to 5 20 p.m.
The KU on Wheels bus service will run only from downtown to Campus and residence halls this summer.
It leaves Oliver Hall to Elsworth Hall at 8, 28 and 48 minutes past the hour from 7:08 a.m. to 5:28 p.m.
Bus service reduces route
The bus leaves Ellsworth Hall to Campus at 15, 35 and 55 minutes past the hour from 7:15 a.m. to 5:35 p.m.
It leaves the Union for downtown at 2,
22 and 42 minutes past the hour from
7:22 a.m. to 5:42 p.m.
Kinko's
Kinko,2
Attention KU Profs!
Kinko's now has Prof. Publish available at no cost to you.
Just leave your class readings with us and we'll prepare a composite booklet which your students can buy directly from us at low cost.
8:30 to 6:00 Mon-Fri 10:00 to 5:00 Sat
842-9010
Each classroom is equipped with an amplified telephone system, linking each Teletet location with the instructor. A microphone is used so that the students may ask questions and discuss the lectures with students in a two-way communication is intended to memorize the instructor's physical absence.
New Hampshire St. The Topper
classroom is in the Staff Development
Training Center in the Feldman
Building at the Tooneka State Hospital
"I imagine it's probably very boring at those places where the instructor isn't present," said Ellen Koppes, a senior, who is enrolled in the physical education class. "I think it's more enjoyable when the instructor is around."
Nine courses will be offered by the Telnet Network this summer. Two, Adaptive Physical Fitness and Jazz Music Education, will be broadcast from KU, while the other seven will come from K-State.
ACCOUNTING TO OSTorm, the typical enrollment for a Telenet class is five people, but can vary between two and nine. A minimum of two students is required for each course to keep the location open.
Did You Know K.U. Student Senate Has A Health Insurance Plan Available For Students At Special Rates? LONE STAR GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN
To enroll in a Telentel course, a student can phone or mail in an application, or attend the first or second day of classes. You will be paid by credit card or personal check.
Douglas S. Goracke
Lone Star Student Agent
843-4455
Lone Star Insurance Company
1-800-527-0519
Policy has been approved by Student Senate for 1980-81 school year, effective Fall 1980.
Applications will be available during Fall 1980 enrollment at Allen Field House.
LOOK FOR THE GROUP HEALTH INSURANCE TABLE IN ALLEN FIELD HOUSE
This Group Health Insurance Plan is the same as the 1979-80 plan, but the contract will be carried by Lone Star instead of Blue Cross/Blue Shield. Current holders of the Group Health Plan are advised to call Doug Goracle for information about continued coverage in 1980-81.
Genuine leather Sunjuns® by Bass® Naturally cool, cushioned comfort in an ever popular style.
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Open Sunday 1-5
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Thursday 9:30-9
819 Massachusetts
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts 842-3963
UPSTAIRS
ALL REGULAR
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All
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Assorted
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Ends June 14th
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Live 7:30 and 9:40
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
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Downtown 843-9788
New Showing
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Eve. 7.30 and 9.30
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Downtown 843-1068
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Staring Clint Eastwood, Sandra Locke
Eve. 7.30 and 9.40
Hillcrest
6th & Iowa 842-8400
Starts Friday
1. Urban Cowboy
Staring John Trapple
Eve. 7.15 and 9.40
New Showing
2. The Long Riders
Staring the Reach Brothers and
the Corridor Brothers
Eve. 7.30 and 9.30
Starts Friday
3. Wholly Moses
Staring Buddy Moore
Eve. 7.40 and 9.30
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311th & Iowa 842-8400
Starts Friday
1. Mary Poppins
Eve. 7.00 and 9.30
Starts Friday
2. The Shining
Staring Jack Nicholson
Eve. 7.15 and 9.45
Sunset
West 6th St. 843-9717
Now open 7 days a week
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Starting Saturday
The Jerk
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Shows start at dusk
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SUA FILMS
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THE Maze
3-D Glasses Provided Friday, June 13, 7:00 $1.50 WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
42
Page 10
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Marcum says budget in black Sports anticipat Marcum
Sports
The KU Athletic Corporation will end the fiscal year in the black despite exceeding its budget by more than $70 million. The KU Athletic Director, said last month.
A spending excess of $275,000 has been projected yesterday by both the Kansas City Times and the Associated Press wire service.
Marcum conceded expenditures exceeded their budgets by a total of $250,000, but said all these expenditures were "absolutely essential."
HE SAID he had authorized the expenditures himself.
"With both football and basketball, we run out of money before the end of the season. What were we supposed to do?" he rest of the seasons? "Marcum said."
Chancellor Archie B. Dykes had "full
knowledge of the expenditures and an understanding of their reasons," he said.
Dykes was not available for comment.
Although both the Times and the Associated Press indicated that the budget was facing a projected yearend deficit, the Times said the budget was not in the black.
Marcum attributed the ability to come out in the black to a sharp rise in outside contributions and $131,000 more than expected from the Big Eight. The department initially thought it would receive $350,000 from the conference.
"We're in the black," Marcus said THE BUSINESS manager for the KI!
COUPON
"We're in pretty good shape," she said. "In fact, by the end of the year the budget should be in the black. Maybe much more in the black, but in the black."
Athletic Corporation, Susan Wachter,
said the athletic program was not anticipating a deficit by the end of the fiscal year.
The current head of the KU Athletic Board, Del Brinkman, said he knew nothing about the current state of the budget.
Following this projection, spending cuts were made in golf, baseball, gymnastics, and track.
anticipated last February when Marcum warned that his department faced $20,000 in budget cuts.
"I'm not the person to ask," Drinkman said. "But it is my understanding that by the end of the fiscal year the fund will be balanced and could be a little ahead."
The department made "absolutely essential" expenditures that exceeded their budgets by five figures.
MARCUM SAID that football was oversending its budget by $89,379.
basketball by $52,975, administration by $50,454, sports information by $23,170, and women's athletic scholarships by $31,518.
Most of the money went to travel and recruiting, he said.
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Asked what the Athletic Corporation would have done if the additional revenues had not been received, the university had to go to the University for a loan.
"But we haven't had a meeting since April, and won't review the budget again until next fall."
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Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 7Spirit OAK Lawrence Opera House
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FREE DELIVERY 842-9982
6th & Michigan St
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
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Drop by with your next prescription or have your doctor call any time (day or night).
HOURS: MON. & FRI. 8:30-6:00
TUES., WED., THURS. 8:30-8:00
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Aztec Inn
842-9455
Home of the Aztec Calendar
The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in
the Aztec kitchen will be at the Aztec Inn. We invite
you to share our proud heritage
WELCOME
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday
Summer Students
Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts"
Mexican and American Food
All Meals Served on Piping Hot Dishes
Closed Monday
Immediate Carryout Service on Roheatable Trays 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday
Mexican and American Food
807 Vermont Closed Monday
Edward and Naomi Reste invite you to stop in soon.
CLEVELAND (AP)—Jorge Orta hit a two-run home in the seventh innning and a two-run single in the eighth inning as the Cleveland Indians defeated Kansas City 8-5 last night for a spit of their double-header.
The Royals, whose winning streak was halted at eight games, took the opener 5-4 behind the two-hit pitching team. The Rays hurled a buried his second straight shutout.
Dave Rosello singled and scored on Orta's fourth homer of the season off Kansas city reliever Rich Gale, 2-7, to
Royals, Indians split double-header
| East |
|---|
| W | L | Pct. | GB |
|---|
| New York | 34 | 20 | 629 | |
| Milwaukee | 29 | 23 | 580 | |
| Boston | 27 | 23 | 490 | |
| Baltimore | 17 | 28 | 61 | |
| Cleveland | 26 | 27 | 491 | |
| Detroit | 26 | 27 | 491 | |
| Detroit | 23 | 28 | 451 | |
Kansas City 35 21 625
Chicago 35 21 627
Oakland 28 20 7
Garden State 28 20 67
Texas 28 20 455
Minnesota 33 32 418
Michigan 33 32 419
**Yesterday 5 Games**
oklahoma City 16, Cleveland 41
Kansas City 7, Cleveland 41
Chicago 9, Toronto 8
New York 9, California 7
New York 9, California 7
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Montreal 3, San Diego 6
San Francisco 4, Philadelphia 4
New York 2, Washington 2
New York, Los Angeles 2, 10 games
Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 2
San Francisco 2, Arizona 1
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Houston 12 21 611
Los Angeles 32 31 582
San Diego 32 31 194
San Diego 25 31 446
Albuquerque 25 31 415
Fresno Francisco 25 31 415
E
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Kansas City regained the lead when Rance Mullins hit a sacrifice fly and Clint Hurdle belted his sixth homer of the sixth in the sixth.
| | W | L | Pct | GF |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Montreal | 38 | 26 | 1.04 | 9 |
| Pittsburgh | 38 | 23 | 1.25 | 7 |
| Philadelphia | 27 | 24 | 1.02 | 4 |
| Washington | 27 | 21 | 1.01 | 3 |
| Chicago | 22 | 20 | 0.98 | 1 |
| Atlanta | 22 | 18 | 0.97 | 1 |
put the Indians on top 6-5 in the second game. The victory went to Dan Spillner, 6-3, who scattered eight Kansas City hits.
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THE ROYALS with a 3-4 lead
of Spillner with a run in the first and
two in the second. Cleveland went in
front 4-3 on a second-inning three-run
homer by Charboneau, his ninth of
the year, and a solo homer by Mike
Hargrove off Royals starter Paul
Welch. The Royals' seventh homer of the year.
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the VILLAGE SET
922 Massachusetts
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Page 11
CHRONICLE
HUCK ISAACSDN/Kansen staff
Two members of the Ted Owens Basketball Camp play ball in the gymnasium at Lawrence High School this week.
camp nets large turnout
By TOM GRESS Staff Reporter
More than 200 small-fry Dr. J's and would-be Larry Birds have come from across the nation to the Ted Owens summer at Lawrence High School.
For $15 a week, the basketeers,
some as young as 8 years old and others
high school juniors, play an average of
nine hours of basketball a day.
When they finish they even get grade cards—scouting reports of sorts—that tell them what they need to work on and give the indicators of their futures in the big time.
"We've had kids from nearly all the states and some from overseas," Owens said.
At this week's camp there are players from Ohio, Texas, Mississippi and Illinois. Last week one player traveled Germany to take part in the camp.
THE CAMPERS are housed at Naismith Hall where their day begins at 7 a.m., as coaches裤 the morning of an alarm forms that substitute for alarm clocks.
After breakfast, the campers congregate for roll call and march up 18th Street and down Mississippi Street to Lawrence High.
Drills in the morning include offensive and defensive fundamentals, ball-handling and shooting skills.
Tuesday morning Owens showed the campers the finer points of offensive fundamentals—primarily how to make sure they keep, square up to the basket and shoot.
Fifty 12 and 13-year-olds, dressed in shorts and T-tails, paid close attention to Murray Knox, KU graduate assistant coach, and John Douglas, former KU basketball great, who assisted Owens in a demonstration of the drill.
FOLLOWING THE demonstration, the campers broke into six groups to work on what they just learned. Some
Douglas jogged along the baseline to the middle of the lane, quickly pivoted with his right foot and cut to the right wing where he caught a pass from the basket and launched a textbook to the basket that banked off the backboard and into the basket. The campers oiled, ahed, and applauded after the basket.
picked up quickly on the finer points, some did not. Owens walked through each group, telling one camper to keep talking, telling another to move more quickly, telling another to move more quickly.
The campers break from 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. for lunch and a short nap. From 2:30 to 5:00, the players do more drills and get in some scrimmaging. After dinner they go back to the high school and another three hours of scrimmaging.
"We want to give the kids a complete day of basketball," Owens said. "The coaches take a lot of time explaining the rules, and they bring the day. And the kids work hard."
DISCIPLINE IS stressed all day long. Campers caught out after the 10:45 am. p.curf get to spend some time in the camp, push-ups and sit-ups as punishment.
"The players need to be disciplined." Owens said. "If you don't have it, then you have it. The campers learn teamwork, such as the teammates waiting at roll call. The kids, though, have had an excellent attitude this week. We've had no
There are several goals to the camp. Owens said, but the main goal is learning the fundamentals of basketball.
"We want to see the kids improve their fundamentals, skills and techniques," he said. "We try to keep a constant theme in the camp, stressing the fundamentals during the drills and the scrummages."
To teach the basics, Owens gets players and coaches well-versed in basketball.
"I try to bring back former players who were fundamentally sound," Owens said. "We're using John Douglas to teach shooting because he has the body of a kid. Kids can watch him and see the exact form they should want for shooting."
-
THE HIGH SCHOOL coaches among the staff of 25 contact Owens to get their chance to coach at the camp.
"This is the best camp around," Bob Knoll, head coach at Leavenworth High School, said. "I've coached at Notre Dame's and Oklahoma's camps but this camp has the finest coaching and the organization is outstanding."
an invitation to sail picnic with the k.u. sail club
All affiliates of KU:students, staff, alumni
A sunny day of sailino, picnicino & frisbee
Lake Perry Yacht Club. Carnools available
**when**
Saturday, June 14th, noon until five o'clock
Before Friday the 13th if lunch is desired,
**before**
Monday, June 15th
side SUA or call for directions: 864-3477.
CAMPAGNOLO
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Sponsored by: Student Assistance Center 121 Strong Hall
Facilities by: Student Union Activities Kansas Union
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Self-serve Car Pool Exchange Kansas Union, Main Lobby (near the Ride Board)
Call 864-4358
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer
Each additional word
Why not "AUTO-MATE"?
AD DEADLINES
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 2 p.m.
Thursday Friday 2 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days). These ads can be placed in person or by calling the Kranich business at 844-1580.
TONIGHT
at 9:00 p.m.
THE ROCKY
HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
This Friday and Saturday
BLUE RIDDIM BAND
$1.50 pitcher
$1.25 bibs
from 8-9
Lawrence
Opera House
7th & Mass
842 6930
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Kline Hall 864-4392
The Kanran 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
Make it easy on yourself, your car, and your wallet this semester-CAR POOL! Kansas Union Main Lobby Questions-call 864-4064 6-19
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER: Literacy, literate and communicative skills. We also, buy, sell and trade good condition books and sell used books. We offer and scholarly titles in all fields. 140 Massau Avenue, 814-644. Open every week except Monday.
Visit the Book End at Quantrill's Fife mum-
ket for the finest in books at reasonable
prices. Weekends 10-5. 6-16
COMMUTERS:
ENTERTAINMENT
★★★★★☆☆
★★★★★★★★★
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. Now on sale!
Western civilization out of West
Mind. make sense in the study.
For first preparation. 3 For exam prep.
For second preparation. 4 For exam prep.
For third preparation. 5 For exam prep.
Catalog Mails Bookstore and Oread Bookshelf
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $26.98, 3 year
guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-
1386. tf
Large furnished rooms in house one block from Union. Shore K&B deposit central cooling. 843-908-1290 Izho Univ. 6-26
Pine Bookcases-$20 & up; Tables, $35 & up;
small shelves, $15 & up. Mike Stough,
843-8892
6-23
COOPERATIVE LIVING—established stu-
ing cooperative, live in easy waggle
way across the country and is located
town Lawrence. Private room rent $80-$150
units utilizing utilities and applier Call
7-31 9421
FOR RENT
Roommate wanted for summer, 2 bedroom
apt bus route. Pool. All furnished. $90 per
suite. Utilities. Call Kim or Dana 842-
1723. W 24th St. 237. (307)
Apts. 12. (6-19)
Renter(s) want to share House-3 bed,
1 bath; formal dining room, carpet;
fireplace; backyard; basement. C.A.
supports. No pets. Jebbs.more 6/23
631-3043
NAIMISH HALL has openings for summer
Both male and female. If interested contact
business office at 843-8539 any time of the day.
if
Mark I, & II - iipt. NOW RENTING FOR
accommodations at 15-80 yrs old. Quiet 1. Kit of bedrooms,
tanning and heat. Carpeting, balconies, off-
sides, laundry and laundry facilities. Call resident mgr for details.
HOUSE-3 Bedrooms, 1'8' baths, formal dining room, carpet, large fitted backyard, basement. C.A. Shawnee area. No pets. $50 per month. Call 631-3043. 6-23
Vitaill-Bascula Apparets-Musculaire. Unisexuit à 8 & 2 bain de corps appliqué. Cosmetique. Cuisine et bain de C
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9069, 3900 W. ft
SINEMILLA - Herbal seeded smoking mokkies and perfume essence. Mix contains mutilen, anise, and Aizuna Tea, traditional infusion. Purchase 100 $1.99 coin, LightningStrike. Ld-P.O Box 86230, Arizona 86230
Moving! Must migl? 79 Headones Moved Excellent excelcd
Moving! Must sell 79 Honda Express moped Excellent condition. $350 or best offer. 841-3466 6-16
PENTAX SLR 110 CAMERA. Includes three lens, skylight lenses, lens hoods, electronic flash, electric motor film advance, deluxe camera with new condition, #475. Call 6-1984-825-788
OLIVERT PRAXIS TYPEWRITER Office
connect, ultra-modern styling, like
new condition, pica, $200, Call Mike, $42-587,
e.10
1975 Camaro psh-ph-ac, excellent condition,
sacrifice. $2,000. 842-1702. 6-26
TENNIS RACKET. Donnay Graphite wood
strung with blaugacant闪光材 (96 way
guardianes) $100 plus value for $60, call 842-
585, 4135-835
FOUND
Small tabby kitten found Sat. night at 14th
& Kentucky. Call 841-5376. 6-12
HELP WANTED
Part Time Help. needed. For apt call 843-
4937. Tantalize Suntan Center. 6-12
Found at Trailridge Apts. One gray and white kitten-approx. four weeks old. Please call 841-7648 6-16
Graduate Assistant for University and Facilities Lawyer, Half-time, 12-month appointment in begin July. Position may be increased by a quarter of salary to a minimum of $500 for month. Qualifications: excellent communication skills with minimal supervisee ID; 30 days'工作经历, strong Hiring or call Janzie Ziute June/July, Minimum Opportunity Affirmative Action (MOA) Position.
The Equity Research Project will hire two research assistants and one academic researcher, each costing $250 per half-time commitment. Those hired must be members of the Kansas Graduate School Position 1. The projects Duties include interviewing education reports and monograph reports 2. The projects TIX in public schools. Duties include providing qualitative data, and preparing reports for a form contact: Ms. Swila Di库利; Equity Research Project Phone: 931-864-6948 g=12
Need money? Like to buy babysit? Then add your name to the news information Center's list of contacts. Drop by 103 Strong Hall or call 864-5060 to add your name to one of the most popular websites.
house managers, Menninger half-way house.
This position is for a live-in couple to manage graduate students find this job attractive as well as having good communication skills both in business and a good salary and also experience to gain independent living skills patients to gain independent living skills or husband. The spouse may be a full time worker or the manager of Foundation), and will be paid a salary on benefits of the pay rate responsible for attending staff meetings, training, and continuing education of the tenure department for repair, and plan maintenance of the manager are shared with an array of duties
Experienced sales wanted. Part-time, week nights and weekends hours. Apply in person: 802 W. 23rd. Green's Liquor. 6-19
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Gutar, bando, mandolin from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock, jazz, bluegrass, and folk styles. Experienced teacher Call Kurt at Steve Mason Music.
Summer
Softball Officials
Meeting
Thursday, June 12th at 5:30 p.m.
in Room 155 Robinson Center.
All persons interested in attending this meeting must enter Robinson Center through the East doors.
PERSONAL
Wanted—Intramural Softball Office if interested call 664-3540 or stop by 208 Robinson Center, Recreation Services and ask for Mike. 6437
FOX HILL SUGURRY CLINIC- abortions up
bringing Froggy pregnancy Treattion, Birth Cen-
tral incision. Call 9 AM to 5 PM (103) 642-380,
4401 w 109th St, Overland Park, PA
4401
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tt
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and
Wednesday evenings. Call Bob Hills 864-491,
before 5, 842-1136 evenings.
6-30
The Good-Bye Archie Ball—with XANADU
Monday, June 16th. Off the Wall Hall.
Only $1.50. 6-16
PROGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821. 6-31
Nautical Delights, Tans Guaranteed—with the KU Sail Club. Join us Wed. night at 7 in the 80 on Wednesday.
Try the summer specialists at the cool Harbor Sports Club. Specialists nightly during summer and can win for winning softball team. And try in sandpit like at Ballet School or like at a discount on your next trip.
SERVICES OFFERED
thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4876 for reservations. tf
Question: How can you have fun, meet new friends, and get excited about all at the same time? For answer see self-serve Car Pool Exchange Manager Main Lobby Questions—call-811-456-7890.
Printing While You Wall is available with Alice at the House of Ubbers Quick Copy from 8 a.m. to midnight; from 8 a.m. p.m. Monday to Friday; to 1 p.m. on Saturday @ 888 Mass.
Museums of Natural History SUMMER WORKSHOPS
Now through August 2
OPENINGS AVAILABLE
Week-long Classes Ages 5-13
CALL 864-4173
Accurate, experienced typist, ipn server
Selective, Call Donna, 842-2744, tf
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-
4989. 1f
solving *Scaleficient* Call Donna. 842-2744
Report, discontinuities, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct *Scaleficient* Calle Orlenan. 841-2712
7-31
TYPING
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-
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Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done, thesis dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty. 842-6097 after 5 weekends.
Experienced Typist-term papers, thesis,
mice, electric IBM Scaled Proofreading,
spelling correted 843-9543, Mrs. Wright ff
Tipton Editor IBM Pica EII Filc Quality work-
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IRON FENC TYPING SERVICE. Fast, r-
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tt
WANTED
3, 5, or 10-speed bike, preferably woman's Call Dobbie 842-6080, afternoons or evenings
6-19
Female roommate to share my trailer until Aug. 15. $100 * 2* utilities. Nice fence in yard. For more information call 841-6762 after 5:00.
TUTOR. English 101, 102 Experienced in K U. system $5 per hour Contact Margie.
4+4050. 6-26
Get a Cool Tan, no need to suffer the heat outdoors. Tantalize: Tan Center, 2210 Iowa,
843-4937. 6-25
LFAIR TENNES this summer from experience *d* instructor—begin beginner and intermediate sessions start Monday. 16th. Details C. Gee 842-585, 841-335.
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS
CLASSIFIEDS
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
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money order to 111 Flint
figure costs. Now you've got
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AD DEADLINES
MIDDLE LINES
Monday ... Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday ... Thursday 5 pm
Wednesday ... Monday 5 pm
Thursday ... Monday 5 pm
Friday ... Wednesday 5 pm
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time
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KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS—EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD
10
University Daily Kansan, June 12, 1980
Educators switch roles for summer
By DAVID STIPP
Staff Reporter
For most KU students, summer is a vacation from the rigors of higher education, a time of job hunting, traveling or just taking it easy.
But for many students in the School of Education, summer is the only time to take vacations from the rigors of full schooling to enhance the pleasures of higher education.
These students are elementary and high school teachers who are taking classes for postponed graduate degrees in teaching certification requirements.
"TEACHERS ARE expected to keep up with their profession," Paul Haack,
associate dean of graduate studies in the School of Education, said this week. "They have to take six to eight hours every five or six years for state examinations. Also, a lot of teachers are here in the workday working on graduate degrees."
Enrollment figures reflect the influx of summer students who spend their winters teaching. In the summer of 1979 it was 3,405, and in the fall of 1989, 1,689 out of 3,780, were in education. During the regular 1979-80 school year, less than one-third of the KU's 5,470 students were enrolled.
"I THINK A lot of the older teachers resent having to go back to school for recrimification. But some people go back just to get away from 9-40."
special education teacher at Cordley School in Lawrence, said. It's a lot easier to go to school than to teach. It takes longer, and often put in a good 10 hours a day.
Vickie McCauley, a health teacher at South Junior High School in Lawrence, said she learned more attending summer school to take a required class for her teaching certification than she did as an undergraduate.
"It has more meaning behind it because I have a job and am applying
Although she finds school more rewarding now, McCauley does not think her work experience will make a difference for him for students without such experience.
what I'm learning," she said. "It makes me more serious in school because I've had experience teaching."
"You can't put anything off," she said. "Your really have to stay with it every day."
Another South Junior High School teacher, Carol Church, said she was returning to school this summer to help with the new school. Out of school for more than 20 years.
"I GRADUATED, taught, had my
family and then went back into teaching," she said. "One real shocker about coming back is that there are as many summer school students now as there were students during the regular school year when I was an undergraduate."
Church said she was trying to apologize to being a student again by taking only one class at a time while she redevelops the habits of taking notes and studying. Summer school is convenient for her because of the short, single-subject courses offered to these students have more personal contact with teachers in smaller classes.
"It's easier for me to cope when I don't have to be in those huge classes," she said.
Dioxin . . .
from page 1
in the hands of a fool", he said. "I don't understand why everybody's so upset I've worked with it and taken baths at the times, and I'm still healthy."
ACCORDING TO A local farmer who asked not to be identified, some farmers began to stockpile 24-tight when the EPA was going to restrict its use.
"It's the only stuff that works on brush," he said.
Although he is not registered with the state as qualified to handle restricted herbicides, he has about 25 gallons he was saving for when he really needed it.
Car Alamar, a local farmer, he had several cases of 245-T stored in an irrigation ditch. He said he planned to move to the Douglas County Landfill.
with the Islamic government, Amani pointed to a friend who sat nearby.
from page 1
"He just received a letter from the Iranian government asking for a report of his grades so that they could renew his scholarship," Amani said.
Iran...
Coan said the Iranian desk at the Algerian embassy in Washington had told him Tuesday that reports about vanishing funds were fabricated, and the six Iranian scholarship students at his university assured that their money would arrive.
In London, the Associated Press reported that thousands of young Iranian students faced expulsion from their schools because their funds have been cut off.
One Iranian student said she felt like a pawn in a political power play where the students are trapped in the middle.
Most Iranian students at KU are supported by their families. After President Carter froze Iranian assets in this country, students faces delays in receiving their checks. Amani said that they waited 80 days for money from home.
Another student, who asked not to be identified, said most Iranian students had no ties to the Islamic revolution and were being punished by the U.S. and Iranian governments despite their lack of political involvement. Coan agreed that most Iranian students simply wanted to get an education.
"I'm almost as if Carter and Khomeini, who claim to be enemies in public, are working together for the war—the destruction of Iran," she said.
Amani described revolutionary Iran as the epitome of freedom.
CALVIN EDDY
& KAPPELMAN
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867-1739
Serving the K. H.
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40 years
CALVIN EDDY
KAPPELMAN
120 WESTMASON ST.
BAR 3772
Delivery stalls force move to photo IDs
KU student identification cards with photos may be available for students during the 1988-89 school year. GI will send them to admissions and records, said this week.
"Since the current IDs have no photos," Dyck said, "it's sometimes hard to make positive identification with them."
"We asked various people about the problem, including the Student Senate, and they said they felt some kind of photo ID would be valuable in cash checks and for identification around campus."
DEPARTMENTS THAT give large group examinations also would prefer photo ID cards for students, he said.
because it would help them "tell which student is which."
If the plan to issue photo ID cards goes into effect, the cards will be produced at KU, Dyck said.
Students with old IDs will not be required to get new cards, he said.
Walter Gelbach, director of student admissions and records at the KU campus, said he helped Dyck plan the production of the new cards, said another reason for producing photo student ID cards at the school to speed up delivery of the cards to students.
“It’s unfortunate when you’re a student and you enroll and then don’t get your ID for three weeks,” he said. “Students are students immediately after enrollment.”
Over 15 years in the business
843-2931
ADMIRAL
CAR RENTAL
2340 Alabama
Where economy comes first
- Rentals start at $7.95 a day plus mileage
for the cards were encountered. The problems with Malco have now been resolved, he said.
Gelbach said that, because the new cards still were in the planning stage, he didn't know how much students with old IDs would be charged for photo ID cards. He said the cost to students would "probably be a few dollars."
Gelbach said the new photo identification card system might be begun late in the fall semester.
Student identification cards are now produced by Malco Plastics, Inc., in Garrison, Md., and then are shipped by truck to KU. Distribution of ID cards to students falls fall when changes were required in the graphics on the backs of the cards.
- A choice of any of these economy modes are
2340 Alabama
avronge, Kayser, 6504
Toyota Chevette Pilots Bobcats Fireworks Cullas Monte Carlo Ltd WAGons Trucks Vans
--cannot be cleansed of the blood that is shed therein, but by the blood of him that she detil. It denote not therefore the land which ye shall inhabit, wherein I dwell; for I The Lord dwell among the islands of Israel." Numbers 35:30-34
Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, which directed card production and delivery last year, said delays on card delivery from Malco also occurred last winter when problems with the billing arrangements
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The Harbour Lites Summer Specials
Mondays: Pitcher night
6-8 P.M. *1.50 Pitchers
Wednesdays: Busch Night
7-10 P.M.
50a. Busch Bottles
Tuesdays: Terrific Tuesday
7-9 P.M.
6 o'clock/Petition
Thursdays: Quart Night
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"My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge; because thou hast rejected knowledge. I will also reject thee, that thou shalt be no priest to me; seeing thou hast been shorn from Thy God. I will also forget thy children!" Heschel 46:5.
Our land is also filled with stealing, lying and covetousness. If this writer's appraisal is correct even of our nation and states encourage its people to covet the land they own, another instead of teaching and urging them to take heed to one of the first laws of God to fallen man to live by the sweat of his own brow* **We are trying to run over Abraham** *The Lord said to Abraham who men deny and blaspheme The God we claim to serve, we turn and make war on God himself! SHALL WE HAVE PEACE WITH MAN BY MAKING WAR ON GOD We have peace with Shakespeare what said: "What these mortals betray!"
And Introducing JOE'S SUBS
The knowledge of God, or lack of it, has to do with our Eternal Life, or eternal death! God says, "Cursed be the man that trusteth in man," and "He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool!"
Weigh these words! it is a terrible message of judgment! Destroyed on account of "tack of knowledge" or ignorance, the God of God! The results: they shall be祈祷 to God, and God will forget their children, seeing they have forgiven the Protestants gives us the true teaching of God's Word. We have not forgiven the Law of our God! "breach The Sabbath; and destroy" The God of God! Our home, the home, home and marriage, the home, home marriage, and sex relations. Our land is joyous with murders, and yet quite a number of our states have forgiven that did not know what He was talking about when He said:
For the sake of the children we should not forget the 'Law of Our God'!
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University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
The University Daily
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 146
Monday, June 16, 1980
Pride in thy Country
Faith in Thyself.
THE FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY'S BACHELOR OF SCIENCES DEPARTMENT HAS BEEN OFFERED TO THE ESSENTIAL STUDENTS.
Sen. Nancy Kassebaum passes during a speech last night before nearly 500 high-school girls who are attending the 38th annual Sunflower Girls State. During her speech in Templin Hall, Kassebaum told the audience that optimism was the way to meet the challenges of the future. "It is easy to be pessimistic," she said. "But pessimism is the easy way out."
Dog meat on the table legal but probably in poor taste
Staff Reporter
By PAUL CARMAN
SALINA—Eating a dog may not be common, but it is not illegal. Salinans discovered recently after a reported case of dog-eating stirred emotions in the community.
It began several weeks ago when the local newspaper began receiving requests that it publish warnings to the public to keep their dogs inside their yards or locked in their houses.
At first the paper ignored the calls and letters, according to Larry Mathews, managing editor of the newspaper.
"All the calls and letters were anonymous and could easily have come from one person," he said. "We ignored the whole thing until the Board of Health got involved."
"It was finally determined that one family ate a dog, and all the others to it. It dog, and they had it," the lawyer said. "They have it."
THE BOARD OF HEALTH in Salina informed the paper and the complaint that no violation had been made.
Dick Hack, the director of Environmental Health Department, conducted a Louisiana County Health Department, conduct
"As far as I know, if you want to go out in your yard and shoot your neighbor's dog and eat it for supper, there's no law that says you can't—if you settle with him for the loss of his" Hark said.
There is no Salina city ordinance against dog eating, according to Mathews.
Hack said, "So long as it's not sold in the grocery store, the government doesn't regulate it. The government doesn't control what people kill and eat themselves."
MATHEWS ALSO said there was nothing inhumane about the incident.
"The family went out to the city pound and bought a dog that would have been killed by the city any way," he said. "The didn't torture it. The dog did the dog just like you would a cow or a nut."
Linda Decelles, manager of the Charles Ies Memorial Shelter in Lawrence it would be more difficult for someone to buy a dog for slaughter in Douglas County.
"Someone can't walk in and buy a pet from
us," she said. "We screen all applicants to make sure they would provide a good home."
DECELLEES HAD NOT heard of any cases of dog eating in this part of the state, but said, "If it were done, the Humane Society would not have a very good opinion about it at all."
When asked about the Humane Society's position on an owner killing a dog, she said, "Outside the city limits, there is no law which prohibits one from shooting one's own animals if they are sick or no longer wanted. If it was cruelly abused, of course, then we prosecute."
FOOD PREFERENCES are purely cultural variations according to Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian Studies, who teaches a course in food in Chinese culture.
"There are, for instance, some people who would not eat frog legs, snakes, octopuses or snails. There are some people who simply will not eat meat," he said.
"Animals domesticated for food since early times included dog," Leban said, "As early as two millennium B.C., dog was included on menus of great Chinese cooks."
BOLSA
One of an estimated 2,000 motorcycle riders leaves Quenoque Saturday afternoon after the Friday the 13th celebration. Osage County police are seeking a suspect in the shooting death of a 27-year-old Pomona man.
Quenemo wants bash busted
By DAViD STIPP
Staff Reporter
QUENEMO--"They'd better stay away"
Quenemo's postmaster, Dorothy Brigain, warned
Saturday morning with grim determination as
she surveyed the piles of broken glass and
smashed beer cans that littered the town's two
main streets.
Brigan spoke for most of Quenemo's 430 students when she pronounced the word, "prevent" the threat, right above "power."
motorcycleists from ever using her town again for
Friday the 18th celebrations.
"May be this will draw enough attention to the thing so we can put a stop to it," she said.
THE NEAR RIOT Friday night in Queeno which ended in three deaths, was the culmination of a series of bikers' gatherings that began six years ago when a local tailed offered 25-cent beers on Friday the 13th. Since then, Queeno, a farming community about 35 miles southeast of Topeka, has played host to crowds of motorcycle enthusiasts who gather for beer
drinking and drag racing on Quenemo's main streets every day the 13th.
Friday's celebration was the first in the tradition to end tragically.
More than 2,000 bikers and 3,500 onlookers began converging on Quenemo early Friday morning. About 80 police officers from five surrounding counties were called in to Quenemo to help keep the peace, according to Osage County officials.
Except for noise and minor vandalism, it was
casual (UNFEM) back home.
T
Trash littered the streets of Quenemo Saturday after a turbulent ending to a Friday the 13th celebration that attracted thousands. In the center of a dirt street a 27-year-old man was shot in the chest and killed. The ill-fated party drew critical remarks from Quenemo residents and attracted national attention.
western Kansas water supply almost drained
By WALTER THORP Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
When western Kansas farmers began to pump water from the ground around 1900, they thought it was too hot. They started to use salt.
What they had tapped was a huge underground ocean geologists call the Orallala.
Water from the Ogallala spawned an
A giant waterbearing formation of rocks, sand and gravel created thousands of years ago, the Ogallala aquifer spans the high plains from Texas to the Dakotas.
But the Ogallala is drying up and there is little that can be done about it. If the Kansas Geological Survey forecast is correct the aquifer will be too dry to draw from in eight years.
agribusiness industry that annually contributes $7 billion to the Kansas economy. State economists attribute an estimated $3 billion to irrigation.
"It's a huge system and a huge source of water," Bill Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Survey, said. "But it has been taken away from us for decades that we are actually mining the water."
"Over years, the decline in the water level has been on the average of, say, three feet a year and the recharge rate has been about three inches. It looks like a mathematician to figure out what happens."
In other words, they are drawing it out if a faster rate than it is being recharged.
IN PARTS OF southwest Kansas 150-foot drops in the ground water level have been recorded over the past decade, according to the Kansas Water Resources Research Institute.
A Governor's Task Force on Water Resources, concerned about the economic and environmental consequences of a widespread water shortage, investigate the problem for two
At the heart of the problem was the belief among farmers that the aquifer was replenished by melting Rocky Mountain snow and thus inexhaustible.
The task force also found farmers reluctant to change from a water-intensive crop such as corn to less profitable dryland wheat farming, or to increase the amount of water they could pump from the ground.
HOW DOES THIS affect the rest of Kansas?
Miller said that when the water was no longer economical to pump, the people in the eastern part of the state will have to pick up the tax on the costs by failing businesses and farms in the west.
Employment will also suffer, he said.
One industry that would be hardest hit by a loss of water would be the Kansas livestock industry, Hambleton said. Farmers could revert to dryland wheat and farming at a financial loss, but if there was not enough water to supply the crop, that industry would be financially destroyed.
Lawrence police want formal contract
Bv MARK PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
A fundamental rift in the talks between police and the City of Lawrence threatens to keep the two sides from coming to an amicable agreement.
The Lawrence Police Officers Association wants a comprehensive work agreement that will detail in writing the exact rights and responsibilities of an officer.
Kevin Burt, director of personnel relations for the city, said Lawrence had a "special relationship" with its municipal employees, including the police, and did not want to spoil it.
The city is not willing to give it.
"It's like if I walked home to my wife and gave this contract which said all the things that we
understand between each other are now going to be in writing," he said. "That is going to hurt the
"We're quite willing to sit down and talk about their specific areas of concern, but this formalizing of the situation, well, I'm not going to reduce everything to written."
GARY SAMPSON, chairman of the LPOA,
maintains that any agreements made in
this chapter would come to us quickly.
"Put it down in writing," he said. "That way I've got something to show my membership and we don't have to start over if they want to take something away from us."
The firefighters association, which has a similar relationship with the city, recently released a report showing that 85% of
negotiation ended with mutual praise for good-faith bargaining.
In contrast, the police negotiations have been characterized by shouting matches across the city.
A FEDERAL MEDIATOR will attempt to resolve the dispute in seven days starting next Monday. If he cannot, the differences will be taken to the City Commission.
"It's just that we so much better off with the association," Samson said. "It was like one guy talking into the wind before. He's not going to make much noise. If there's a whole bunch of guys talking into the wind, well, they're going to make a lot more racket.
The LPOA has had to "jump up and down" to
see UNION back page
Weather
A hawk is running in the grass.
Skies will remain partly cloudy today, with much cooler temperatures. Highs will reach 78. Tonight will be clear and cool, but it may still be sunny. Clouds will be from the northeast at 10-20 mph.
CLOUDY
Tomorrow will be sunny and mild, with temperatures barely topping 80. Wednesday's skies will be mostly sunny, with highs in the low to mid 80s.
The extended forecast calls for temperatures to climb well into the 90s by Fri.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Capsules
Daily Kansan
Hostages remain in embassv
TEHRAN, Iran—American hostages are still being held in the U.S. Embassy despite claims that they were taken away and hidden in towns throughout the country, a source at the headquarters of Iran's revolutionary guards said yesterday.
This report contradicted claims by the militants holding the embassy that all of Americans taken captive inside the embassy Nov. 4 were dispersed to civilian bases.
"A number of them are still there; I cannot tell you how many," the source said.
A day after announcing a cultural revolution to “finish the enemies of” a Malahil Ruhailah Khormez was reported yesterday to have ordered that not only a minister of state, but also a minister of education be
Tehran Radio said that Khomeini met with department directors of Iranian radio and television yesterday morning and told them the organization should fire non-Moslems and hire committed Moslems in their place.
"Radio must be a tool to disseminate Islamic ideas and teachings," Khomeini was reported to have said. "I hope by purging those elements belonging to the old regime you will succeed more. There should not be any anti-Islamic idea or element in the mass media."
Peace talks plans denounced
JERUSALEM - Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization yesterday denounced a European plan for reviving Middle East peace talks.
assumes.
Market pressures a surreptite to totalitarian blackmail and compared them to Nazi Germany's diplomatic backlash before World War II.
"Of the Venice decisions, nothing but a bitter memory will be remembered," he said, reading a communique after a cabinet meeting. "Any man of good will and every free person in Europe who will study that document will receive a Munich surrender, the second in our generation to totalitarian blackmail."
He was referring to the 1938 conference at which European nations gave in to Adolf Hitler's demand for self-determination by the German-speaking minority in Czechoslovakia. The capitulation led to a Nazi takeover but didn’t stop Hitler from launching further conquests.
Meeting in Venice the European leaders last week called for self-determination for the Palestinian people but stopped short of suggesting that they should move to Jerusalem.
Instead, they said the PLO should be "associated" with the negotiations, apparently along with U.S. pressure against recognition of the Mumbai attacks.
"The PLO rejects the communique," spokesman Abol Mohsen Abu Meizier said in Damascus after a late-night steering committee meeting chaired by him.
1981 budget deficit predicted
WASHINGTON - Former Treasury Secretary George Shultz, now an
balanced budget Congress adopted last week would end up $40 billion in the
Shultz also called the government's current economic policies "virtual insane" and said he foresaw a possible unemployment rate of more than 10
Although the $813.6 billion budget Congress put together for fiscal 1981 shows federal spending will be balanced with revenues, many economic experts are saying that there will be a deficit when the final figures are in decline. Revenues fall during a recession and government spending increases.
Shultz, in an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press," agreed with Reagan's pledge of a tax cut.
"I think we should have a reduction in taxes now." Shultz said.
Shultz also predicted growing unemployment. "I think right now unemployment is probably around 8.5 percent," he said. "In the middle of May it was 7.8 percent. I think it’s certainly going to get above 9 percent and it may very well be that this will be a year in which we have double digits in three dimensions. We’ve had double digit inflation, double digit interest and it is conceivable that we’ll have a double digit unemployment rate."
Commerce Secretary Philip Klutznack, appearing on ABC's "Issues and Answers," conceded that the new budget could be unbalanced by a deepening recession, but he ruled out any tax cut to stimulate the economy before next year. Klutznack added that a tax cut must be "very desirable."
House to decide draft issue
WASHINGTON—President Carter's draft registration program is expected to overcome its last congressional hurdle this week as the House of Representatives begins reviewing his plan.
The Senate voted Thursday to spend $13.3 million to begin registration this summer of 19- and 20-year-old men.
The measure was essentially identical to legislation already passed by the House except that the cost of the Senate measure totaled $10,000 less than the House.
Senate Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia said the difference was "trifling" and predicted the House would concur with the Senate
If the House passes the measure, Carter would sign a proclamation ordering young men to register and fix a date for the program.
Registration is expected to start in mid-July and would be spread out over a two-week period. Men born in 1900 would register one week and men born
The American Civil Liberties Union hopes to block registration with a court suit challenging the constitutionality of an all-male program.
Cuban shot while escaping
FORT CHAFFEE, Ark.-U.S. marshals worked yesterday on the transfer of two Cuban prisoners—one of whom was shot during an escape attempt
A spokesman said the pair would be taken from Fort Chaffee to Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary. It was not known when the transfer would be made.
The escape attempt occurred at 10 p.m. Friday. Federal guards saw two men running toward the wire fence stocked the stockade. One man was on a stretcher and was held up to the
Neither man was seriously injured. Both were treated and released from a Fort Smith hospital and then taken to the Sebastian County Jail.
The other jumped the fence and was shot by a deputy federal marshal armed with a shotgun. Officials said the guard fired warning shots, but the police did not believe there was any danger.
The man who was shot was hit by about 12 pellets from the shotgun blast. The other received minor cuts from the wire.
The men were being held in the stockade on charges of assaulting a federal officer and a female refugee with a knife.
Greensboro Klan trial starts
GREENSBORO, N.C.—Six Kiu Klux Klansman and American Nazis go on trial today on murder and roiting charges, seven months after a shooting spree killed five at a "D death to the Klan" rally in Greensboro housing project.
The six men will be tried in a case that some lawyers say will require five weeks for jury selection alone. All six have pleaded not guilty to five counts of assault or other felonies.
Five 6,
free oil billet, were to surrender last night to the county jail. The sale, Jack Wilson Fowler, 27, has been without bail. The five are: David Wayne Mathwes, 34; Lawrence Gene Morgan, 31; Coleman Blair Pridmide, 38; Jerry Paul Smith, 32; and Roland Wayne Wood, 34.
Five of the defendants, free on bail, were to surrender last night to the county sheriff. The six,Jack Wainow Wilson 27, have been bailed without jail.
Officials said the shots were fired as Klan supporters set to fire a cross during a rally Saturday night to raise money for two of the Klansmen on Sunday.
The injury selection process begins two days after shots were reported during a Klan rally near Walkertown, 40 miles east of Greensboro.
MUSEUM OF ARTS & CULTURE
The Graduate Women's group meets at noon in the Cork Room of the Kansas Union. A football camp for boys, ages 17, continues today until Saturday.
Monday. June 16
A high school journalism summer camp for students in newspaper and photography begins today. Registration for the camps is in Room 106 Flint.
The 38th annual Sunflower Girls State meets at Lewis, Templin and Hashinger Halls until Saturday.
Daily Kansan On Campus
A workshop on animal communities will be held at the Museum of Natural History for children ages five to seven.
Daily Kansan
Workshops on forest and marine plants, animals without backbones, horses and geology also will be held. Call 864-4173 at all museum workshops on observations on all museum works.
The Black Student Union will hold its chore practice in Room 328 Murphy Hall with Sigma Dauga Ensemble will meet at 7 p.m. 220 Robinson The Christian Science Organization at KU will meet at Danforth Chapel at 6:30 p.m. Campus Christians will meet at 7 p.m. at the Kansas University Parlers A and B.
The movie "Harold and Maude" will be shown at 9 and 11 p.m. at the Lawrence Ooera House.
The movie "Singin' in the Rain" will be shown at 7 p.m. in the Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Tuesday, June 17
The KU Sailing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlors.
Two lectures will be given by Clair Vickery, University of California at Berkeley. At 10:30 a.m. in the Spencer Research Library auditorium she will present a lecture on Relation to Family Lifestyles in America, 1920-1975. At 1:30 p.m. she will give a lecture on "Women's Work Roles and the Standard of Living."
Wednesday, June 18
Skaters roll on despite city ban
By LAURA LUCKERT
Staff Reporters
Despite legal complications with downtown merchants, KU officials have given their blessing to a new form of entertainment that has rolled onto campus.
MORGAN BLAKE and LaVall Scott, both of 538 Maine St., tried to open Mercury Skates, a rollerskate rental company, operated from a camper, in November.
But their efforts first stalled because of zoning problems and then from an investigation by the Lawrence City Commission which began after a complaint was made by the Downtown Lawrence Association. The association contended that skating downtown was not safe and that shoppers might get hurt.
human-powered vehicles, including bicycles and skateboards, within 100 feet of businesses from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. The city designer the prohibition to keep bicycles on streets, Blake said, and rarely enforced it.
"We're not upset with the new ordinance," Blake said. "We are happy that we are even open at all."
The city outlawed the operation of
Mercury Skates has been in business 10 days and has rented out 20 to 30 pairs of skates in an evening. Blake and Scott predicted that by the end of the summer they would rent out each of their 55 pairs of skates.
THE MERCURY SKATES truck now parks by the Kansas Union Saturday and Sunday. The skating on campus does not upset University officials.
Vickie Thomas, acting University general counsel, said that the roller skaters on campus just assume responsibility for accidents just as pedestrians do.
THE U.S. CONSUMER P safety Commission reported that roller skating caused about 135,000 injuries a year. Blake and Scott said they had not of anyone seriously injured while rollerskating.
"If the roller skater injured another person on campus then legal action would involve the skater and the injured party, not KU," she said.
Blake said he was not afraid of a lawsuit from an injury.
According to Commissioner Marci Francisco, the variance was allowed because drinking in front of the bar had not been a problem.
Crossing gets porch drinking
The City Commission last week voted in favor of an ordinance variance to allow beer drinking on the landlocked pier in front of the Crossing.
The Crossing at 12th and Oread streets has been the Rock Chalk, the New Haven and the Catfish. Somewhere along the line the old, white stucco building with a red tile roof was given a wooden facade and an ersatz pier and lost the right to have its nuts drinker food in the open-air.
She said the bar lost the 20-year tradition of open-air drinking because Lawrence changed its drinking laws to forbid open containers in public.
"I think people pretty much know what they are getting into when they put on a pair of skates." Blake said.
"Some people don't want to drink in air-conditioning," Francisco said. "The people who live around the Crossing want a place where they can drink."
By KIRK TINDALL Staff Reporter
"We were getting a lot of complaints about the downtown area," Francisco said. "In an area like the one around it, writing it has never been a problem."
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
Christ's Sermon On The Mount is near the beginning of The New Testament in The Book of Matthew, chapters 5, and 6, and 7. in chapter 13 it recorded the Lord's Prayer: "O God, forgive me for my sins." It is the public worship of Protestant and Evangelical Christians:
It is not mighty bad, tragic, that our government has forbidden this prayer in our schools, forbids prayer to The King, forbids prayer to the King belongs "The Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory, forever?" Paula 22:18 tells man "THE LORD IS THE GOVERNOR AMONG THE NATIONS," and yet our government refused this recognition of Him in our public schools!
"OUR FATHER WHICH ART IN HEAVEN, HALLOWED
DONE IN HEAVEN, AS IT IS IN HEAVEN, GIVE US THIS DAY
OUR DAILY BREADE. AND FORGIVE US DEBTS, AS
WE FORGIVE Our DEBUTORS. AND LEAD US NOT INTO
THE KINGDOM, DELIVER US FROM EVIL. FOR THINE
IS THE KINGDOM, AND THE POWER, and the GLOR
FOR EVER, AMEN."
unforgiving spirit upon The Lord." and have been so, that his life was "forgiven." Makes me love everybody." A forgiving spirit, and the spirit of hatred of evil, are not enemies, but rather brothers with the same spirit God: "Ye that love The Lord will forgive you."
After the Amen in The Lord's Prayer, the only direct comment made by Christ was: "FOR IFEY GOVEMEN THEIR TRESPASSES, THEY HEAVENLY FATHER WILL TRUST YOU FOR LIFE." For WE HAVE TRIED THEIR TRESPASSES, NEITHER WILL YOUR FATHER FORGIVE YOUR TRESPASSES!" The forgiveness of God is made conditional upon our forgiving those who have wronged us. We submit this is a dangerous prayer for the unconverted, and those unable to forgive others, lest we receive further harm from them. Myriads of Christians have, and doubtless every true Christian can testify how they have "cast the burden of an
Surely a critic should strive to be constructive, suggestive and wise. A criticism of the people of God put their "personal fellowship with the Almighty" in good shape, keep it that way, pray, testify, and strive to the end of leaders and great men might be the right thing.
Hear the conclusion of the whole matter of living the few years of temporal life: "FEAR GOD AND KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS, FOR THIS IS THE WHOLE DUTY OF MAN." Eccles. 12:13.
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University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Small claims court helpful with minor disputes
By TAMMY HARBERT
Staff Reporter
It's time to move out and you are shocked to find that for no reason your landlord isn't returning your full amount of money against yours, so what do you do?
For a five dollar filing fee, you can take the landlord to court and have a neutral third party decide the dispute.
The small claims court, established in Kansas in 1973, provides an inexpensive way for people to settle disputes involving less than $500.
"Basically, you get up and tell your side of the story, and then the other side tells its story," Clay Chapman, National Affairs Association, said last week.
ALTHOUGH PEOPLE involved in the suit may seek legal advice before the hearing, no lawyers are allowed in the courtroom.
To file a case for small claims in Douglas County, the plaintiff must fit out a form at the Specialized Division A and B Office at the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center, 11th and New Hampshire streets.
Joy Burns, Douglas County deputy court clerk, said a hearing was usually scheduled about three weeks after a claim was filed so that the defendant was given time to prepare a defense. The court had 33 cases in May, she said.
ROBERT WARD, MAGISTRATE of Yates Center, who heard small claims cases Friday, said about one third of the cases in the court involved businesses, including landlord-tenant disputes.
"A lot of our landlord-tenant problems grow out of subletting apartments," he said.
But the court covers such a wide range of cases, Ward said, that it is hard to classify them.
The cases Friday ranged from a woman suing a travel agency for a $77 refund on an airline ticket to a $80 suit. Another company said the company did not fulfill its contract.
"We refer them at the point that it looks like complaints cannot be worked out on an individual basis," he said.
CHAPMAN SAID his office often referred consumers to the court. The most commonly referred cases involve apartment security deposits, he said.
Often the defendant never shows up in court, Ward said, in which case the plaintiff usually wins by default. Also, the act of filing a claim against someone often shocks them into paying up, he said.
One of the problems with small claims court is that winning your case
does not necessarily mean you will get your money, Chapman said.
Ward said the court had the power to force payment, but that it was up to the creditor to take the legal steps required. By filing an aid in execution, the creditor can bring the debtor before the court to review his assets. The court may then put a lien on the person's car or other property until the debt is paid. A creditor may also file a request for garnishment if he requires a specified amount of the debtor's money be withheld by his employer from each paycheck until the debt is paid.
"Those are the hardest people to collect from." he said.
SOME DEBTORS have no definite place of employment and do all their business in cash, Ward said.
Although some people become upset during a hearing, Ward said there had never been any violent incidents.
Thanks to a federally supported program, some victims of crimes in Lawrence no longer face adversity alone. They are informed of developments their cases and are reassured by prosecution of the Oread Neighborhood Association.
The Association established an anticrime program through a grant from the Law Enforcement Assistance Foundation, the ONA's Mary Lisa Pike said.
Program assists crime victims
The program was designed to bridge a communications gap between victims and the police created by constraints of the law, tape and shear numbers, she said.
The Association received reports from police of all crimes that occurred in the neighborhood, which lies between Upper Michigan and Massachusetts Streets. The program workers contacted victims to reassure them, to provide home-security checks and to keep them in touch with the progress of their cases, Lake said.
Many victims felt they are lost in the shuffle and that their case is a statistic, she said. They felt excluded from a law
enforcement process that meant to serve and protect them.
Javad Dehagani, a KU Iranian student who was robbed and beaten, was an example.
Three weeks after he was taken to the hospital he did not know if the police even knew of the crime.
Thus, victims like Dehagani often were kept in the dark. This breakdown in communication often led victims to feel lost or disconnected from their effectiveness. Pike and Brothers agreed.
Mark Brothers, of the Lawrence Police Department's Crime Analysis Unit, said it would be too expensive and too time consuming for the department to keep in touch with all victims. And he added that law enforcement police, federal regulations prohibited police from disclosing information that could jeopardize an investigation.
Brothers said that a degree of mistrust was inherent in the criminal justice system. He described a dichotomy between a police officer's duty to be sensitive to a victim's feelings and his role as an investigator.
which an officer must deal the cases become, from necessity, mere statistics, he said.
Because of the number of crimes with
"We end up wearing more hats than you can imagine," Brothers said. "We act as father confessor, big brother and family counselor. Often a distressed victim thinks an officer is cold and unwilling to help the scene he must be controlled and unemotional in order to calm the victim and ascertain the facts."
A police officer who was not sensitive to a victim's needs would not last long on the force, Brothers said. He said, however, that this supportive psychological role was not a formal part of police training.
Community anti-crime programs like the ONA were part of a nationwide trend toward emphasizing the rights of crime victims, he said.
He said the amount of communication between police and victim varied from case to case and depended on an investigation's routress.
"Unfortunately, many crimes go unsolved," she said. "And because often there is no contact, the victim becomes a piece of paper somewhere in police file. We here to let him know that he's more than just a piece of paper."
Pike said that a victim's only point of contact with the police often was the initial report of the crime.
Oread's anti-erite program, which served more than 3,000 residents, was unusual because it was based in a small area. Oread usually funds programs in large cities.
Most Lawrence officers were concerned about victims of crime, which made them unusual. Pike said. Officers worked with the Oread staff and other community groups like the Hape Port Service, which helped rave victims.
Although she acknowledged the need for more victim assistance programs, Pike said she saw them as being essentially stop-gap measures.
It is hard to prevent some people from telling their story subjectively, he said.
"I'd like to see the police fill in the gap," she said. "But it all boils down to a question of money. Our program is better than nothing, and often is not the alternative in other neighborhoods."
Some of the cases he hears bring up complicated legal questions even though the amount involved is small. He used a screen to way screen out such cases, he said.
"Usually the witness wants to get in "there and explain to me the whole world," Ward said. "They think they are there to tell me what to decide."
WARD RECOMMENDED that people seek legal advice before coming to court so they know how to present a case effectively. He said having lawyers in the courtroom would make the process easier.
"An attorney will get my factual information," he said. "I would much rather have an attorney in the court than proceed without them."
Chapman said he didn't advise people to seek legal advice before the bearing.
"The idea of small claims court is that people don't have to go to lawyers," he said. "...lawyers don't give out free advice."
Chapman said he advised people to outline cases on paper before the hearing and to stick only to the facts.
"ard said that in small claims cases, a judge made his decision according to the "preponderance of evidence" rule. Unlike criminal cases, in which the judge makes his decision on the shadow of a doubt," the judge in small claims cases need only be persuaded slightly more by one side than the other. If it boils down to one person's word against another, the judge must decide on whom he believes the most.
ACCORDING TO A recent article in Consumer Reports, it may also help your case to present the judge with a photograph of a dented fender.
10
"If neither witness really persuades you," he said, "then it has to go with the defendant."
"I want people to leave the courtroom feeling as good about it as possible," he said.
If a person disagrees with the judge's decision, he may appeal to a higher court within 10 days. Ward said.
University to modify club recognition policy
By ERNIE DAVIS
Staff Reporter
A proposed change ending the University's policy of requiring groups to be recognized before receiving Student Senate funds would make it more difficult for some organizations to request funding. Deniece Chauchek, Student Senate president, said.
Under current policy, a group must register with the Office of Student Organizations and Activities before it can be recognized by the University.
Any group can register with the University if it is non-profit in nature and has a University-approved adviser.
THE RECONGITATION policy being dropped states that a group cannot support or oppose political party activism. This is true in situations, activities or beliefs, or
personal and private activities, habits or inclinations.
The new policy would allow any group registered with the University to request funding. Am Eversole, director of student organizations and activities, said.
Schnack said the requirement concerning personal habits would be dropped under the new policy, eliminating a double standard.
"The new policy would allow groups to be judged on individual merits," he said.
Eversole said the policy concerning the funding of religious and political groups must be clarified.
SCHNACKE SAID the Senate would have to develop a policy on the funding of political groups in accordance with the Senate rules into the Senate rules and regulations.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 16; 1980
Opinion
The search begins
Trying to find a new chancellor the caliber of an Archie R. Dykes will not be an easy task, but active student, faculty and alumni representation on the search tree could help organize the issue of finding a new leader for the University of Kansas.
Jordan Haines, Board of Regents chairman, has said a search committee of four students, four faculty members and four alumni probably would be selected to help recruit applicants for a new chancellor.
One element missing from the proposed committee is a member of the Classified Senate.
Although the Classified Senate was not given full recognition by the University last October when it was acknowledged as an organization, it has shown its imitability and support for a classified pay plan recently approved by the Kansas Legislature.
Classified employees debated the plan with local legislators and wrote several letters to Gov. John Carlin. They also informed KU administrators of the plan's changes and how they would be best implemented on campus.
Without the loyalty of the 1,500 classified employees on campus, the University could not function and it would lose its
position as an important employer in the Lawrence community.
The Regents should allow at least one qualified employee on the search committee.
Another important guideline for the Regents to follow is all Affirmative Action rules for hiring personnel.
Since its beginning in 1972, the Office of Affirmative Action has not had an opportunity to monitor the selection of a University chancellor. The select committee brought Chancellor Jones to KU was well under way when the office was created.
However, the Regents should seek to involve the legislature and a permanent one.
The best insurance for finding a suitable replacement for Dykes is individual participation. Only 12 or 13 KU representatives will have the opportunity to be on the search committee, but students, faculty, classified workers and alumni can write letters with suggestions to the Regents.
The next Regents meeting is Friday. The means used to finding the best possible chancellor should reflect fair representation, accordance with hiring practices and campus and community recommendations.
MANNELY THEERHAMNEWSLEADER @ROBOCBYCHICAGO TRIGEME
GUNS Butter
Islamic world unity a myth
By KHALID SHAH
New York Times Special Features
When I was a small boy 37 years old, going my religious instruction on the whitewashed-brick floor of the village mosque in Milak, Uttar Pradesh, India, the idea of the "brotherhood of Moslems," stretching from the Rock of Gilbarrat to the jungles of the Philippines, was a golden legend that nurtured us and made us feel stronger as a people than we really were.
It is only in the most recent years, even months, that for the masses of Moslems the myth has been shattered and the underlying hostilities among a multitude of diverse nations has revealed Islamic unity to be an ephemeral notion.
Today, the Islamic world is in turmoil. Most of the unrest is not the result of antagonisms between East and West, nor conflicts between the industrialized and developing worlds, not even the Palestinian problem in the Middle East. The most result of antagonisms among Moslem themselves.
present come from the same region or even the same village.
Because my name happens to be Shah, many of my American friends teasingly advise me to wear a button proclaiming "I am not Iranian." But that is quite harmless when compared to the most horrible and insulting any gathering of Moslems, except perhaps the most homogenous—that is, when all those
There is fighting in the Sahara between the Moslems of Algeria and Morocco (just a border-oil dispute) and conflict between South Yemen and Yemen that has threatened to explode into Saudi Arabia where the monarchy has obviously been in jeopardy since the assassination of the Taliban in Fallah, not to mention the occupation of the Grand Mosque in Mecca that ended early this year.
Farther east, Iran and Iraq are at odds. The Kurds in Kurdistan, a region that includes parts of southwestern Turkey, Iraq and Iran, are prepared to fight all three for independence. Afghanistan has been invaded by the Soviet Union, and its forces consist of Moslems from central Bangladesh has tried to stem the intufux or Moslem refugees from neighboring Burma.
Recently, an Indonesian correspondent at the United Nations was criticized bitterly by Moslem colleagues for trying to establish an Islamic journalists and writers' association. Fellow correspondents from Pakistan, Tunisia, Turkey and Iraq were among those who attempted to give Moslems their professional sounding board, complaining that he was not a good Moslem because he ate pork.
A Turkish writer and I were discredited by the authorities because our wives are Jewish, and o'Pakistan is a Jewish nation.
sneered at by members of the same group for eating during the fast of Ramadan.
In fact, it has been proclaimed by representatives of the government of Saudi Arabia that anyone does not say his prayers the required five times and attend special services on Fridays, shall be considered a "non-practicing" Moslem and not questioned in any event or association attended for Moslims.
There is an unfortunate proclivity among Moslems to honor self-proclaimed holy men. In this context, the importance of this tendency is unduly apparent in a religion where the impossibility of the emergence of a new prophet is its most important tenet, and of any human being is strictly prohibited.
But the Saudi Arabians have 'proclaimed themselves—or at least the ruling family has proclaimed itself—the keepers of Mecca and, hence, the keepers of the faith.
Islam was conceived as a religion of equality. A religion that emerged from a pagan system of a castes, discrimination, oppression of women and abuse of the impoverished, Islam has always had as a major article of faith the equality of all men and women before God. This means that merchant and truck driver, servant and king were not the same group as those structured so that rich and poor are interdependent. Alas, by abuses by class, sect and nation continue unabated.
Letters to the editor...
The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor and guest opinions that present different points of view about topics of timely concern. Letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. The Kansan reserves the right to edit all letters and columns. Letters must be legislated and must include the writer's address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position.
The city of Islamabad, the 21-year-old capital of Pakistan that was literally blasted from the earth in 1980, is home to those Moslems have of the emergence of their nations from fuedal medievalism. It is a unique amalgam of modernity and a sense of Moslem spirituality and represents the architectural heritage of the Islamic world.
an imam, or priest, from Islamabad University, who gave religious instruction to my family when we spent three months there in 1977, summed up the tragedy of 20th-century Islam as a society that has been so-called Islamic republics that have come into existence today," from Tunisia to Malaysia.
"It is not Jew vs. Moslem, or the developing countries vs. the industrialized world that keeps the Islamic nations in turmoil." he explained. "It is, rather, the inability of Moslems today to follow the most elementary article of brotherhood of man."
W N E I V THE RICHWOND NEWS LEADER © PROBYCICASO TRIP
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Warranties guarantee protection under law
By CLYDE CHAPMAN
Consumer Affairs
How do you know that a product you buy will contain those things that the seller or manufacturer said it would? For example, how do you know that a $28.50 toaster will be made in China or that a manufacturer said that the appliance would make toast. In legal terms, what the seller or manufacturer did was promise a toaster would make toast, and that promise is called warranty.
There are two basic types of warranties: express and implied. Express warranties are given by the manufacturer and service people, and are in writing, usually on a card or in a note to the customer. The manufacturer makes various promises in the express warranty regarding the quality of the product or the terms and conditions under which the product will be repaired. What a manufacturer or service person includes or uses is an express warranty is entirely unto them.
MOST EXPRESS WARRANTIES contain the following clause: "This warranty is expressly in lieu of all other warranties and representations, expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a purpose, the warranty of non-inherent defects, the clause takes more rights away from you then theexpress warranty originally offered.
Implied warranties guarantee the right to receive what is expected of a product. The implied warranty can be a strong weapon in the fight against defective merchandise, but manufacturers and service people are concerned that if their implied warranties are not in writing, they are, however, imposed by state laws on any business establishment that sells products.
These state laws require sellers and manufacturers to make certain promises to the consumer. Even if such promises are not in writing, sellers and manufacturers are bound by law to uphold them. What the manufacturer guarantees is warranty is determined by state laws alone.
EXPRESS WARRANTY can be useful. if a manufacturer or service person refuses to honor an express warranty, asserting your right to claim damages of the problem. However, the implied warranty possesses the type of broad protection that covers most problems. Rights can be demanded under the implied warranty even if the manufacturer attempts to take them away.
The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, a federal law passed in 1975, guarantees such protection. This act discourages manufacturers from eliciting warranties from suppliers that if a written warranty is received from the manufacturer or seller for a product costing $15 or more, it is illegal under state law for the warrantsor to eliminate your rights to the implied warranty. The act requires that manufacturers make a statement regarding the nature or workmanship of the product or any statement to
the effect that the product was detect-free or any promise to repair, replace, refund, or take other action if the product failed to meet the requirement, a act should apply to most consumer products.
THE ACT'S EFFECT on the implied warranty is broad. If any written warranty is given, it contains an implied warranty, which cannot be eliminated by the manufacturer.
There are two instances, however, when the act would not apply. If there was no express warranty and the manufacturer simply eliminated the implied warranty in writing, there was no express warranty and the law would not apply. Also, if all that accompanied the product was the term "as is," the buyer would receive a warranty for any future promises. Aside from these two exceptions, all products costing more than $15 carry an implied warranty.
Sections 2-314 and 2-315 of the Uniform Commercial Code provide buyers with the implied warranty. Every state except Louisiana has adooted the code.
SECTION 2-314 of the code requires all goods to be "merchantable." While the law provides an elaborate definition of merchantable, the word means that if what is bought does not meet reasonable expectations, it is not merchantable. Section 2-315 adds a more specific promise to the implied warranty under certain circumstances. The product must be used with judgment that a particular product is fit for a particular purpose is relied upon. In such cases, the product is implicitly warranted to be able to perform for a particular purpose.
Before the Magnuson-Moss Act, effective remedies for breach of implied warranties were unavailable. If the seller refused a money back demand, the buyer was forced to go to court. Regardless of the outcome of the case, the buyer would have to pay lawyer's fees.
The act now provides the buyer with attorney's fees, an important remedy if the implied warranty is breached. If the buyer must sue to obtain a refund or replacement, the salesperson who sold the defective merchandise must pay the fees.
A SIMPLE EXAMPLE of the implied warranty is the case of Mindell v. Raleigh Rug Company. Mindell bought some floor rugs from the company, which were manufactured by the GAF Corporation. After the tiles were installed, they began to yellow. The court ruled that "a product, such as tile, which discloses shortly after installation, is merchantable as required by the law," and that no warranty can be only durable, but also hold its pattern and color for a reasonable length of time consistent with the degree of quality selected." The yellowing of the tile, the court concluded, was a breach of the implied warranty, which the GAF Company was required to give to Mindell.
In the case of warranties, both express and implied, buyers now have a tool which can give satisfaction when dealing with defective merchandise. It must be you, the buyer, however, who brings the law to bear on the seller or manufacturer.
The University Daily KANSAN
(UPSF 605-460) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays.二级公司帖页 at Lawrence UPSF 6046. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $2 a year in Louisville County, year outside the county. Student subscriptions are @ acemail, paid through the student activity fee.
Unigned editorials represent the opinion of the Kanan editorial staff. Signed columns represent, the views only the writings.
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9
University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Page 5
Arson trend burns on
By TRACEE HAMILTON
Staff Reporter
Every day in the United States enough property to equal a city the size of Lawrence is destroyed by arson.
Arson, considered the fastest-growing crime in America, costs the public nearly 1.6 billion dollars annually, and accounts for 1,000 deaths a year.
Because of the growing concern over arson, Gov. John Carlino declared June "Arson Awareness Month" in Kansas. This month marks the first anniversary of an arson hotline, sponsored by the Kansas Arson Advisory Committee.
CITIZENS ARE encouraged to use the houtie to aid in authorisms in cases. Informants may receive reward money if their tip leads to the conviction of the suspect. The Christian, Socialist, Secular or the Arson Advisory Committee, said last week.
In 1978, of 13 Lawrence fires due to arson, four were solved. Last year the total more than doubled to 21. Eleven of those were solved.
"A little old lady almost burned up in one fire," Tirad said. "It's disgusting to think they had dislikes so strong that they would put lives in danger."
One of these informants, Tim (a fictitious name), used the hotline after seeing his friends start several fires.
One year, from $131,000 in 1978 to $369,000 in 1979.
"A successful arsonist doesn't leave a lot," he said. "We have to sift through rubble to find evidence."
Tim said his main concern now is to remain anonymous. The fire chief from Tim's south-central Kansas community said Tim would be in danger if people ever found he had informed on his friends.
DESPITE TIPS from informants, arson is a tough crime to solve, said Chief Jim McSawn of the Lawrence fire department.
Only 1 in 100 arson suspects are convicted. Experts say there are not enough skilled investigators in the field, and if an arson site is also because of arson for profit.
A few businessmen see arson as a
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"every organization that deals with arson--fire departments, police departments, the KBI-is represented on the committee," he said.
Christian said that in its first year, the hotline received 19 calls. Three people are now eligible for reward money, he said.
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A relatively small number of fire sets are set by pyromaniacs, people who get a thrill out of seeing a fire, according to the psychology professor David Holmes.
"Some people like to go to tractor pulls, some to discos, others to set fires," he said. "They love to watch the fire come. Some people find fires exciting."
Who is that KEG-MAN?
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In addition to the profit motive, many fires are set for revenge. These tend to be more costly in terms of lives,
SUA FILMS
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Maybe the most fun ever packed in two hours of film, this great musical features the talented Debbie Reynolds, Donald O'Connor, and the greatest dance numbers in history. Directed by Stanley and Stanley. (1952 101 min.)
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Handicapped read from radio
By SHAWN McKAY
Art Hadley, a volunteer with Audio-Reader, a service designed to reach those who cannot see to read, prepares to read a selection of material during the "Mature Subject Hour" on a special dial selection on KANI. radium
Staff Reporter
THE TIME IS NOW. THE BEST OF JOHN LENNON'S FILMS, EDITED BY ALEXANDER EASTMAN AND KEVIN CAMPBELL. PUBLISHED BY MIDLAND PICTURES, INC. 1973.
Five years ago Donna Laushman spent countless hours reading to her bed, now lay paralyzed in a hospital bed. Not long after, she read newspapers and books over the airwaves of the Audio-Reader to her son, her son, her son, are unable to read for themselves.
Laushman did not know about the Audio-Reader until a year after her son's death.
"Four years ago I heard Rosie Hurwitz speaking on the need for volunteers to read to the blind and I've been giving my services ever since," he said then, and I know now, that there are many people out there who need me.
HURWTZ, DIRECTOR of the KU Audio-Reader, said that there was always a need for volunteers to read books, newspapers and magazines to thousands of handicapped recipients of service throughout the state of Kansas.
The Audio-Reader, established in 1971, was the second in the nation to offer specialized radio programs to those unable to read. The station broadcasts 163 hours a week of pre-recorded and live broadcasts through cable televisions and information dealing with blindness and physical impairments.
The Audio-Reader uses the KANU radio signal to broadcast its programs but it is not available to regular listeners. Recipients of the service use a special receiver to separate KANU from Audio-Reader programs.
POPULAR BOOKS with copyright dates less than two years old are offered in programs ranging from "The Mystery Hour" to the late night "Toronto Night," and "Hour" which offers adult novels and excerpts from Playboy magazine.
"The Mature Subject Hour is broadcast from 11 p.m. to midnight so listeners will not be offended," Harwit said. "Though some listeners want a quiet environment, do not air pornography. We find books that have some redeeming quality."
Art Hadley, who reads Playboy for "The Mature Subject Hour," said he
thought that listeners enjoyed the adult novels.
"Most of the listeners are receiving more enjoyment from the party jokes in Playboy than are the viewers of television," Hadley said.
"And because of the deliberate action involved in listening to the adult hour, I can't help but feel that someone to someone who is really listening.
Resident and student volunteers were responsible for more than 95 percent of broadcast time, but Hadley is paid for his work, Hurwitz said.
"Our volunteer readers derive a tremendous sense of satisfaction
when they realize that they are allowing people who could not read to read through them," Hurwitz said. "There comes a time in everyone's life when they like to feel that they really have something of great significance that they can offer to others."
WALTER SANDEALAS, former professor of political science who has been blind for 10 years, said the volunteers would never realize the amount of enjoyment they brought to the blind.
"Thanks to the Audio-Reader, I've been more well read than I've ever been in my life," Sandalela said.
"The readers allow me to keep abreast of the outside world that I can no longer see."
"Not to be able to read is an in- comprehensible thought for most of us," Hurwitz said.
"Physically handicapped people thanks to our program, can read through us."
BUT MORE FUNDS are needed for the project. Hurwitz said.
"Kansas has the fourth largest aged population in the United States with as many as 100,000 who would qualify for this type of service and there is no way that we can ever begin to serve that many," she said.
By PAUL CARMAN
Staff Reporter
"Up the Academy," originally filmed in Salina as a "family fun film" under the name "The Brave Young Men of Salina" which disappointed several Salina residents.
Col. Keith Duckers, president of the St. John's Military Academy, where most of the filming was done, said it would be to objective about the movie.
"The finished product was hardly a work of art, but I wasn't really shocked." Duckers said, "I spent most of my time watching the movie looking for people and places that I could recognize."
DUCKERS ALSO SAID he was not aware during the filming that the movie was rated R.
"The plot summary they gave me did not include any of the things that made him sick," she said. "Now that he had shown the script to some schools, but had always been turned down. By the time they came here they were gone and I never saw the script." "he said.
Duckers said that the cadets of his school were not in any of the derogatory or objected scenes.
The closest scene, he said, is the one where the cadets are "oiling" and "aathing" at Barbara Back play lt. Col. Fern Bliss.
The lines of the major characters in at least one such scene indicate the cadets are masturbating.
DANIEL BRATTON, president of Kansas Wesleyan, which was used for the filming of the Butch Academy TV series, wrote the core of the rating at the time of the filming.
"I was told that it would be a family fun movie," he said. "The plot summary was quite a bit different from what we had seen there." There was nothing enticing in all at all.
"I was not offended by it but I enjoyed it only from the point of view of seeing familiar scenes and people. It was by no means an artistic work."
Bratton said his son and daughter were in the movie.
Bratton said that had he known about the R rating he would not have allowed the film makers to use Weslevan.
But Bratton requested that all publicity for the movie not include Kansas Wesleyan and that its name be dropped from the credits.
ONE WOMAN SAID she was aware of the rating all through the production.
"I don't think it's going to be around very long. I mean, it's not going to win any Academy Awards or anything, but I enjoyed being in it. I had wanted to see the backstage part of the movie production."
The woman, Clarobel Geis, the mayor's mother, was one of the extras for the movie and said, "I think they didn't like me. They one for the theater and another for TV."
John Woody, Salina police chief, is disappointed about the way his dog was used in the film.
"They told me they were using Sgt. Patty mostly for promotional purposes," Woody said, "They said they were her almost entirely out of the film."
In one scene, actor Tom Leibman is Major Vaughan Liceman, prepares for what he hopes to be a night when he can "score." He puts several packages of money on his wallet, then offers one to Sgt. Patty, who plays Liceman's dog in the movie.
The film cuts to Sgt. Patty, who is chewing something.
"That's the kind of sexual exploitation I don't care for." Woods said.
a daddy sald.
The movie's producers about the plot of the movie, but had told him it was going to be rated PG, he said.
"Nothing these days would really shock me," he said, "But I had no idea that it would be rated R.
"Mad magazine bought out the movie, didn't they? That probably explains it."
Duckers, reflecting on the production, the publicity and the resulting film, said. "The finished product is a bit of a disappointment that happened during the production."
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An Invitation . . .
A new intentional Christian living community called "Koinoonia" will be sponsored by Ecumenical Christian Ministries at the University of Kansas for the 1980-81 academic year. Located on the lower floor of the ECM Center at 1204 Oread, Koinoonia will be a fellowship of men and women students whose life together is dedicated to the love of God and of neighbor through following Jesus Christ. The new community will be characterized by two features:
(1) a disciplined life together, and
Mature Christian men and women who are sophomore or above students at KU are invited to apply as soon as possible for full information, application forms, and interview appointment. Appointments will be on Monday through Friday, 9:00 - 12:00 p.m. and 1:00 - 5:00 p.m.
(2) a ministry of service to the KU campus.
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
is sponsored cooperatively by
The United Methodist Church
The United Presbyterian Church USA
The United Church of Christ
The Prohibition Churches
The Church of the Brethren
Dr. Jack Bremer, Director
A sailboat in a storm.
WITH THE KU
SAIL
SAILING CLUB
INTRODUCTORY MEETING
Wednesday JUN.18 7:00 pm Kansas Union
Learn to Sall Classes Advanced Teaching Come and join us! Partles
COLEMAN AND JEWELRY
Outstanding Results
at
hair lords
styling for men and women
1017 1/2 Mass
841-8276
REDKEN
Hours
M-Sat. 9-9
Sun. 12-5:30
University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Otis' bat boosts Kansas City
MLIWAKEU (AP) — Amos Oti still cannot bend the little finger of his right hand, but that didn't stop the Kansas City Royals centerfielder yesterday.
Otis, batting 188 at game time, had missed 40 games because of a broken finger. But yesterday he knocked in three runs with a pair of homers. Willey Mays Akens and Hal McRae added bases empty homers to back Dennis Leonard's five-hit pitching as the Royals defeated the Brewers 7-2.
"I really wasn't trying to hit home runs, but I just seem to do pretty well against this club," Olsa said. "If figure I can hit as many homers as Willie Mays Akins, I'll have a pretty good year."
Otsit hit .50 with five homers and 14 runs batted in against the Brewers last year.
"Amos has been struggling, no doubt about it," Royals manager Jim Frey said in the last few days he started his tenure. "I look like he's started to come out of it."
"He's coming out of it at just the right time. Taking two games out of three from Milwaukee in their park is a good move." He was capable of scoring a lot of runs. I was
worried as hell, but we just happened to hit more home runs today than they did."
The Royals broke a scoreless tie against loser Moose Haas, 6-6, in the fifth innning when U.L. Washington scored on a single by Frank White.
1. Frank White.
Alkens slammed his sixth home run of the year and third in the three-game series leading off for the Royals in the sixth. Obit hit his second homer of the season one out later and the Royals led
AMERICAN LEAGUE
| | W | L | Pts | G |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 31 | 25 | 461 | GB |
| Milwaukee | 31 | 25 | 354 | 14 |
| Washington | 29 | 27 | 344 | 8 |
| Cleveland | 29 | 27 | 318 | 8 |
| Detroit | 28 | 27 | 300 | 6 |
| Baltimore | 28 | 27 | 492 | 17 |
| St. Louis | 28 | 27 | 481 | 14 |
Kansas City 77 22 657
Chicago 29 28 396
Oklahoma 29 28 7
Seattle 28 28 467
South Carolina 28 32 441
Minnesota 21 36 144
Missouri 21 36 390
Toronto, 0, Tina 2. Texas
Boston, 1, Dipdil, pgd., rain
Minneapolis, 2, Rainbow,
Kansas City 7, Milwaukee
New York 8, Miami
New York & New
Garden City
Leonard, 7-5, who hurled shutouts in his last two starts, had a string of 23 consecutive scoreless innings ended when Robin Scoret lined his 11th homer of the season with one in the outing and Don Money followed with his sixth.
However, McRae singing leading off the Royals' eighth, and Otis followed with his second homer of the game to score 38. The RBI was his homer with two out in the ninth off Jerry Augustine and the Royals, who have won 21 of their last 28 games, added another run on a single by Otis, scoring the RBI double. NATIONAL BALLGIRL
W 12 L Pct GB
Montreal 30 24 197
Pittsburgh 30 24 379 1
Philadelphia 30 24 356 482
Chicago 30 24 482 444
Chicago 30 24 482 444
WEST
Houston 34 25 596 1
Los Angeles 34 25 596 1
San Diego 34 25 596 1
San Francisco 25 34 474 10
San Diego 25 34 474 10
San Francisco 25 34 474 10
Los Angeles 3, Monteaulis 4
Philadelphia San Diego 5
Phoenix San Francisco 6
San Francisco 3, New York 4
Chicago 1, Atlanta 4
Financial aid group going broke
A Lawrence service organization which gives emergency financial assistance for food, rent, utility and medical expenses may be bogged back.
last winter to a man who could not pay his utility bill and faced the possibility of freezing if the service was disconnected.
Mary Anne Stanley, a tick researcher, said one young man called her for information after he saw a tick on his girlfriend. He thought his girlfriend was very clean until he saw the tick, she said.
Ticks not picky pests
STANLEY SAID SHE spent about 45 minutes explaining to him that anybody can get ticks.
More ticks are biting people this year, and most of them are not choosy; they'll bite the spotless as well as the seedy.
With the current high rate of inflation and national unemployment, Baron said ESC expected the number of requests to increase.
Bv SHELLY COKER
Ticks are often picked in woods, and more people are coming in contact with them because of the presence of ticks such as camping and backpacking, she said. Favorable breeding conditions last year made ticks more difficult to kill.
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence Emergency Service Council, a coalition of social service organizations, all but its last $100. The usual amount of each request from applicants seeking assistance is $100. Unless public access is received, the ESC will cease operations.
Stanley, Jesup, Ga., graduate student, said ticks climb grass and bushes and their legs catch the clothes of people or animals that brush them.
said. It may take 15 minutes to remove a tick by tyhis method, she said.
Those using a lighted match or cigarette are sometimes burned, she said, and kerosene might irritate the skin around the bite.
"Last week we took 20 applications and granted only eight of them," said Betty Baron, publicity chairman for ESC. "This week we have a crisis situation with only $100 in our budget to distribute."
Do not squeeze the fat part of the tick, where it stores the blood, Stanley said. Blood and saliva might be squeezed into the wound and some ticks carry blood from other diseased hosts.
Staff Reporter
By NANCY SEARLE
The body also might separate from the head. Then it is difficult to get the head out and the saliva organs may still be attached. Although the tick is dead, the saliva glands may continue to work.
Suburban development displaces ticks 'natural hosts of animals in the woods. Ticks then turn to humans for food more often, Stanley said.
If a tick does bite, it spends hours feeding.
Occasionally, the saliva is toxic to the host and may contain diseased organisms. Leaving the head in the heat can cause an infection, Stanley said.
To remove a tick, grasp the head with a pair of tweezers and slowly pull the head out of the wound, Stanley
ESC, which began in 1971 and operates from the Community Building at 11th and Vermont streets, serves as immediate relief for people who need help with food or shelter. $100 rent for a woman who had her purse stolen. Assistance was also given
Unlike mosquitoes, both male and female ticks feed on blood. The female will not complete her meal and the male will engorged with blood until she mates.
When walking through the woods, a person should check often for ticks, Stanley said. It usually takes several minutes to detect and transmit diseased organisms to a host.
Baron said ESC was low on funds because the assistance given out-numbered the donations received.
Although ticks are well known for their bite, other details of their lives are less well known. After ticks climb grass or bushes, they use their feet to smell an approaching animal. They may also detect nearby animals by their shadows, ground vibrations, carbon dioxide, or temperature differences.
Three of the most common diseases ticks carry are Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia, and tick analysis. None are common in this area.
Ticks mate while they are on a host.
The male engorges himself and then searches for a female. The female is attracted to chemical that helps the male find her.
LAST YEAR, ESC helped 350 families in the Douglas County area.
If an animal comes indoors with a mated female tick, she may drop off and lay from 2,000 to 6,000 eggs.
If aick lays eggs in a carpet, the young may hatch and infest the home. People have been driven from their homes because their eggs are easily vacuumed, she said.
TACOS 25c
the KEGGER
Kinko's
Hours 8:30 & 6:30
M/S
4c copies
(no minimum)
904 Vermont
843 8019
After 10 p.m.
Offer good this Mon.-Fri. only.
5
Taco Via'
Mondays: Pitcher night
6-8 P.M. *1.50 Pitchers
Tuesdays: Terrific Tuesday
7-9 P.M.
60 Boxes/Bottles
1700 W. 23rd St
841-4848
The Harbour Lites Summer Specials
60c Canz/Bottles
Wednesdays: Busch Night
7-10 P.M.
50m Busch Bottle
$1.00 Coors Quarts
TGIF
Fridays: 3-6 P.M.
*1.25 Pitches, 60 Cans/Bottles
Softball Team Specials For Winning Teams in uniform on game nights.-$1,000 Pitchers regardless of time
And Introducing JOE'S SUBS
Buy any sandwich and get 25c off your beer price . . .
pitchers, cans, bottles and draws.
Thursdays: Quart Night 7-10 P.M.
The University Daily
CLASSIFIED RATES
Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
tint two three threep five six seven eight nine ten
15 wounds or fewer $2.25 $2.30 $2.40 $2.50 $2.60 $2.70 $2.80
additional word $2.90
nine ten
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 2 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 2 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 3 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 3 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 3 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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 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 Kauai business office at 844-588
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 644-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Make it easy on yourself, your car, and your wallet this semester—CAR POOL. Kansas Union Main Lobby. Questions—call 864-4064.
J. HOOD BOOKSKELLER: Scholarly, literate. In the past we have taught our students also, buy, sell and trade good condition used books in all fields and scholarly titles in all fields. 1401 Muschelstauss. 841-1444 Open everyday except holidays.
Visit the Book End at Quantrill's Flea Market for the finest in books at reasonable prices. Weekends 10-5. 6-16
ENTERTAINMENT
The man that has protected decent Kansas from the tide of scyff radicals now extends his coverage to auto, home, and life. "A man you know, a face you trust." 8-25
THIS WEDNESDAY
The Movie Classic
HAROLD &
MAUDE
2 shows 9 & 11 only $2.50
Also singer Roger Barne between shows
Cheap pitches & highlights 8:00-9:00
Present 1 set of door fired for free draw.
(Limited one per person)
Lawrence Opera House
7th & Mass.
Students—com to Mails Bookshop to,
Western Civ Analysis, Magazines, Hallmark
cards, George Booth cards, Posters and
more! **1**
FOR SALE
Townesque Opera House
7th & 8th. Apt. 423,6930
FOR RENT
OLIVETT PRAXIS TYPEWRITER Office
compact, ultra-modern style, like
new condition, pica, $250. Call Mike. $45-587
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Makes use of the book "Western Civilization"
Makes sense to use them. As a study
material, prepare 3. For exam preparation.
"New York State." For exam preparation.
"New York State at town Crit, Mala
Bookstore." For exam preparation.
Good living arrangement two blocks from campus. Responsible rate. Call 842-6579. 619-
★★★★★★★★★
Villia Mall Carrier Applications. Unlimited 1 & 2雇员 applications available. Central触觉设备 1 & 2雇员 available. Blockschool software of Foster Hall Computer and blockschool software of Foster Hall Computer and other 38 schools. B 82-7490 & 81-5810.
Mark I & II i l pt. NEW RENTING FOR
Mark I & II i l pt.
15:00-18:40, 18:40-19:10, 19:10-20:40, Quit 1. Interested in 2 bed roomate, onboarding and heat Carpeting balances, off-campus and landlord facilities. Call resident mar for details and landlord facilities. Call resident mar for details.
Roommate wanted for summer, 2 bedroom
bus. Apt. bus. All furnished $90 per
ullage. Call Kilm. or Dau 842-
4324. W. 24th St. #97. (6)19-
Apts 12). 6-19
NAIMISH HALL has openings for summer:
both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-859 any time of day.
if
Renter(s) wanted to share. House-3 bed,
room-1/2 bath, formal dining room, carpet.
Backyard backyard. basement. C.A.
Shawner area. No jebbs. 30/4 months
631-3043.
Large furnished rooms in house one block from Union. Share KRB deposit central cooling, 843-9808—1209 Ohio. 6-26
COOPERATIVE LIVING—established stu-
rength-focused, located within easy walking
pathways; convenient location in town
lawrence. Private room rates $80-$120
utilities and aspera;掌柜 8120-
9421.
HOUSE- 3 Bedrooms, 1½ baths; formal dining room, carpet, large tiled backyard, basement. C/A Shawne area. No pts. $50 per month. Call 631-3043. 6-23
Pine Bookscase=$20 & up; Tables, $35 & up;
small shelves, $15 & up. Mike Stough,
843-8892.
6-23
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9069, 3900 W.
tf
SINSEMILLA - Herbal seeded smoking mix in a blend of tobacco, lavender, and Arizona Sage, traditional ingredient of Navajo smoking mixes. Perfume 4 oz. Cottonseed Oil 8322 7-10 2251, Cottonseed Oil 8322 6832 7-10
Moving! Must sell 79 Honda Express moped.
Excellent condition. $350 or best offer. 841-
3466.
PENTAX SLR 110 CAMERA. Includes three lens, lightly照射, lens hood, electronic motor electric film advance, new condition #292, Call: 6-198, 842-5587
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-1386.
Complete unfilled waterbed, $169.95.
Sheets $25. WesternWorld waterbeds, 841-
1090, 6th and Kasid.
6-16
TENNIS RACKET. Donnay Graphite, wood
string with blaucey baumant glut (90
day guarantee) ($10 plus value for $0, call 842-
585, 843-315.
1957 Camaro psb-pab-excellent condition,
sacrifice $2,000. 842-1702. 6-26
Yamaha receiver, turntable with diamond head 25" Professional Wireless Techniques 841-360-7242 841-360-7243 841-360-7244
FOUND
Toyota air conditioner—Radiator, compressor, blower assembly, $250, negotiable, 842-2352, Sunday and evenings. 6-19
1972 Ford LTD Station Wagon. Good tires and runs good AC & AT. Lots of miles for $300. See at 1007 West 27th Street. 6-23
Found at Trailridge Apts. One gray and white kitten—approx. four weeks old. Please call 841-7648
6-16
HELP WANTED
Need money? Like to babysit? Then add money to the Center's babylist list and watch Drop by 108 Strong Hall or call 846-3506 to come to one of the most popular lists in town.
House managers, Menninger half-way house and adult halfway house. College and graduate students find this job attractive as they are required to be board room, and a good salary and also to patients to gain independent living skills. Employees may be required to be husband. The spouse may be a full time employee of the Foundation, and will be paid a salary on the basis of responsibility for attending staff meetings, managing the business of the tenure department for repairs, and planning maintenance of the manager's desk with an arrangement and adequate time in its assured Apply in person or by telephone. Topska Foundation, Tth & Fraser, Topska
ATTONYNE. Student Governing Association, Inc. will be held at the School of Law. Student Attorney to serve student body of law may be licensed in Kansas; experiential legal issues preferred. Salary burden may be waived. August 1980. Applications must be received by August 20th. The names and the names of three referrers to Mr. Mittertee, SGA Office, K-State University, SGA Office, K-State University, or an eligible employment employer. 6-46
Experienced sales wanted. Part-time, week nights and weekends hours. Apply in person. 802 W. 23rd. Green's Liquor. 6-19
nights and weekends hours. Apply in mid-
night, on 802. W 23rd. Green Liquor. 6-11.
In lieu of a regular network seeks a Volunteer. Special Projects Coordinator负责编程 and family involvement and broadcast equipment required. Ability to work with people, good vocabulary and readier language. Mandatory. College degree or equivalent Position available July 1, 1980. Salary dependent upon 802. W 23rd. Exp. job description contact R. Hurwitz, HRV. Audio/Video Contact W. Hurwitz, Audio/Video Contact W. Hurwitz, KS 60443 9115 W 11th, Lawrence, KS 60443 9115 W 11th. Lawrence, KS 60443 9115 W 11th. Employers are an equal Opportunity Employer.
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Guitar, band, mandolin from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock, jazz blues, and folk styles. Experiments with Calt Ritler, a Steve Meyer musician. 841-0817. 6-30
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call
Licum Aid 845-564. tt
CAR POOL: Haven't you been without one long enough? (Kansas Union Main Lobby)
Questions-call-864-8064. 6-19
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and Wednesday evenings. Call Bob Hills 846-4991 before 5, 842-1136 evening.
The Good-Bye Archie Ball—with XANADU.
Monday, June 16th. Off The Wall Hall.
Only $1.50. 6-16
PRGFNGAN and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821. 6-31
Nautical Delights, Tans Guaranteed—with the K.U. Sail Club Join us Wed. night at 7:00 in the Union. 6-19
Try the summer specials at the cool Hard Lites. 1031 Massachusetts Specialties Outfit for football and basketball or finding softball teams. And try a sandwich Lites-and get a discount on your next Lites-and get a discount on your next
Pepsi hour at Bucky's! 10e off all soft drinks! Small 25, medium 35, and large 45! Bucky's, 2120 W, 9th from 6 a.m to 4 o'clock p.m.
TYPING
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 812-
2001. If
I do damned good typing Peggy 842-
4476 tf
Experienced typist IBM Correcting Selective Quality work. References available. Sandy, day and weekends. 745-8818 tf
Experienced Typist-typist papers, thesis,
presentations. Mail corrections. Mrs. Wright
spelling correction. 843-9544, Mrs. Wright
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with all types of computers. B&H-629-7487 after 5 weeksends. If you have a phone number that is reasonable, we thank you. Things, dinners, welcomes and business trips are welcome. Your original design deserve an Encore Knockout.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast, reliable, accurate. IBM pica/elite. #825-207
evenings to 11:00 and weekends.
SUMMER WORKSHOPS
Museums of Natural History
Thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4476 for reservations. tf
Now through August 2
OPENINGS AVAILABL CALL 864-4173
Week-long Classes Ages 5-13
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics editing, self-correct Sellicat, Electric OrJean and Ellen, 841-2172. 7-31
TUTOR: English 101, 102. Experienced in K.U. system. $5 per hour. Contact Margle, 4-4050. 6-26
Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna. 842-7244. tf
Question: How can you have fun, meet new
people, and learn new skills? Patricia all at the same time? For example,
s-1-svwe Car Pool Exchange Board, Kansas
4064 Main Lobby Questions; call 6-10
4064
Printing While You Wait is available with Alice at the House of Usher's Quick Copy from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Friday, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at 838 Mass
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-
4989. ttf
LFARN TENNIS this summer from experienced instructor—next beginner and intermediate sessions start Monday, 16th. Details C. Gets 842-585, 841-335.
Get a Cool Tan, no need to suffer the heat outdoors. Tantalize Tan Center, 2210 Iowa. 8-63 4937.
WANTED
The University Daily
3. 5, or 10-speed bike, preferably woman's.
Call Debbie 842-6980, afternoons or evenings.
6-19
Mature, non-smoking female roommate start August, $135/month apartment on Tennessee, own room. Write: Grad Student, 128 Stanton, Amherst, Iowa. 50010 7-10
ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM
1
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 7,500 PLUS
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 7,500 PLUS
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansas. 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING:
Write Ad Here:
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Dates to Run: ___ To
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8.23 8.20 8.23 8.20 8.23
8.25 8.20 8.23 8.20 8.23
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page 8 University Daily Kansan. June 16, 1980
Quenemo ...
from page 1
big, loud party until 10 p.m. by big, loud pomona Porna was shot to death on a street that was being used as a road, according to Osage County sheriff.
OSAGE • COUNTY ATTORNEY
Mike Hines, said Saturday that a suspect was being sought in connection with the attack, but that no arrests had been made.
Two other traffic fatalities occurred during the celebration. Larry Rank, 31, Kansas City, Kan., was killed when his motorcycle and two other vehicles crashed into miles north of Quenoa on Kansas Highway 288, according to sheriff's reports. Mary Graen, Williamsburg, was killed when her car struck another car head-on near Pornoma Lake, highway Patro' officials reported.
Max Ferguson, Osage County sheriff's deputy, said police tried to barricade Quenemo's main streets about 8 p.m. to stop the drag racing, but were not able to keep the barricades in place because of the crowd.
They were ripping off police cars right and left," Ferguson said. "Some tires were slashed and the red lights stolen from one of our patrol cars."
Hines said that early in the evening the police used a containment strategy because of the crowd's size.
"We didn't want to send officers down into the crowd," Hines said. "It was too dangerous, they could have been swallowed up."
THE GATHERING dispersed about 1 a.m. when police told the people remaining that they would be arrested if they didn't leave, he said.
Police said they were prepared for Friday's traditional celebration, but were surprised by its size.
"The crowd was much larger than we anticipated," Hines said. "The officers were overwhelmed and couldn't hold them once they started racing."
Maxine Lloyd, a Quenmo resident whose property faces one of the streets used as a drag strip, said, "The police and job keeping them off our property."
"But I don't want to see it happen again."
NOT ALL QUENEMO residents
thought Friday the 13th was an unlucky day for the town.
Sam Watts, proprietor of Sam's Quenemo Saloon, the only tavern in town, said he sold more than 300 cases of beer during the celebration.
"I make a lot of money," he said. "I'd like to see it continue if they can do it without problems."
Jack Cade, a Quenuela resident who said he helped start the Friday the 13th golf tournament, started out with a bunch of old boys having a good time. We invited some friends from the area and pretty soon it just started getting bigger and bigger.
"Quenemo the last place in Kansas where bikers can get together and meet, he said, left here to destroy anyway. There's nothing destructible in Quenemo," he said, gesturing with his open beer at the long-abandoned buildings along *street*
BEN LEWIS, OWNER of a gas station in Stationen said it was once a thriving farm town, but had become a small family farm decades as small farmers moved away.
Nicklaus wins 4th U.S. Open
The 2-stroke trump came in record fashion, a hallmark of Nicklaus, incredible catches and even the big Bear had been written off by so many observers as an over-the-hill, 40-year-old former champion, a man whose victories were all behind him.
yesterday and secured what may be the most welcome of all his titles, a record-matching fourth United States Open crown.
SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (AJ)-Jack Nicklaus, displaying the vast talent that made him golf's incomparable champion, fired a last-round 68
He answered his critics as he had done so many times in his unmatched career - with his sticks.
He won this one with a 72 total, eight strokes below par on the farned lower course at the Baltusrol Golf Club.
boyhood hero, Bobby Jones, as the only four-time winners of the U.S. Open. Nicklaus' previous victories came in 1962, 1967 and 1972.
Not only did it snap the longest nonwinning streak of his career, it came in the biggest of all the world's tournaments and returned him to a position of leadership in the game he has ruled so long.
It was his 67th victory on the American tour but, more importantly, it was his first in two long years.
John Douglas, Leon's younger brother and a former KU star, would like to join Leon in the NBA's world of three-point plays, loose ball fouls and close clocks. But Douglas said that after two years he had not had the chance.
Last Thursday former Detroit Piston center Leon Douglas signed a multi-year contract to play for the National Association's Kansas City Kings.
That broke his own Open scoring record of 275, set here in 1967 when he won his second American national championship.
"I worked harder this year than at any time since I was a kid," he said.
By TOM GRESS Staff Reporter
It had to be the sweetest of them all. For two years he has patiently explained the problems he was facing.
Douglas' NBA dream lives on
Siaff Reporter
He viewed old movies to find the tiny flaws in his swing. He worked with Phil Rodgers to add some shots to his game. He had his disappointments, many of them, but they all faded with his brilliant triumph yesterday.
"I'm just working out and staying in shape," Douglas last week. "I'm waiting for a chance to make a club."
It enabled Nicklaus to tie Willie Anderson, Ben Hogan and Jack's
DOUGLAS, A 6-2 guard who last played for KU in 1978, is waiting for a tryout with an NBA team. The Houston Rockets and the Golden State Warriors have talked with him but nothing is definite.
"They said they'd be in touch a few days after the draft (the NBA's annual college draft, held last Tuesday) so I'm waiting for a call." Douglas said.
Douglas was drafted by the New Orleans Jazz in 1978, but didn't make the cut in rookie camp. He tried out with Golden State last year and was one of the last players cut. But past success gives him confidence that he can make it. His basketball resume from high school and college sparkles with honors.
He was a high school All-American at Colbert County High School in Leighton, Ala. Douglas then went to John C. Calhoun Junior College in Boston and gained All-Regional jaco honors. He came to KU in 1976 and quickly
established himself as a scorer with explosive potential.
DOUGLAS LEAD KU and finished second in the Big Eight Conference in scoring with 19.2 average, hitting 48 percent from the field during the 76-77 season. In a game against Iowa State he pumped in 46 points.
To cap the season he was picked All-Eight Big Eight by both the Associated Press and United Press International, was an All-District Five selection by the United Press. He also won an award and was given the Phog Allen Award as KU's most outstanding performer.
But with freshman Darnell Valentine to share the ball with, Doug's senior year wasn't as productive offensively (12.8 average). His defense improved, however, as he held All-Americans and Jack Patterson in point-in-game two early-season games. Kansas won the Big Eight title and advanced to the NCAA playoffs where UCLA defeated them in the first round.
SINCE LEAVING KU and missing the cut with the Jazz and the Warriors, Douglas has played for the Utah Injurers in the World Basketball League.
"It was all right," Douglas said about the league. "There were a lot of players with previous pro experience, guys like Smith and I don't do too bad. I played about 20-25 minutes a game and averaged in double figures. We flew first-class to every game; the food was tasteless, but the NBA I wouldn't mind go back."
But Douglas is not ready to call Utah and tell the organization to print his
10C
CONE
TUESDAYS
name in next year's programs. He wants to be in the NBA.
"There's a lot of politics involved," he said. "I just want somebody to say John Douglas get out and play ball and may the best man win."
"I want an honest chance to make a team in the NBA." Douglas said. When he talked about his chances to make a team, "honest" was prevalent in his words. He thinks he hasn't been given enough of a chance in his tryouts so far.
DOUGLAS WOULD not mind a chance to play on the Kings with his brother. And he isn't jealous of Leon's success, even though he hasn't had the chance.
THE POLITICS DOUGLAS talked about involve how much time a first and second-round draft choice gets to make a team compared to a later choice. Early draft choices, because of the value placed on them by the club, will be less important than they develop. Later choices have to perform well quickly or they are sent packing.
"I try to set my own standards," he said. "I'm happy for Lao. We played ball together when we were kids and he was right to play ball with him in the NBA."
If Douglas doesn't make it in the NBA he plans to come back to KU and earn a degree.
"I've studied education, but I like to take some business courses," he said. "I like to know more about the admonition of the school and maybe become an athletic director."
"Yeah, I'd really like to make it," he said. "I could use the money."
But for now Douglas will concentrate on the NBA.
reg.
30¢
limit 5
EVERY
TUESDAY
IN JUNE
Union . . .
from page 1
to get every concession the city has granted in the past, he said, and this year was no different.
Both Burt and Samson said the situation would probably require an impasse hearing in front of the City Commission, as it did two years ago.
Sampson said that if the Commission decided against the LPOA, his only
THE BROADER ISSUE in this year's negotiations is the formal recognition of the LPOA as the union representative of the 57 officers and corporals in the city police department who are members.
alternative to acceptance would be a work slowdown or a strike
Lawrence municipal codes currently ban contracts with city workers. The LPOA in the past has been a legal agent" for police, not a formal union.
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The LPAO, like most formal unions, takes dues automatically from a police officer's paycheck. The officers currently work under a "memorandum of understanding" that differs from a contract. It is not the comprehensive work agreement that Sampson would like to see.
---
PRINTING
HOUSE OF USHER
The House of Luker is also the Quick Copy Center. This service provides quick-printing while you wait at extraordinarily low prices (e.g. 100 copies for $200, 200 for $500, 500 for $100). It can print up to 100 pages per sheet and for only 64 address labels, reductions, copies up to and including 11 x 17 - large paper selection; 2-sided copies, the very best reproduction available on a printer. Utilizing four different machines, if it can be done on a copier, we can do it. Quick Copy Center also offers copy- and curing or filing. We have been doing these work for KU students for 13 years.
We are Lawrence's one-stop source for your printing needs. The *House of Uhler* caters to the small to medium size account. We work with our customers to help them print their designs from their home or office and provide them with the very latest equipment, from sophisticated computer-driven phototypeseters to high-speed presses. More importantly, the *House of Uhler* is people — dedicated talented experienced.
The House of Uher is Uher Computing We provide a computer service to those organizations with the need but not enough to justify their own system in addition to custom programming we currently offer a payroll service, a mailing list, directory membership program and will soon have our accounts receivable program available.
You will probably find our prices surprisingly low - a attribute our efficiency, productivity and commitment to providing a superior service is a reasonable cost.
We want to be your printer!
Serving the Lawrence community for 15 years
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In a formalized union setting, Burt said, union stewards do union work on time. He said it would also be a benefit to the union if they were wide-ride rules for municipal employees.
Serving the Lawrence community for 15 years
SUA FILMS
PRESENTS
Singin' In The Rain
Gene Kelly Donald O'Connor Just about the best Hollywood movie of all time. Paula Radcliffe
JUSTICE LEAGUE
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WESTERN WORLD WATERBEDS HAS COME TO LAWRENCE
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Water Fresherner $ 2.50
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Fri & Sat 10-6
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6th and Kasad
Westridge Shopping Center
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We have someone for you to meet. He's soft, plush, and a very good listener. Come into the Zercher Photo nearest you and get acquainted.
We're sure you'll want to take at least one of our friends home with you. After all, talk is cheap, a good listener is hard to find.
Downtown
1107 Massachusetts
Hillcrest 919 Iowa
Jill Pottery Wand JAMES GREENING CARDS Edition 12
4
University Daily Kansan, June 16, 1980
Page 7
Otis' bat boosts Kansas City
MLWAUKEW (AP) — Amos Otsi cannot bend the little finger of his right band, but that didn't stop the Kansas City Royals centerfielder yesterday.
**JACKIE BREWERS.**
Otis, batting 184 in game time, had missed 40 games but recovered a finger. But yesterday he knocked in three runs with a pair of hammers. Willie Mays Alkens and Hal McRae added bases empty homers to back Dennis Leonard's five-hit pitching as the Royals defeated the Brewers 7-2.
"I really wasn't trying to hit home runs, but I just seem to do pretty well against this club." Otis said. "If figure I can hit as many homers as Willie Mays Aikens, I'll have a pretty good year."
Otis hit 510 with five homers and 14 runs batted in against the Brewers last year.
"Amos has been struggling, no doubt about it," Roya managers Jim Frey said. "But the last few days he started playing well and now looks like he's coming out of it all."
"He's coming out of it at just the right time. Taking two games out of three from Milwaukee in their park is a great way to take advantage of capable of scoring a lot of runs. I was
worried as hell, but we just happened to hit more home runs today than they did."
The Royals brok a scoreless tie against loser Moose Haas, 6-6, in the fiftinning when U.L. Washington scored on a single by Frank White.
Aikens slammed his sixth home run in the second inning, series leading off for the Royals in the sixth. Oht hit his second homer of the season one out later and the Royals led by a single.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L W Pct GR
New York 31 25 146
Milwaukee 31 25 154
Chicago 29 27 118
Cleveland 29 27 118
Baltimore 29 27 70
Baltimore 29 30 181
WEST
Kansas City 27 21 627
Chicago 22 28 697 7
Indianapolis 23 25 682 8
Seattle 28 32 467 14
St Louis 32 13 441 19
Minnesota 21 36 388 14
Oklahoma 26 36 388 14
Toronto 0, Texas 2,
Philadelphia 3, penn. rain.
Cleveland 1, Miami 4,
Kansas City 7, Milwaukee 8.
New York 0, Oakland 2
St. Louis 1, Colorado 5
Leonard, 7-5, who hurried shutouts in his last two starts, had a string of 23 consecutive scoreless innings ended when Robin Yount lined his 11thomer of the season with one out in the sixth inning and Don Money followed with his sixth.
However, McRae淋 leaded off the Royals' eighth, and Otis followed with his second homer of the game to win the fifth. He then homered in two out in the ninth off Jerry Augustine and the Royals, who have won 21 of their last 28 games, added another run on a single by Otis, and scored the RBI double. NATIONAL LEAGUE
W W L Pct. GB
Montreal 33 24 108
Pittsburgh 33 24 579
Philadelphia 32 24 108
New York 77 29 482
New York 77 29 482
Chicago 24 30 116
Chicago 24 30 116
Houston 34 23 596
Los Angeles 34 23 596
San Diego 34 23 1
San Francisco 23 34 424
San Diego 23 34 10
San Jose 25 34 478
**Yesterday** Gami
Los Angeles, Michael P. San Diego 5
Philadelphia, Michael S. San Diego 4
San Francisco, Michael S. San Diego 3, New York 0
Chicago, Atlanta 9
Olympia, Atlanta 9
Financial aid group going broke
BLOODY
Ticks not picky pests
With the current high rate of inflation and national unemployment, Baron said ESC expected the number of requests to increase.
last winter to a man who could not pay his utility bill and faced the possibility of freezing if the service was disconnected.
STANLEY SAID SHE spent about 45 minutes explaining to him that anybody can get ticks.
Staff Reporter
A Lawrence service organization which gives emergency financial assistance for food, rent, utility and medical expenses may be going broke.
Mary Anne Stanley, a tick researcher, said one young man called her for information after he saw a tick on his girlfriend. He thought his girlfriend was very clean until he saw the tick, she said.
Bv NANCV SEABLE
Stanley, Jesup, Ga., graduate student, said ticks climb grass and bushes and their legs catch the cloths of people or animals that brush them.
More ticks are biting people this year, and most of them are not choosy; they'll bite the spotless as well as the seedy.
Staff Reporter
Ticks are often picked up in woods, and more people are coming in contact with them. The popularity of outdoor recreations, such as camping and backpacking, she said. Favorable breeding conditions allow ticks to lick numerous this year.
said. It may take 15 minutes to remove a tick by tyhis method, she said.
ESC, which began in 1971 and operates from the Community Building at 11th and Vermont streets, serves as immediate relief for people who need housing. Assistance costs $100 rent for a woman who had her purse stolen. Assistance was also given
Suburban development displaces ticks 'natural hosts of animals in the woods. Ticks then turn to humans for food more often, Stanley said.
Those using a lighted match or cigarette are sometimes burned, she said, and kerosene might irritate the skin around the bite.
By SHELLY COKER
The Lawrence Emergency Service Council, a coalition of social service and religious organizations, has spent $100 million on each request from applicants seeking assistance is $100. Unless public services are served, the ESC will cease operations.
Do not squeeze the fat part of the tibia to it store blood, Shield said. Blood stored in the foot should be squeezed into the wound and some ticks carry blood from other diseased areas.
"Last week we took 20 applications and granted only eight of them," said Betty Baron, publicity chairman for ESC. "This week we have a crisis situation with only $100 in our budget to distribute."
The body also might separate from the head. Then it is difficult to get the head out and the saliva organs may still be attached. Although the tick is dead, the saliva glands may continue to work.
If a tick does bite, it spends hours feeding.
To remove a tick, grasp the head with a pair of tweezers and slowly pull the head out of the wound. Stanley
When walking through the woods, a person should check often for ticks. Stanley said. It usually takes several hours to remove them. The transmit diseases organism to a host.
Baron said ESC was low on funds because the assistance given out-numbered the donations received
Unlike mosquitos, both male and female ticks feed on blood. The female will not complete her meal and the male will be engorged with blood until she mates.
Although ticks are well known for their bite, other details of their lives are less well known. After ticks climb grass or bushes, they use their feet to smell an approaching animal. They may also detect nearby animals by windows, ground vibrations, carbon dioxide, or temperature differences.
Three of the most common diseases ticks carry are Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia, and tick paralysis. None are common in this area.
LAST YEAR, ESC helped 350 families in the Douglas County area.
Ticks mate while they are on a host.
The male engorges himself and then searches for a female. The female is the chemical that helps the male find her.
If an animal comes indoors with a mated female tick, she may drop off and lay from 2.000 to 6.000 eggs.
If a tick lays eggs in a carpet, the young may hatch and infect the home. People have been driven from their homes by these eggs are easily vacuumed, she said.
TACOS 25c
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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.
Lawrence
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kauai business office at 84-548.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Make it easy on yourself, your car, and your wallet this semester—CAR POOL! Kansas Union Main Lobby. Questions—call 864-4064. 6-19
J. HOOD BOOKKEEPER: Scholarly, literate,
passionate, and able to deal with good condition
items we also buy, sell and trade good condition
items we do not know. We have a
scholarly library in all fields. 1401 Maxima
and scholarly libraries open daily except
Monday. 814-644. Open everyday expe
rdences.
THIS WEDNESDAY
The Movie Classic
HAROLD &
MAUDE
2 shows 9 & 11 only $2.50
Also sanger Roger Bane between shows
Cheap picks & highballs 8:30-9:00
Present this ad at door Wed for free draw.
(Limited one per person)
Tawny Opera House
7th & Mass
843-6730
The man that has protected decent Kenanians from the tacit of scaffold radicals now expects his coverage to auto, home, and life. "A man you know, a face you trust," 37.
Students-come to Mails Bookshop for Western-Civ Analysis, Magazines, Hallmark cards, George Booth cards, Posters and more! 6-26
ENTERTAINMENT
★★★★★★★★★
Visit the Book End at Quantrill's Flea Market for the finest in books at reasonable prices. Weekends 10-5. 6-16
Good living arrangement two blocks from campus. Reasonable rates Call 842-6579, 6-19
FOR RENT
FOR SALE
Large furnished rooms in house one block from Union. Share K&B deposit central cooling, 843-9808-1209 Ohio. 6-28
NAISMITH HALL has openings for summer.
Both male and female. If interested contact
business office at 843-859 any time of the day.
tf
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
*Made with Cursive.*
Makes sense to use them *1-1*. As study
materials for *3-4*. As exam preparation.
*No Analysis.*
*No Analysis.*
*Critical Analysis.*
Critically Analyzes Criteria, Criticizes
Booklet. Oread Booklet.
Victoria Carili Apartments - Unfurnished 2 or 3 bedroom apartments available. Central air conditioning. Blocks south of Fraer Hall Couples and students preferred. Bldg #82-9703 after $30.
OLIVETT PRAXIS TYPEWRITER Office-clean, ultra-modern styling, like normal condition, pica, $250, Call Mike, $42-558,
6-19
Roommate wanted for summer, 2 bedroom
unit. bus Route. Pool All furnishings $90 per
week. Bus service. Call Kim or Dan. Bd.
4124, 1732 W. 24th St. #37. (South-
Apts) 6-18
COOPERATIVE LIVING-established student cooperative. living within easy walkway to campus. Resident housing at town Lawrence. Private room rent $80-$120. Utilities and supplies.掌柜 $82-9421.
HOUSE- 3 Bedrooms, 1½ baths, formal dining room, carpet, large fenced backyard, basement. C.A. Shawnee area. No pics $50 per month Call 631-3043. 6-23
Mark I & H art & NOW RENTING FOR
Mark II & H art
12:50-18:00) Quit 1 & 2 bedrooms;
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more information. Call residents for more info.
Renter's (wanted to share) House-3 bed, room, 1/2 bath, formal dining room, carpet. large fenced backyard, basement. C/A, outdoor area. no pets. Bedroom: 6/23 631-3043
Pine Bookcase=$20 & up; Tables, $35 &
up; small shelves, $15 & up. Mike Slough,
843-8992. 6-23
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9069, 3900 W.
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2251, Cottonwood, Arizona 86236.
7-10
Moving! Must sell '79 Honda Express moped
Excellent condition. $350 or best offer. 841-
3466.
PENXTA SLR 110 CAMERA. Includes three lens, skylight filters, lenshades, electronic flash, electric motor film advance, deluxe condition new condition. #824-5587. Call 6-1984-5587.
WATERBED MATTRESSES. $36.98. 3 year
guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-
1386.
TENNIS RACKET Donnay Graphite (wood)
string with bluebaque giant fund (9) @
day guarantee) $10 plus value for $6; call 842-
585, 841-355; 6-16
Complete unfinished waterbed, $169.95
Sheets $25 WesternWorld waterbeds, 841-
1090, 6th and Kaasol, 6-16
1975 Camaro ph-pe-ph, excellent condition,
sacrifice $2,000. 842-1702. 6-26
1972 Ford LTD Station Wagon. Good tires and run good. AC & AT. Lots of miles left. 1300. See at 1067 West 27th Street. 6-23
Toyota hawaii receiver, turbantable with diamond coating. Bottle size 6-15 fl oz. Loadpodseller. Best offer. 841-115-366. 6-26 Toyota air conditioner - Radiant compartment. Best offer. 841-115-366. 1027 Ford LTJ Station, Great tiger good taste.
FOUND
Found at Trailridge Apts. One gray and white kitten—approx. four weeks old. Please call 814-7638. 6-16
HELP WANTED
Need money? Like to baby? Then add your name, to and where you want to visit information centers. Drop by 105 Orange Hall or call 864-506-200 and add your name to one of the most popular restaurants in Orange.
house manager, Meninger half-way house. This position is for a live-in co-worker to graduate students find this job attractive as a board room, board, and a good salary and also patients to gain independent living skills or a husband. The spouse may be a full time Foundation), and will be paid a salary on responsibility for attending staff meetings, responsible for attending client meetings, tenure office for repairs, and planning department for repairs. The duties of the manager are shared with an employee in person. Perennial Office, the Meninger Anno 6100. EOE Fitzgerald, 9-19.
ATTRONTE. Student Governing Association.
School of Education. Must be licensed in Kansas; exp-
perience as a student attorney to serve student body of
400 must be licensed in Kansas; expere-
sence as a student attorney to serve student body of
legal student issues preferred. Salary-benefit:
August 1, 1900. Applications must be re-
ceived by August 31, 1900 and the names of three references to Mr.
Roya, the chair of the School Committee,
SGA Office, K-State University. KSU is an equal
opportunity employer.
Experienced sales wanted. Part-time, week nights and weekends hours. Apply in person. 802 W. 23rd. Green'S Liquor. 6-19
The University of Kansas Audio-Reader
Institute. Some broadcast programming
experience and equilvian req's are
Coordinator. Some broadest programm-
ing experience and equilvian req's are
to interface comfortably with all kinds of
audio content, including the ability to
Good bralling skills prefer but not
excellent experience. Application deadline June 25.
Resumes to: Karen Hurwitz, President,
pendent upon skills and experience. Range
of job titles incl: Director, Audio-
contact Rose Hurwitz,
NOTICE
PERSONAL
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks Pregnancy treatment. Birth Consultation. Postpartum call; 9 AM to 5 PM (832) 642-3400. 4401 W 100th St. Overland Park, PA 15220
Can afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5544. tf
CAR POOL: Haven't you been without one long enough? (Kansas Union Main Lobby)
Questions—call 864-604-604
6-19
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and Wednesday evening. Call Bob Hills 864-4991 before 5, 842-1136 evenings. 6-30
The Good-Bve Archie Ball-with XANADU
Monday. June 16th. Off The Wall Hall.
Only $1.50. 6-16
PRFNGAN and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821. 6-31
Nautical Delights, Tans Guaranteed- with the KU. Sail Club. Join us Wed. night at 1:00 in the Union. 6-19
Try the summer spectacles at the cool Harbour. Take the kids to a brightly during summer school 5 pitcher's pitchers' camp at the Harbour with from New Sub-row at The Harbour and get a discount on your new set.
Peps oil hour at Bucky's 10c off all soft drinks; small 25, medium 35, and large 45 Bucky's, 2120 W. 9th from 3:00 to 4:00 p.m.
TYPING
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-4
2001.
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-
4476. tt
Experienced typist. IBM Correcting Selectric.
Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-3818. tf
Experienced. Typist—term, papers, Uses, msec, electric IBM Sealic Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-9554, Ms. Wright, if
IRON PENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast, reliable, accurate. IBM pica/clite. #425-207 evenings to 11:00 and weekdays.
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with customers. Reqs: Master's degree in Computer Science, Ed. Title Editor, IBM Price Elite, Quality work, computer science, Java. Resumes must include resume title Layout: Cai Juan 881-937-1977, originals deserve an Encore Encore Letter of recommendation.
Museums of Natural History
SERVICES OFFERED
SUMMER WORKSHOPS
This thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4476 for reservations. tf
Now through August 2
Week-long Classes Ages 5-13
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CALL 864-4173
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms. graphics, editions, self-correct Iscall. Electric Ellen or Jeannam. 841-2172. 7-31
Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna. 842-7244. tf
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-
4989. tf
TUTOR. English 101, 102. Experienced in
K.U. system. $$ per hour. Contact Margle.
4-4050. 6-26
Question: How can you have fun, meet new people? Answer: Go on a pool party or all at the same time? For answer see - | -x-srvc Main Pool Exchange Board. Kansas City Main Lobby. Questions: call-6-19 4064.
Printing While You Wait is available with Alice at the House of Uwhers Quick Copy room. From 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Monday to Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday at 3283 Mass.
LFARN TENNIS this summer from experience—instructor next beginner and intermediate sessions start Monday, 16th. Details C. Gells 842-5585, 841-3355.
Get a Cool Tan, no need to suffer the heat outdoors. Tantalize Tan Center, 2210 Iowa,
843-4937. 6-23
WANTED
The University Daily
3, 5, or 10-speed bike, preferably woman's Call Debbie 842-6980, afternoons or evenings. 6-19
Mature, non-smoking female roommate starting August. $135/month apartment on Tennesse, own room. Write: Grad Student. 128 Stanton, Amherst. Iowa. 50010. 7-10
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The University Daily
KANSAN
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 90, No. 147
Thursday, June 19, 1980
KU minority faculty declines in spite of affirmative action
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas has failed to in-
tervene its members in spite of an affirmative action program.
Whites still fill 95 percent of full-time faculty positions at KU. Minority representation on the KU staff has actually declined one-half percent to forming to forms filed with government agencies.
KU has also failed to establish formal goals and timetables to insure minority hiring even though it was required by a five-year contract. It has not been ratified by Commission on Civil Rights and by federal law.
KU WOULD stand to lose $33 million in federal funds if it did not comply with federal law and did not remedy the situation. Investigators from the Office of Federal Contract Compliance are working to find a solution.
If the University does not comply with the
KCCR agreement, it could be sued in federal court.
But KU administrators and KCCR officials said they were satisfied with the progress made in recruiting women and minorities as specified in the agreement.
However, in 1975 there were 65 minority full-time faculty members at the University. Four years later the number had dropped to 60. Black faculty membership declined 40 percent and the number of American Indians on the faculty went down from 23 to 12. In 1986, to the nine who were already faculty members.
FOUR YEARS ago when the KCCR agreement was signed, employment practices at the University "may not have been on the up and down" for its awards, acting director of KU affirmative action.
Last week William Minner, KCCR contract compliance provider, said one of the reasons KU was investigated was that historically, KU women faculty members had been undermined.
"Let me give you a hypothetical situation," he
said. "A male professor in the department or anthropology might have been making $28,500. A female with the same experience might have been paid $18,500."
But currently three lawsuits are pending against the University by KU faculty members alleging sex discrimination in pay scales and tenure status.
THE THREE FACULTY members suing the University for discrimination are : Mary Hinman, associate professor of English; Flora Silini, associate professor of music performance; and Ann Willner, professor of political science.
The goals and timetables that were specified by the KCCR agreement are not in the current KU affirmative action plan, according to Edwards.
See ACTION page three
KU seeks minority students
Ry SUSANA NAMNUM
Despite continuing efforts to recruit minority students at the University of Kansas, some faculty members think KU's efforts have fallen short.
"We're not doing enough," Marilyn Ainsworth, associate professor of law, who directs a federally funded summer minority program at the University of Missouri. "The money is tight, but often it's not spent efficiently."
"We have to do more because there are so many minority students who would benefit from the education and so many other students at KU who have no contact with minority students or teachers. We have people coming to law school who have never had a black teacher."
Staff Reporter
AINSWORTH DIRECTS the Council of Legal Education Opportunity program, which is funded mainly by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and hosted by KU
Only a few of the 33 students in the program will enroll at KU, she said, because they get better offers from other schools. CLEO is an intensive summer program that prepares students for law school in the fall. Answorth said that one of its goals as director was to recruit students for KU.
According to the KU Profiles which are published every two years, KU had a 5 percent increase in profit.
"We're trying to change things," said Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, who runs the program.
program at the William Allen White School of Journalism.
IN ADDITION to summer minority programs, the School of Business and the School of Engineering have full-time recruiting programs. The school's recruitment program is being planned for new students in the fall.
1,000
500
400
300
200
100
0
American Native
Asian or Pacific Islander
Hispanic
Black
White
7
0
36
39
6
9
20
12
983
999
Adams said the integration of the media and journalism education was particularly important because newspapers and television people perceived themselves and their environment.
ETHNIC MAKEUP OF FULL-TIME FACULTY
1975: black
1979: white
INGEGRATION WILL help stop black children from psychologically "painting themselves white," he said, and will show them alone is not a barrier to succeeding in society.
ETHNIC MAKEUP OF KU ENROLLMENT 1978
American Native
103
Asian or Pacific Islander
174
Black
769
Hispanic
235
Non-resident Alien
1,391
White
21,232
No data available
1,423
100 500 1,000 2,000 21,000
Source: "Higher Education Staff Information (EEO4)" 1973 and 1979 Equal Opportunity Commission
Two young ones from the Hilltop Nursery enjoy a run through a sprinkler on the lawn of Flint Hall. Classes from the center often go there to visit the sprinkler.
DREW TORRESI Kancar
Limits may be put on acting chancellor
Rv DAVID STIPP
Staff Reporter
KU's acting chancellor probably won't have the amount of administrative power that a permanent chancellor has, Jordan Haines, Regents chairman, said yesterday.
"I don't envision it as just a baby-sitting job at all. But at the same time I don't think an acting chancellor will have the same degree of authority as a permanent chancellor." he said.
John Conard, Regents executive officer, said the Regens hoped to appoint an acting chancellor by tomorrow and to name members to a new committee or permanent chancellor by the end of next week.
THE REGENTS were scheduled to meet at 1 a.m. today to consider candidates for acting positions in the department.
replacement for Chancellor Archie Dykes can be found. Conard said.
Dykes' resignation as chancellor will take effect Aug. 15.
The Regents are hoping to get the appointment of acting chancellor settled by the Act of Acting.
Haines said the Regents would probably outline administrative guidelines to the acting chancellor and monitor University ad-
ministration during the search for permanent chancellor.
Haines said he could not define the specific limits to the acting chancellor's power, but said radical changes to the University by the acting chancellor would be considered inappropriate by
JIM SCALLY, administrative assistant to the chancellor, said the most important job facing
the acting chancellor would be "shepherding the University budget through the state legislature"
"This will be the single biggest job for the legislature as much as Dykes, 'Scaly said.'
Conard said the Regents would probably appoint a 12-member search committee for permanent chancellor during their Thursday and Friday meetings next week.
The Regents decided on the composition of the search committee in a series of conference calls.
see INTERIM back page
SUA film chairman's policies criticized
Rv VANCE HINER
Staff Reporter
"Citizen Kane" and "2001" will not be shown at Wooldruff Auditorium this summer because Mike Gebert, SUA film board chairman, does not want to miss him while he is out of town.
Gebert also said he did not want to end his policy of letting program participants take home their work.
But there are those who say that such policies could cost the SUA film program thousands of dollars and be difficult to get.
"I DON'T APPROVE and I'm sure no other board member would approve of such a practice," he said. "It's a risk to the films and there's too many people how many people get to see the films for free."
Films could be lost or damaged during private screenings, said Rick Kastner, SUA user.
"I think it's a perfectly reasonable request, he said. "We exercise a fair amount of caution. A
Gebert said private screenings were not necessarily bad.
person can't just walk in off the street and take one. They need my permission."
Gebert also has been criticized for his film selection methods. Current SUA policy gives Gebert final say on what films are brought to the University.
MARK KLOBASSA, who is in charge of the summer film series, said "Gebert has rejected several film suggestions because he didn't want to miss them while he was gone for the summer. I don't think that was done in the interest of KU students."
Although Gebert admitted that he had vetoed some films in order to see them in the fall, he did not stop filming.
"I've never said that board members absolutely couldn't bring the films they wanted."
Klobassa said that films were also chosen on the basis of their past financial success at the University and that such a practice was not with the Kansas Union philosophy statement.
"According to the statement," he said, "the Union seeks to develop and enhance the out-of-
class learning experience* of KU students. I don't think you can do this by showing reruns.
GEBERT SAID the SUA film program was expected to provide a profit each year and could be lost to loaning.
“There are other departments in the SUA program that don’t bring in money at all,” he said. “If we lose money, these departments are lost. We’re definitely a profit oriented program.”
Klobasa said that the pressure to turn a profit made it difficult to bring new or unknown films
"I think student film questionnaires should be sent out at the beginning of each semester," he said. "Students should be asked what types of films they want to see, when they attend films and how often. It's a chance for people to really have a say about the program."
GEBERT SAID that a suggestion box was available in the SUA office and was often used in
"I think we do a pretty good job already," he
see FILMS back page
Housing costs force changes
By LAURA LUCKERT
Staff Reporter
Because of rising building costs and increasing demands for houses, homebuilders and buyers in Lawrence and across the nation must consider these factors for their dreams, builders and realtors said this week.
JIM LUTZ, Kansas City area home builder.
These baby pools are beginning to buy houses. This
baby pool is building a new home in Kansas City.
forces demand to exceed supply and drives up prices even more.
This has forced the building industry to construct smaller and less expensive housing, he
"The average person is now finding it difficult to qualify for hope mortgages." I札萨 said.
These trends include transforming apartments and duplexes into condominiums, an increase in manufactured houses and a decrease in the quality of new housing, he said.
Lutz predicted that Lawrence would follow housing trends that have already hit larger cities in the United States.
building a house—and condominiums are not cheap. Some Kansas City condominium complexes are selling half a duplex for $115,000, Lutz said.
STUDENTS ATTENDING the University of Kansas may in the future have to face the challenge of managing a large student body.
Mike Lowe, of McGrew Real Estate in Lawrence, said that when West Meadow Condominiums went on the market, most were sold within six weeks.
McGrew Real Estate is asking $34,900 for a one-bedroom unit. This price does not include a $33 monthly charge for maintenance and homeowners insurance, Lowe said.
Lutz said that condominium owners hold two titles. The first title is to the structure. The second title, shared with the other owners in the condominium complex, is for the common land,
see HOUSING back page
DREARY
Weather
Pelican
Today's forecast calls for a chance of scattered thunderstorms in the afternoon. Temperatures will rise to the 70s and will be from the southeast at 10-20 mph.
Skies will become mostly cloudy
tunnel, with a 40 percent chance of rain.
Lake Winnipesaukee.
Cloudy skies will prevail again Friday, with a 30 percent chance of rain. Highs will be near 80.
Highs Saturday and Sunday will be in the 90s, and may reach 100. The chance of precipitation will remain through the weekend.
3
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, June 19. 1980
Daily Kansan Capsules
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Cape Town death toll rises
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—Two days of violent clashes between 14 people and more than 200 wounded, press report says.
The state-controlled South Africa Radio reported at least 20 dead, including policemen, in the spread of unrest following the four anniversary
Cape Town reporters said yesterday that some shops in Elisie's River were on fire and there were unconfirmed reports of a second day of shooting in the area.
The racial unrest began Monday on the anniversary of the 1976 Soweto riots that led 600 people dead in nationwide disturbances.
The Cape Times newspaper reported 42 people dead in the two days of violence but said the toll likely would rise.
The Cape Argus said three hospitals reported that 34 people were dead on arrival and two died of injuries after being admitted following violent assaults.
- once and "a number" of people were killed and wounded in the current unrest, but imposed a news blackout on details. All reporters, including the media, have been called into the office.*
Abscam stings two officials
WASHINGTON—Two powerful Democratic congressmen were indicted yesterday on bribe charges involving $100,000, bringing to five the number House members facing criminal charges in the two-year FBI Abscam prob-
The five-count bribery-conspiracy indictment returned in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn against Rep. John M. Murphy, D-N.Y., and Frank Thompson Jr., D-N.J., accuses them of accepting money in return for bribes. The court will impose hints for foreign businessmen to waive to the United States.
Specifically, the two were charged with conspiracy, bribery, illegally receiving compensation for services relating to government matters and unauthorized use of government funds.
Murphy was also charged with receipt of an unlawful gratuity, and Thompson was charged with abetting in that activity.
The indictments stem from the Abscam "sting" in which FBI agents posed as representatives of Arab businessmen willing to pay bribes for help in their business.
Also named in the indictment were Howard I. Criden of Philadelphia, a lawyer previously indicted with other conspirators, and Joseph Silvestri, a lawyer.
EBA halted again in Illinois
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -- The Illinois House of Representatives failed to raise the Equity Amendment yesterday, felting five votes short of the majority.
The House voted 102 to 71 for ERA which was short of the three-fifths majority required to pass.
The failure came after President Carter had personally telephoned two wavering black lawmakers to urge support of the amendment.
Earlier, the House had debated the measure before galleries packed with spectators wearing pro-ERA green and anti-ERA red.
It was released by the Illinois State Board of Education nine times since 1972 that the Illinois House has defeated the ERA. The Senate has defeated it four times. It has been approved by each of its seven states.
Illinois, the only major Northern industrial state not to approve the amendment, was targeted by the National Organization for Women and its allies.
Yesterday, ERA lobbyists clad in green wandered through the Capitol and mixed with sign-carrying opponents wearing bright red.
ERA supporters had hoped House approval would have improved the measure's chances in the Senate.
The amendment banning sex discrimination has been approved by 35 of the 38 states whose approval is needed to make it part of the U.S. Constitution. Five states have rescinded their approval, but the validity of that action is in question.
Unemployment rise predicted
WASHINGTON—Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said yesterday that the nation's unemployment rate may rise 5 percent early next year, but he said the job program as a whole is "not too strong."
Marshall also said he would be "very surprised" if the Carter administration proposed an across-the-board tax cut in an attempt to slow
President Carter has said he is considering proposing a tax cut in 1981, but Marshall said a general cut would be inflationary and an inefficient way to create jobs. However, he didn't rule out the possibility of selective tax reduction measures.
Marsailh's unemployment estimate was the highest yet from a top official of the Carter administration, which has officially predicted unemployment rates.
However, unemployment already has surpassed that mark. It climbed to 7.8 percent in May.
Unemployment figures released yesterday indicate another rise in the rate this month. The Labor Department said the number of initial claims filed for state unemployment insurance rebounded during the first week of May, after dropping 675,000 after seasonal adjustment, up 30,000 from the previous year.
An unemployment rate of 8.5 percent translates into nearly 9 million people who are looking for jobs and cannot find them. Each additional rise of 1.5 percent in the unemployment rate can have a devastating effect.
Kabul factional fighting flares
The resident, a university student who declined to be named, said the bodies were discovered early this month at the Soviet-built housing project in Prague.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—Dismembered bodies of five supporters of President Babak Karim Karnal of Afghanistan were discovered at a housing complex in Islamabad on Wednesday.
The account appeared to corroborate Western and non-aligned diplomatic reports of intensified friction in the ruling Khalq People's Party between them and the Shi'ite government.
Karmal was installed after Soviet troops helped overthrow his predecessor, Hafizullah Amir.
Factional strife within Karmal's party dates back to the April 1978 coup that brought in the first of three successive Marxist regimes.
Reports from Western diplomats this week said Afghan informants told an average of 10 assassinations a day of low-level party members, many of whom were in the Afghan government.
Unconfirmed reports said Karmal made an unsuccessful attempt to commit suicide and his air force commander had been shot and wounded.
'Fuzzbuster' ban approved
"Provided constitutional and procedural standards are employed, the Kansas Legislature may make unlawful the use of radar detection devices and provide penalties for use of such a device and allow seizure thereof." Stephan said in an opinion request by state Rep. John Sullivan, R-Wichita.
TOPEKA—The Kansas Legislature has the power to outlaw citizens' use of so-called "fuzzbuster" anti-radar detection devices on motor vehicles, Attorney General Robert Stephan said in an opinion made public yesterday.
The 1980 Legislature considered a bill which would have prohibited use of the andradar and radar systems. The effort did not pass, but it did not stop. Effort is likely to receive it in the 1981 session.
"The Legislature may reasonably believe that the use of radar detectors tends to promote the violation of the speed limit laws, and for that reason, it should be prohibited."
Under its broad police powers, Stephan said, the state may make reasonable laws to enforce uniform behavior among drivers, including
On Campus
CASTLE OF GREYA
Thursday, June 19
The Graduate Women's Group will hold its weekly meeting at noon in the Cork Room No. 2 in the Kansas Union.
Graduate Group
Special Guest
Daily Kansan
Richard Joseph and Special Guest will perform at 7 p.m. at the Pentimento Cafe, followed by Greg Felke at 8 p.m.
The Kansas City Royals will take on the Cleveland Indians at 7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium.
Friday, June 29
Puppet Show
Rovals vs. Indians
Riology Club
The Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in the Kansas Union.
The International Theatre Studies Center will sponsor the puppet show "Little Tom-Tom." The show is presented by the Puppet Theater PUK of Tokyo. Tickets are $1 for children, $2 for adults. Reservations to Murphy Hall Box Office. Reservations can be made by calling 864-3982 for the performance at the West Junior High.
The SUA Friday night movie will be the "Stroszek." Showtime is 7 p.m. and tickets are $1.50.
Movie Time
Royals va. Brewers
The Kansas City Royals will meet the Milwaukee Brewers at 7:35 p.m. at Royals Stadium.
Saturday, June 21
Symphony Orchestra
The Lawrence Symphony Orchestra will perform its only summer concert this Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in Southark. The orchestra will perform *Schumann*, the composer of Wagner's "Rienzi Overture," Struza's "Blue Danube Waltz," plus works by Gershwin, Sousa and others. Admission is free, and in case of rain, the concert can be cancelled.
David Bading, organist, will give a Master's Rectal at 8 p.m. in the Hall in Murhovy
Organ Recital
Opera House
The Secrets and Method will perform at the Lawrence Opera House. Admission is $3 at the door.
Jan O'Neill, president of the Classified Senate, said yesterday pay increases would be as high as 21 percent. Mr. Neill said some University classified employees
A new pay plan providing an average 11 percent increase for most of the University's classified employees beaten yesterday.
Cobb defense unfolded
Lord Lowen, University director of personnel, said some employees would receive only 8 percent raises.
KU pay plan hikes salaries
Lowen said the state devised the new pay plan to accompany the merit evaluation system it was developing.
TOPEKA (AP)—The defense attorney for Katherine Cobb told a Shawnee County District Court jury yesterday that the young man she was accused of killing him because he feared a vision he claimed to have had would come true.
The increases in base pay were designed to attract more qualified personnel, and the merit raises in the plan, which are spread over a longer period than previously, were designed to retain them, Lowe said.
"He said, Kathy, I want you to get a gun and shoot me in the head," Carine Nohde, defense attorney, said in testimony that the first-degree murder trial of Coble.
COBB, 26, of Topeka, is charged in the Feb. 27 shooting death of Henry R. Davis 22 Lawrence
in the head. His body contained a high level of cocaine, investigators said.
Noha said Cobb carried out Davis', wishes only after she and another friend failed to dissuade him from committing suicide.
Davis' body was found on a road southeast of Topeka. He had been shot
"It is one thing to attract employees," Lowen said, "and quite another to retain them."
He gave that as the reason he asked Cobb to shoot him to death. Davis and Cobb had been friends for five years but were not romantically involved, both
Nohe and Sally Pokorny, assistant District Attorney, who is prosecuting the case, agreed in their opening statements on the basic facts in the case. However, Nohe argued that he does not constitute first-degree murder.
BOTH ATTORNEYS said Davis claimed to have had a vision in which he sustained injury in an automobile bed and needed hospital bed for two months before dying.
problems and she would come to him." Nobe said. "She was there when he needed her and he was there when she needed him."
'It wasn't a love relationship, but he would come to her when he had
On the night Davies died, the attorneys said, he asked Cobb to shoot him after he had taken a large quantity of cocaine. She helped him take the drug while they drove around rural Shawnee County roads, then put a pistol to his temple shot when the drug went into killers who went into convulsions. Pokerney said.
NOHE SAID Cobb and another friend, Ranna Moon, 26, also of Topeka, drove to Lawrence the day of his suicide to talk Davis out of his suicide命.
She said they failed, and Davis told them, "It's got to be done."
Moon was not with the other two when the shooting occurred.
The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 806480) Published at the University of
Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Thursday,
September 12, 2013 and July except
Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class
scrips are payable in cash or by mail;
scrips by mail are $1 for six months or $7
a year in Bountiful County and $14 for six
months. Scrips by mail are $9 a semester, paid through
the university.
Footmatter: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence. RS60045.
Editor Managing Editor Jennifer Robles Bob Pittman
--at its BEST.
Jennifer Robles Bob R.
Mike Knuth
News Adviser ... Mike Kautsch
Business Manager Retail/National Mike Panethere Sales Manager Kevin Koster
Over 15 years in the business
Advertising Adviser ... Chuck Chowins
Unsigned editors represent the opinion of the Kansan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
843-2931
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University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
Page 3
Legislative races begin tomorrow
By DAN TORCHIA Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Political activity in Kansas is gearing up this week for tomorrow's noon film deadline that will signal the start of the state legislative race.
State House seats come up every two years and the Senate each four. This year, all 140 seats in both branches are up for grabs.
Lawrence and Douglas County voters will elect representatives in the 43rd, 44th, 45th and 46th House seats, and the 2nd District in the Senate.
Three incumbents, all Democrats, are running again. Betty Jo Charlson of the 4th District, who is finishing up his second term, is the 46th District. John Solbach of the 45th is completing his first term and is running again, as is Arnold Berman in the 47th District.
BECAUSE THE only Republican representative, John Vogel of the 43rd District, is not running, and Charlton Hussey has been elected, and 44th districts have no incumbents.
David Berkowitz, Democratic party chairman in Douglas County, said he expected the three Democratic incumbents to be re-elected.
But John Lungstum, chairman of the Douglas County GOP, said the Republicans also had a good chance this year.
"Our candidates know what it takes to win, and they are willing to spend a great deal of time at it," he said.
Primaries, if needed will be August 5. Here is a rundown of the races and candidates.
43RD DISTRICT: Dave Miller of Eudora is the GOP candidate who will fill Vogel's vacancy. Miller is an insurance broker. He was KU student body president in 1972. He announced his candidacy May 6.
44th District; the Republicans have two candidates for the seat. Wint Winter Jr, has announced his candidacy. Winter, an area lawyer, is the son of State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa
Jackson Arbrister is the other GOP candidate, Arbrister, a Douglas County Sheriff's Lieutenant, has announced and filed.
Jessie Branson filed yesterday for the Democratic position. Branson, past president of the Douglas County and Kansas Associations for Mentally Retarded Citizens, has served on the governors' Committees on health care.
45TH DISTRICT: There are two Republican candidates running in this district also. Glenn McGonagle, former director of the physics and astronomy lab at KU, announced in April.
McGonagle will face Kent Snyder in the august primary. A part-time KU student and area realtor, Snyder filed viederday.
46th District: This is the new district created by the reap of voters who had been announced Republican candidate, Willie Amison is considering. Amison, a former KU football player, lost to the 44th District race two years ago.
Democratic incumbent Solbach planned to file today. Solbach an area lawyer, is best known for sponsoring the Landlord-Tenant Act.
Charlton has filed in this district, as her home fell in the 40th District when she was appointed to represent the 44th when Glover resigned last year.
2ND DISTRICT: The Republicans have not announced a candidate, and officials would refuse to say who was considering.
Sheriff aspirants favor change
Republican Rex Johnson has been Douglas County sheffield 16 years. Three Democrats, including one who accused Johnson of corruption last fall, will battle each in the Aug. 5 primary. One candidate will run against him in November.
Bv IAN SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
Johnson, 47, is a formidable adversary. He won a narrow victory over Jim Huskey in 1978, and he is well-placed even by his political opponents.
THE SIZE of the office has increased greatly since 1964. During his tenure, the sheriff's department has grown from a staff of 10 to 46. The proposed 1981 budget is $997,000, which is more than 10 times the 1966 budget.
But his opponents say it is time for new blood after 16 years of one man in the same office.
Even Douglas County Republican chairman Jim Langstrum said this week, "There comes a point when change for change sake becomes important. Incumbency is a two-edged sword."
One candidate, Gale Pinegar, 38, a former Lawrence police detective and now a private investigator, said the department needed more training and improved communications with the Lawrence Police Department.
PINEGAR SAID he wanted to increase the number of commissioned officers to 35 and to establish civil service classifications for all employees to improve service and job security.
Early in October 1979, Pinegar alleged that Johnson mistakened funds used to repair a department vehicle in rural Douglas County, June 26, 1979 accident in rural Douglas County.
He also wanted to have police officers hold deputies' commissions to permit greater coordination of police and county operations.
Pinegar brought invoices he said documented the abuses to the attention of District Attorney Mike Malone.
Pinegar he got the invoices from a friend in Lawrence law enforcement. He has refused to identify the source of the documents.
MALONE AND THE County Commission asked the Attorney General's office to examine the charges.
The state conducted a one-day investigation into the allegations. On October 9, Tom Haney, the deputy attorney general who oversaw the inquiry, cleared Johnson of all allegations.
Neil Worman, special assistant to the attorney general, said Monday. "The complainant did not have his facts straight."
Pinegar brought the charges against Johnson because, he said. "I was told about the invoices and as a citizen and taxpayer of Douglas County I brought it to the attention of the County Commission."
PINEGAR SAID of the investigation,
"I'm not satisfied with the attorney
general's investigation, but it's good
enough for me. Period."
Johnson said the attorney general exonerated him. "If I don't have a few enemies I am not doing my job. I hope I am professional enough to go out and make a case and not go off half-cooked."
"I have a clean bill of sale," he said.
Action . . .
"But we're going to upgrade KU's plan," he said, "so that we indeed have an affirmative action plan."
from page 1
The current KU affirmative action plan closely resembles the K-State plan that was changed, Edwards said. The plan contains a program philosophy statement and a list of procedures for granting envisions and filing federal forms.
THE OFFICE OF FEDERAL Contract Compliance recently forced Kansas State University to revamp its entire affirmative action plan after an investigation revealed that the plan did not follow federal guidelines.
Edwards said the University was not embarrassed by the lack of goals and timetables in its current plan. He said federal law requirements changed in 1978 and the University was working to program into compliance within a year.
"Affirmative action goes one step further when all things are equal. What we can do is take positive steps to insure that effected classes are given the opportunity to move up the promotional ladder."
Edwards said the reasons for KU's relatively poor minority hiring record were the small pool of qualified minorities nationwide and KU's difficulty in attracting these qualified minority people.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY, he said, is the emphasis for the affirmative action program at KU. The proposed goals
and timetables are not quotas, but simply objectives to be strived for.
Affirmative action, Edwards said, comes in only when all qualifications are equal.
"They are like two sides of the same coin." Edwards said of equal opportunity and affirmative action. "Equal opportunity means that everyone should have a fair shot at a piece of the action.
Merle Rothwell, 35, another Democrat who has filed for sheriff, dismissed Pinegar's allegations against Johnson.
Rothwell, a construction contractor, said, "Rex Johnson is a very honest man," and that he respected him and the performance of his department.
Although he thought many improvements needed to be made, Rothwell said he would be comfortable if Johnson remained in office.
Rothwell has a background in emergency services and said he favored improved training for deputies, including emergency medical training.
HE WANTED THE CREATION of a reserve deputy force, greater communication between the city and county law enforcement agencies and improved use of the crime facilities of the University of Kansas.
Rothwell also favored the expansion of the force to deal with the inflow of people the county will experience with the completion of Clinton Reservoir.
"Clinton Lake scares me and it scares a lot of people." Rothwell said.
He said he had no law enforcement experience—'absolutely none'—but thought his administrative talents as a doctor would improve the department.
Rothwell thought the county had outgrown Johnson's administrative capacities. The position of sheriff is now less of a riding around in a patrol car, he said.
ROTHWELL AND Pinegar said they would campaign door-to-door. Rothwell said he expected to spend $1,000. He also planned primary expenses at $3,000 and $8,000.
Eudora Police Chief Bill Long has also announced his candidacy, but has not filed yet with the county clerk. Long could not be reached for comment.
Johnson said his record showed improvement in personnel and better communications between the police and sheriff's office.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
Entertainment
Repertory members happy to endure long hours
RvSHAWN MeKAV
Staff Reporter
Over the din of hammers and drills, there was a loud crush as a wooden flat hit the ground. The woman who had been working on the flat stepped backward, her hammer gripped in her hand.
"it's taking a lot more room than I realized," she shouted over the noise. In the next room, an actor sang out of key and was told to begin the song again.
THE STAGEHAND and the singer were tired, nevertheless they continued because opening night of the Kansas Theater was only three weeks away.
THE CURTAIN opens for the first time on July 10 when Meredith Willson's "The Music Man" can be the stage. It also will be performed July 18, 26 and 27. "Hotel Paradiso" by George Paydeau will be presented by July 19. "A Dance with the Lovery Oberlander" by Presson Jones will be presented July 12, 17, 23 and 25.
The 23 members of the repertory began the day at 8:45 a.m. with a group movement and exercise class. Students were instructed to break before the first rehearsal began.
"I really was tired my first three days and now I'm totally exhausted," said Kelli Murphy, a graduate student
who is completing her second degree from the University of Kansas. "Seriously, I'm learning how to use my more widely and to live on less sleep."
"Honey, anybody who can get me to do cartwheels at eight in the morning has my vote."
EDWARD HOUSER, technical director for KRT, said students were not the only ones required to work long hours to bring the shows together.
"We are working the same schedule as everyone else," he said. "We are here from eight to 10 hours each day, sometimes until way after 10 p.m. I never make it home for lunch and sometimes not for dinner."
Houser said he was willing to spend many hours in the theater because he gained satisfaction from seeing a production molded into a work of art.
"Most of us who have chosen the theater as a profession get hooked on the magic of it at some point. Once you have experienced that magic, its worth an awful lot of long hours to make it happen again." he said.
In the afternoon and evenings students rehearsed and constructed sets for the three productions.
"We spend a lot of time in the costume and set shops, especially if you don't have a major acting role," said Eleanor Hardin, Lawrence sophomore.
DAVID SIEGEL, St. Louis, Mo
senior, he said he enjoyed devoting the day
entirely to theater work.
"You enjoy it a great deal more than productions during the normal school year," he said. "It’s often hard to decide what is infringing upon what—whether your classes are infringing other parts of your classes. KRT is a job and you don’t think in terms of it hurtting other parts of your life," he said.
Physically the work was harder than it was during the year, Siegel said, but the cast was becoming closer.
"KRT gives us a greater opportunity to develop a strong bond among the cast. You become more sensitive to the pain and tear that can be able to get your juices flowing even when the alarm goes off at eight and you've only had three hours sleep," he said.
THE LONG HOURS leave little time for anything besides theater.
"My social life was on hold when I got here and I kept it that way." Siegel said. "You're so tired at night that you wake up in the morning absolutely gray. And when you do have a day off, all you do is sleep.
"Five hours we spend communing with a television set. If we can keep our eyes open."
I
Daneers in the Kansas Repertory Theatre production of the "Music Man" practice a routine. The theater company will present three shows next month.
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University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
Page 5
Dictionary is readable
B. John Brenner, Words on Word: A Dictionary for
Writers and Others Who Care About Words.
North Columbia University Press, 1980, 496 pp.
Hardcover, 82.9; softbound $7.50.
By CALDER M. PICKETT Professor of Journalism
For many years I have openly advertised my opinion that John B. Bremner, professor of journalism at the University of Kansas, is the best language teacher in America. I further proclaim this view to the world, as his dictionary, "Words on Words," which I listen to daily, read a novel, be available to us.
It is a book that is addressed,
frequently, to the journalist. It need not be confined to the journalist. Anyone who writes, or reads, could enjoy this volume. Anyone who loves the language would find it a treasure.
What makes the book truly come alive is the fact that Bremner loves the language. He probably would love any language, so long as it was a language of form and dignity, but he especially loves English. He loves English as it has been borrowed from many other languages of the world. His knowledge of classical languages gives special insight into how different other languages, too, whether those languages be German, French, Pentagona or counter-culture.
here.
HE IS AN opinionated man. Anyone who knows John Bremner knows that if he has reason to say he'll say it. His assertions are persuasive (conservative) emerge
He draws his examples from classical sources, from the Bible, from movies, television and popular songs. Howard Cordell or Chris Schoenstel (not shown) has been mouthing off provide him examples. He draws from the way his students talk, from the gently little horrors he sees in the small articles and from memoranda.
"Words on Words," as I noted, is a dictionary. It's a dictionary, that is, in the sense that it proceeds from "A" to His first entry "AAN," see THE PARTY. "The party's over." It’s an unconventional dictionary. You’ll find a phrase, "some of my best friends," which gives him the occasion to sound like “Jewish,” and things as “Some of my best friends are Jews,” and gives him further occasion to offer a takeoff on that bromide: the rabbi of a New York synagogue, whose Quakers, said, "some of my best Jews are Friends."
ON THE SAME page you'll find "some place," which is either two words or "somewhere;" "some way," which is either two words or "somehow;" "sonnabulate," which comes from the Latin; "sonnar," which comes from the Sound navigation ranging"; and a section on "sonic writing."
How does one extract from this book of gems? I found myself reading it aloud to my wife. I cherished the entry on "Caucasian," which is a word from the Greek for "coward." I prompted him to tell about the young man who, on a form asking for church preference, said "Gothic." That young man and I are in accord. Why not put on our forms, after the question about the word "human," Brenner asks.
Brian Bremner is—maybe the word is "was"—an Australian, and there's a bit in from Australia. The word "australian" refers to language, he tells us. Under "strine" we are directed to "aorta." Under "aorta" we find sentences in Strine: "Aorta mice laut genst all these cars the nurseinner simie Simya. Aorta have more buses.
MOST OF US won't be using Australian very often, but that's the kind of thing that adds to the "fear" of speaking English in every point I rather like to "trendy," which seems to describe a lot of behavior that sickens my 18th century tastes, and I like "uptight," too. He says he "quotes," and I much prefer "quotation").
But much of the appeal of this book lies in the little areas where one may disagree, just as much of the appeal of my friendship with John Bremner lies in the fact that we don't always agree on everything.
Travolta believable in'Cowboy'
Bv SHAWN McKAY
Staff Reporter
Somewhere behind the romance of John Wayne westerns, the lonely cattle drives of the few remaining ranchers of the wild west rest at the rodees live the urban cowboys.
Trapped in crowded cities and dead end jobs, the urban cowboys mimic their western heroes. Dressed in tented hats, western shirts and boots, they become for a few hours each night in the city or on the vulnerable Montgomery Clift.
James Bridges' and Aaron Latham's film, Urban Cowboy, which opened last week at the Hilcrest Theatre, provides a glimpse into the life of one of the millions of men who invade the western wilderness for the fantasies of their western heroes.
Bud Davis (John Travolta) leaves his home for Houston, Tex. and spends his first night at Gilley's which is billed as the largest western nightclub in the country. The Sisay (Debra Winger) answers her and asks, "You a real cowboy?"
However the question of what is a real cowboy and why women are drawn to the primal independence of western figures is never answered in the film.
Like all independent characters of the classic westerns, it takes Bud a long time to find out what the actually wants. He throws his new bride, Sissy, out of their trailer and takes up with a pampered rich girl.
The only clue comes from an uptown girl (Madolyn Smith) who tells us that she has something for cowboys and muskets; they use complicated and know what they want.
Sissy is seeing an ex-con (Scott Glenn), and the battle begins between the tender egos of the night cowboys.
But in Urban Cowboy, Travolta manages to create a character that is much more believable than the "Saturday disco dance king in" "Saturday Night Fever." He gives the character the dumb macho image it warrants, and adds to it a sense of warmth and joy. The dumbness of the audience a dreamer—the small part of everyone who needs to escape from the unhappiness of our fast paced society.
"Saturday Night Fever." He plays the same dumb character and even manages to out-maneuver everyone else on the dance floor as he does a whirting version of the Texas two-step pictures "Siesta's heart in the process."
Although the movie does not answer the question of what is a real cowboy, it gives the reader more than a subtle hint of what he is not.
Winger brings to the screen a childish character who only wants to fall for a real cowboy and hold on to him. Yet like a child, her love turns bitter and stagnates when she sacrifices her own identity and moves in with the ex-con.
Travolta does not find happiness in his rodeo triumph at Gilley's because the music and the people around him are canned and fake.
The atmosphere of the nightclub comes off a little too perfect. All the patrons seem to have every hair in place and a cowboy hat that just came over them. The background characters come off a little too pretty and too macho to be real.
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The viewer can hardly ignore the resemblance to Travolta's first smash
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
CITY OF RIVERSIDE
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Hydrogen-powered buses like the one above in Riverside, Calif., are part of an experiment to test the potential for hydrogen use in the future. Some researchers say hydrogen could reduce the demand for oil in as little as five years.
Hoffman named acting dean
Robert S. Hoffman, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will become acting dean July 1 when the current dean, Robert Cobb, becomes executive vice chancellor for the Lawrence campus.
Deanell Tacha, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said
yesterday that Hoffman will serve as acting dean until a new dean is chosen
The new dean will be chosen next year between January and July Tacha said.
Hoffman, professor of systematics and ecology and curator of mammals at the Museum of Natural History, has been the associate dean of the College
of Liberal Arts and Sciences since November 1978.
"I know he will provide active leadership," Tacha said. "He has a thorough knowledge of the affairs of the College and will bring great talent and energy to the College." Tacha said he would be all the responsibility of a permanent dean would have.
Official says hydrogen may replace oil as fuel
By WALTER THORP
Staff Reporter
INDEPENDENCE, Mo.-Hydrogen, the earth's cleanest and most abundant element, may replace oil as America's chief energy source within five years, a Billings Energy Corporation spokesman said this week.
Jim Dangerfield, president of the Hydrogen Organization said that with technology developed by Billings, internal combustion engines could run safely, efficiently and economically on hydrogen than on gasoline.
The Hydrogen organization is the non-profit informational arm of the multi-million dollar Billings Corporation.
Billings Corporation is the world's top hydrogen research corporation. Their most recent accomplishment was finding a way to eliminate the hydrogen bubble in the Three Mile Island Nuclear Reactor.
"We have the technology to begin converting private automobiles to run on hydrogen fuel," Dangerfield said. "We need now is a supply of hydrogen."
TO SOLVE this problem, Dangerfield said, the company is planning construction of a hydrogen-from-coral gasification plant. The plant, located near Forest City, Iowa, will be completed within five years.
The company also plans to conduct extensive nationwide road tests to prove that hydrogen power is competitive with gasoline. Billings has a fleet of 15 to 20 hydrogen-powered postal service jeeps over the next three years.
Twenty privately-owned automobiles also will be converted this year for road tests and a hydrogen-powered V-8 engine will be run nonstop on the next year to study the long-term effects on the engine.
The company also has converted 14 buses to run on hydrogen for companies in Powo and Orem, Utah.
ENGINES POWERED only by hydrogen would last as long as 300,000 miles before they required major overhail because the gas is not corrosive to the engine, Dangerfield said.
He said that tests completed at Billings had proven that hydrogen-powered automobiles are pollution free.
"When hydrogen is burned, the only by-product is water vapor," Dangerfield said. "Our tests have determined that the air coming out of the exhaust of oxygen-fuelled car is actually cleaner than the air coming into the intake."
Hydrogen power is also more efficient than any currently-used energy method, he said. Hydrogen use from a storage tank in an automobile is 100 percent efficient while batteries are only 10%. Efficiency in their use depends on electricity. Efficiency comparison of energy input versus energy output.
Billings had developed electrolysis and hydrogen-from-coal gasification techniques that were 80 percent efficient as compared with current petroleum processes that were only 60 percent efficient," he said.
APPROXIMATELY 2.2 pounds of hydrogen equals one gallon of gasoline, but hydrogen burns 40 percent more efficiently, Dangerfield said, and 2.2 pounds of Hydrogen can be produced and sold to the consumer for 80 cents.
Roger Billings, the corporation's 32-year-old president, said a Mate Monte Carlo vessel was converted to hydrogen and received the equivalent of 22 mpg after
Billings got his idea to develop hydrogen power while in high school.
As a science project, he converted his father's lawnmower to use liquid hydrogen and found that it worked.
Hydrogen power is an old idea, he said, but only recent technology has made the gas safe to handle and transport.
Billings Energy Corporation developed a system they call hydride storage.
"With the hydride system, we found that if you alloy certain metals together—specifically iron and nickel—form forms an affinity for hydrogen.
"As you put hydrogen in a vessel with these hydrides, the iron and titanium soak up the hydrogen like a sponge."
TO RELEASE the hydrogen.
Dangerfield said, add heat from the engine block.
Years of testing has proven hydride safety Dangerfield said.
"The company has done everything from building bonfires under hydride tanks to firing incendiary bullets into them to prove their safety," he said.
The ultimate aim of the corporation is to develop a marketable hydrogen-powered car. Until then, Dangerfield said, the company would educate the public about the hydrogen power. They also would market easy-to-install universal conversion kits.
Although the kits are not yet available, he said, they would cost about $1.600.
"We don't want to be a hydrogen auto manufacturer." Dangerfield so'd. "We would like to license our technolo-tech to the facilities and capital to build cars."
HYDROGEN POWER would not put the oil companies or the automobile manufacturers out of business, he said, but it would break the oil monopoly.
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University Daily Kansan, June 19; 1980
Page
A giant grasshopper? The Sikorsky Sky Crane from the Kansas Air National Guard in Topeka descends upon Lawrence Municipal Airport Tuesday afternoon to remove an engine from an F-11 fighter plane. The eye-like head of the helicopter actually is the
Legislative issues considered by ASK
Raising the legal drinking age will again be an issue affecting KU students this fall. Bob Bingaman, executive director of Students of Kansas, said this week.
By MONICA MARKIEWICZ
Staff Reporter
ASK opposes the raising of the legal drinking age to 21 for 3.2 percent beer on the grounds that it is bad on the health of those who drink, and asks body president and ASK delegate声
Other issues slated for fall consideration are the Landlord-Tenant Act and a bill to ensure a student vote on the Board of Regents. Currently a student sits on the Board but does not have a vote.
IN THE PAST, ASK lobbed for issues that were mainly social, Robin McClellan, past director of ASK, asked. Recently, however, there has been more emphasis placed on educationally related issues.
This summer ASK delegates are attending state senate judiciary standing committee meetings, McCormick is part of the research function of ASK.
Bingaman said issues being researched this summer include the need for student wavers, a student wage increase of 8 percent and TITLE IX, an affirmative action issue dealing with equal funding for women's and men's athletic competitions.
SOME ISSUES, such as obtaining and maintaining minimum wage guarantees for students have been issues for several years, McClellan said.
Snackneck said other issues that ASK lobbies for do not affect only students. Issues such as the Landlord-Tenant Act such as the landlord number of people, he said.
McCllenan said the landlord-tenant issue began in 1977, when the Uniform Landlord-Tenant Act was passed by the Kansas Legislature. An amendment
known as the self-help amendment was originally part of the Act. It was defeated in committee after it had been passed by both House and Senate.
Since then ASK has been lobbying to get the amendment on the floor. In the last session it made it onto the calendar but got no further. McCelian said,
Schnacke is testifying to a Senate judiciary standing committee June 26 on the landlord-tenant bill.
The self-help amendment is designed as a remedy to help tenants whose landlords won't make basic, essential repairs. It also breaks windows of furnaces, he said.
KU HAS 22 delegates to ASK's three legislative assemblies. This is based on KU's enrollment list is in these cases and the products are made on issues to be considered.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said that the administration requested that he use a tenure-term program, but that it was not part of a university-wide drive to increase his research.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes has said that one of KU's most important goals is to provide more attractive scholarships for minorities.
DAVID AMBLER, vice chancellor for student affairs, said, "There is a segment of the population whose minority population is not reflective of the minority population of the state of Kansas. There is a significant portion of high school students we aren't serving."
KU has developed a new minority scholarship fund, he said, in recognition of the need to make special efforts to recruit and retain minority students.
A "mixed bag" of factors were responsible for the University's failure to achieve adequate minority representation. The administration is now encouraging individual schools and departments to develop programs on their own to increase minority enrollment, he said.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
KU professor says Brown court case misused
By MARLIN BERRY
Stuff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA-A U.S. District Court judge in Tepaeko dismissed two school segregation cases yesterday because they could overlap the 1964 Brown vs. the Topeka Board of Education case, which was reactivated last year.
The judge, Richard D. Rodgers, told plaintiffs in the two class action suits that they can petition to intervene in the Brown case.
One of the suits taught to force the school board of Topeka Unified School District No. 501 to initiate crosstown travel and better racial balance in the city's schools.
THE OTHER SUIT sought $10,000 damages for each of 11 plaintiffs who alleged they had received an inferior education by attending Topeka schools. They said Topeka schools continued to have high minority enrollments despite the Brown decision, which was to end segregation in U.S. public schools.
But the Brown case should not have been resurrected, Paul Wilson, KU
professor of law who represented Kansas in the original case, said yesterday.
"The case has changed greatly and is much different from what it was originally," he said. "Back in 1954, the issue was much simpler. Linda Brown and about 19 others named in the suit to help the school to go to their neighborhood school."
Today's issue is much more complex, Wilson said, because the coalition is trying to find a means of integration.
"I think as far as the system goes, it would be more orderly if the old case had been closed and this made a new case," he said. "Of course, it's much easier to attract attention to the case by using the original title."
The Brown case was revived last November when Rogers allowed a coalition of black community members to rekindle the case. The coalition said it would not intervene until it could see that desegregation occurs, deside the 1954 Supreme Court order.
COALITION members charged that facilities, equipment and curriculum
Richard Jones, attorney for the plaintiff, said that the famous case name brought with it was not the sole intention in reviving the case.
or for predominantly black schools are still inferior to that of "whiter" schools.
"We did our legal research and the soundest legal route we could take was to bring the complaint up under the original case," he said.
Wilson said that in the original case all students in the Topeka schools were not considered as plantiffs because of the nature of the suit.
THE TOPEKA School Board, according to Dumene Pomeroy, board president, also felt the court action should have been made a new case.
"In 1951 the NAACP was not concerned with the number of plaintiffs but with striking out segregation," he said. "They were satisfied with Linda Brown and the group that they had for plaintiffs."
Jones explained that the new ruler would cover all levels of education in Topela and not just the elementary schools, as was the case with Brown.
IT WAS INTERESTING how Brown became a folk hero of sorts, Wilson said.
"Her name is the most prominent only because it was first alphabetically in the case in Topeka," Wilson said. "When the case was heard in the U.S. Supreme Court, it was called Brown vs. the Topeka Board of Education because the case from Kansas was the first appealed."
"So just by a coincidence of names and events, Brown and Topeka are landmarks."
When the 1954 decision was handed down by the Supreme Court, southern states indicated that there would probably be bloodshed in trying to replicate the schools. Wilson said the reaction in Kansas was not as severe.
"The local reaction was not violent at all and actually contained mixed feelings," he said. "As far as carrying out the desegregation, the Topeka school board had already announced their intention to desegregate schools
Dan Muggerdichan, Wauegetch, III., resigned as Templin Hall resident director May 31 because he wanted to maintain his "sanity."
"If they exceed three years, then they are a very unusual individual." Fred McEllenie, director of residential programs said.
Hall directors cite job woes
Other hall directors agreed with Mugerditchian that, while the job can be fun, there is a point when they feel the need to move on.
Dealing with younger students, handling those who drink too much, a lack of personal privacy and the fact that are problems directors say she faces.
MUGERDITCHIAN, WHO plans on continuing his education, was hall director at Templin for two years, the average stint, he said.
By CHICK HOWLAND Staff Reporter
Mugdichert said a hard part of working at Templin is get a new group of students every year. He said he had 340 new freshmen each year who needed help adjusting to a new environment.
Despite getting free room and board, Jane Tuttle, Ellsworth hall director, said that the pay is not very good.
"It's not a field to go into if you're looking for a lot of money," she said. "Here I've got my master's, and some college, and I want things are making more money than me."
THE PAY FOR KU RESidence hall directors is $850-$990 per month depending on experience. For the eight major residence halls a master's degree is required and applicants must have completed in student personnel or related areas.
The directors, who work just ten months of the year, put in a lot of time on weekends, however, Tuttle said.
"Your time is not always your own," she said. "Everyone says you have to be half crazy to be a hall director, and sometimes I crab with them."
Dealing with drunks is a problem all directors face.
Tuttle said she would rather call police than handle drunks herself.
"There is a real problem when they come home from bars drunk," she said.
TUTTLE SAID A big problem was hall parties, where there is a large amount of free beer.
"Wherever there is a great deal of free beer, there are generally problems."
"People try to prove how much of a man or woman they are," she said.
general and I declined to get involved in that."
Wilson said he was trying to retain the states' right to regulate their schools and that he was for equality in schools.
A good example is following KU-K-State football games, Tuttle said.
"Hopefully, this time there won't be any fee dragging to the school board and we will get complete imme- turement of the original ruling," he said.
Ed Waller, Naismith Hall director, said he tries to handle problems himself, and usually doesn't call the police. He says the problem is that others is privately owned, usually has problems with students who are not residents. Most of the problems at Naismith are from those who just raise a little hell on the weekends," he said.
A system for dealing with students who have done something wrong helps the directors handle problem residents, Mugerditchan said.
A STUDENT WHO has violated a University policy will receive a letter of warning concerning the offense. If the student fails to comply, then receives a letter of probation. Students will then receive a final probationary letter if an offense is committed a third time. It is then up to the student to inform the programs to take action with the student.
Mugerditchian said. "And they will usually have him removed."
He said, however, that minor offenses, like having hard liquor in your room, will usually be punished lightly. He said they probably receive only one letter, he said.
WALLER IS LEAVING Naismith at the end of the summer after just one year there.
"I do like it," he said, "But it's the kind of job you can' do year after year because you have to be pretty enthusiastic."
"If someone gets three letters they've usually done something really bad,"
Tuttle, who is married, said that there is little privacy living in a residence hall with 650 students.
"You have to get used to living in a glass house," she said. "The need for privacy intensifies the longer you are on the job."
Jones said his group was "fairly confident" that they would prevail in court.
Wilson said that as assistant attorney general for Kansas, he was not defending segregation but representing a side.
regardless of the decision of the courts."
Although room and board is provided for the directors, Tuttle said it isn't as nice as it sounds.
"There are many times that I'd rather pay extra and live in *meadowbrook*, she said. "The room and board is nice but it's not the sky."
"WHEN THE ANNOUNCEMENT was made to desegregate, some southern attorney generals wanted to see about meeting to come up with some kind of action to frustrate the decision," Wilson said. "The attorney
Tuttle said that there are some halls she would not work at. But, luckily, she said the University gives the directors some intern in where they want to work.
Watkins and Weyforth blast Winn in debate
Voters will choose one of the Democrats in the Aug. 5 state primary to run against Winn.
Staff Reporter
Dan Watkins and Jack Weyford, Democratic candidates for third District Representative, were supposed to debate each other Tuesday night, but they seemed more interested in joining the incumbent Republican Larry Winn.
By TAMMI HARBERT
The debate, held in the Kansas Union, was sponsored by the Third District Young Democrats. It was the second time in 10 days the two had met. The last meeting was June 9 in Overland Park. According to Wayford's campaign, the candidates are expected candidates plan at least one more debate for June 24 in Kansas City, Kan.
"The biggest issue between them is who is going to beat Larry Winn," Olzelsky said.
Tom Long, secretary of the Johnson County Young Democrats, co-sponsor of the debate, agreed that the candidates seemed bent on criticizing
"The whole debate was more or less against Winn." he said.
Long said it seemed likely the candidates might be using the debate to publicize Winn's weak points instead of their differences on the issues.
"I wouldn't be surprised if that's half the reasoning behind it," he said.
Watkins said Wednesday that a recent newspaper article quoted Wim as saying he would debate the democratic candidate if the rules were fair.
A big issue in the race between he and Weforth, he said, was which of them
Watkins, who has the support of many state Democrats, said he thought he has more experience in state politics than in national government. In addition to being Carlin's former campaign manager, Watkins has been assistant attorney general under Kurt Schneider and has served as member of the State Democratic Party.
Weyford said he would take a trip abroad only if it helped the people in his district.
"I wouldn't take any foreign junkets," Watkins said. "That's the policy I'd set."
Weyforth, a newcomer to the Democratic Party and to state politics, said his interest in the small businessman, his experience as president of the Shawnee Mission School Board and his involvement in his community made him the best candidate.
Both candidates criticized Winn for his trips abroad, which Watkins said had taken the Congressman to 18 foreign countries in the past two years.
could beat Winn in the general election.
Weyforth said that Winn, who will be campaigning for his eighth term, had been in Congress too long. He favors legislation terms of all elected officials, he said.
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Watkins, John Carlin's former campaign manager who engineered the victory over incumbent Gov. Robert Bennett in 1978, said Winn had been unable to pass any of the legislation he introduced into Congress.
Weyfort said Winn was an ineffective leader who had been unwilling to communicate with his constituents.
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Watkins said he was not sure if a limit would be advantageous. He said many Congressmen continue to be good legislators for 20 years.
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The candidates agreed that the country needed a stronger defense, but Watkins said he thought Congress had given him enough time passing draft registration for men.
"It may be a draft is necessary some time, but I don't support a peacetime draft," Watkins said.
Wyeforth said women should be able to take an active part in defending the country, but that it was futile to debate their position. Women until the draft was reinstated.
"It doesn't make sense to me that if you are going to talk draft that you leave somebody out," he said.
Watkins criticized the growth of the committee system in Congress
Both candidates called on Congress to streamline the federal bureaucracy.
committee system in Congress. He said there were four times as
He said there were too "times" as many committees now as in 1865.
Weyford suggested that Congress allow television into legislative sessions any time, except when Congress votes to bar it from a particular session.
"It might be kind of interesting to explain why you don't want it open," he said.
Weyforth categorized himself as "very much in the middle of the road."
He said he would improve communication between Congressman and constituents by holding town meetings in the district, going door to door to talk people when he was in the area and taking phone calls from telephone in his office for the public.
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University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
Page 9
KC
Royals
KC blasts Cleveland in Gura's ninth win
Jamie Quirk
KANSAS CITY, Mo.(UPI)—Jamie Quirk and Amos Otis combined for RIBT in Larry Gura's ninth victory last night, giving the Kansas City Royals a 10-2 decision over the Cleveland Indians.
Gura, 9-2, allowed seven hits, winning his sixth straight game and tying Tommy John of the New York Yankees for the most wins by an American player. He also lowered his league-leading ERA to 2.16 in his eighth complete game.
Kansas City blew the game open with four runs in the third against starter John Denny, 7- Otis and Clint Hurte singleled in runs and Quirk drilled a bases-loaded double to drive in the other two.
Ots added a sacrifice飞 in the fourth as Kansas City, capitalizing on a double-heed sweep by Toronto over Chicago, increased its first-place lead in the West over the second-place White Sox to eight and eight, and John Watman all drove in runs in a five-righthит. Two runs were scored on an error.
The Royals, who are running away with the Western Division race after scarcely two months of the 1880 season, know that someone—most likely the winner of the championship champion California Angels—is going to wake up and begin a challenge.
Through last night's games, however Texas and California were in no position to challenge anybody. Both
were in double digits in games behind the first-past Royals. The Rangers rested in fifth place and the Angels in last.
"Texas is too good to be playing like this," Kansas City pitcher Paul Splittert said.
Travel costs hurting KU sports
Kansas will have to pay a $10,000 penalty to Tennessee for the contract. But Marcum has no remorse about the move.
Staff Reporter
"Al Oliver is swinging the bat good, Richie Kish is swinging the bat good and Mickey Rivers always seems to get on base. They're going to buddy Budley back soon. That's too good a team not to start winning."
"We can no longer travel coast-to-coast and border-to-border," Marcum said. "We have to move to a regional concern in scheduling."
"It was a great contract for Tennessee," he said. "It wasn't a good one for KU."
Rising travel costs are pinching KU's athletic budget.
Kansas was to travel to Tennessee in 1981 and 1985, and Tennessee would have made a trip to Lawrence in 1983. But Marcum canceled the contract, made in 1969, because he felt it would not have been profitable enough for KU.
The University recently canceled a football series with the University of Tennessee, and Bob Marcum, Kansas athletic director, said this week he was looking at future football and basketball could be made.
By TOM GRESS
"I don't think, after expenses, the trips would be worthwhile financially for us," he said.
KU would have made $75,000 before expenses for both games. Maccona said.
The Royals have made a shambles of the West despite a string of injuries that has denied rookie manager Jim Frey the use of his top four run-producers—George Brett, Darrell Porter, Amos Otis and Hal Macee—in the lineup together for all but two games this season.
Another game that is giving Marcum headaches is this year's football opponent against the University of Oregon in Eugene, Ore. Kansas could have a travel bill of $9,000, including $44,762 for chartering a plane.
Instead, Marcum is talking to Tulsa
University about replacing the Tennessee series with the Hurricanes—a cheaper trip for KU.
Many of KU's travel problems stem from the rising cost of plane fuel. In the last year fuel has gone from between 50 and 80 cents a gallon to between 95 and 115 cents a gallon according to an official at Ozark Airlines the airline that charters KU's flights.
But the Royals have chugged along despite those absences to the biggest lead of any division leader this season—seven games as of yesterday.
"We can't afford to make these plane trips anymore because the price is going too high," Marcum said.
beat," McRae said. "I don't care how far back they are.
"We are afraid we may not break even on the trip." Marcum said. Kansas expects to receive $60,000 from Oregon after the game as part of the gate share.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A chartered plane to the Tennessee game would cost about $16,000, according to Ozark Airlines.
“It’s nice to be where we are right now but it isn’t time to get cut,” he said, “like a leading Alabamba 30-4 at playwhere there is a whole second half to be played.
"I still think California is the team to
Sports
| | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 40 | 21 | .567 | — |
| Ohio | 32 | 58 | .547 | — |
| Milwaukee | 32 | 28 | .533 | 7½ |
| Baltimore | 32 | 30 | .516 | 8½ |
| Cleveland | 30 | 29 | .500 | 9 |
| Detroit | 30 | 29 | .498 | 10 |
| Detroit | 30 | 29 | .498 | 10 |
Kansas City 39 23 692 8 %
Chicago 39 23 692 8 %
Houston 39 23 692 8 %
Toronto 34 34 642 10 %
Yorks 28 35 414 13 %
Minneapolis 28 35 414 13 %
Missouri 28 36 413 12 %
Toronto 3-14, Chicago 64
Boston 20, Seattle 2
Boston 6, Seattle 2
Kansas City 10, Cleveland 2
Detroit 10, Pittsburgh 2, pdp
rain
"Common sense tells you there's still a long way to go. Somebody is going to play playing good. California will and so will Texas. We still got all hundred games to go. This is no time to get excited about anything." Meea said.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Yesterday's Games
FANST W L J Pct. GB
Montreal 14 34 28
Philadelphia 14 34 28
Detroit 13 34 27
New York 13 34 27
Chicago 15 28 49
San Diego 15 28 49
WEST Houston 37 23 617 –
Los Angeles 35 27 683 –
Germantown 33 35 532 –
Miami United 37 25 432 –
Atlanta 32 35 430 –
Baltimore 31 34 411 –
Chicago at Cincinnati 0
Chicago at Miami 0
Atlanta at Pittsburgh 4
Houston at St. Louis 0
Philadelphia at San Diego 1
Washington at San Francisco 2
Olympic trials draw 17 'Hawks
With 17 current or former members of the Jayhawk's track team competing, University will be well positioned to win at Field and Field Trials in Oregon, Oregon and Field Trials in Oregon, Oregon.
The trials will be Saturday and Sunday. Although the U.S. team is boycoting the Olympic Games in Moscow, the team will participate in two meets this summer against other countries boycotting the Games.
To make the Olympic team, a competitor must finish in the top three places in his event.
the seven trackmen from this year's KU squad entered in the trials. Owlabi will compete in the triple jump, an event he won at the NCAA Indoor Championships and finished second in at the Outdoor Championships. Hogan placed fourth with 90-meters, a race placed fourth in at the Outdoor championships.
Sanya Owolabi and Deon Hogan lead
Other Jayhawks entered are Matt Friedman, discuss; Jeff Buckingham, pault vault; Joel Light, high jump; Lester Mickens, Mike Ricks, and Stan Wilhelm, long jump; Steve Warren Wilhoite, long jump, and Steve Fainbow, decathlon.
Al Oerter, four-time Olympic disc champion, leads the contingent of former KU stars competing. Other competitors are Terry Porter, pole vault; Cliff Wilford and Kevin Newell, 100- and 200-meters; Bill Landbender, steeplechase; and Jay Wagner, 400 meters.
VIN
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Welcome Students
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Present this ad at door Fri. for free
draw. (1 per person)
Where the stores are 7th & Mass. 842-6930
Tawrence Opera House
The University Daily
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KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Make it easy on yourself, your car, and your wallet this semester—CAR POOL. Kansas Union Main Lobby. Questions—call 864-604-606.
J. HOOD BOOKSKEEPER: Scholarly, literate, and experienced.
We also, buy, sell and trade good condition paperbacks science fiction, class fiction.
We also, buy, sell and trade good condition books 814-1644. Open every day except weekends.
Students—to Mails Bookshop for Western Civ Analysis, Magazines, Halimark cards, George Booth cards, Posters and more! **6-26**
The man that has protected decent Karans from the tide of rage radicals now extends his coverage to auto, home, and life. "A man you know, a face you trust," 30.
Villa Capri Apartments. Unfurnished & 2 bedrooms apartment available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet, quiet location, room with private bathroom. Students preferred. Call 841-798-9300. After 8:30am.
FOR RENT
NAIMSHIH HALL has openings for summer.
Both male and female. If interested contact
business office at 843-8559 any time of the
day. tf
**HOUSE-3 Bedrooms**, 1½ baths, formal dining room, carpet, large fenced backyard. Bathroom, carpet, large fenced backyard. Room has 500 per month. Call 631-3431.
Mark I & II ippit. NOW RENOVING for 15-80 (-18-41). Quint 1 & 2 bedroom apts, and heating, carpet, balconies, offices, and laundry facilities. Room and laundry facilities. Call resident mr. info #844-0503 at 1015 Mississippi st. 7-31 room, 1½ bath, formal dining room, carpet, large fenced backyard. CA, area. No p beds 1½ per month. Call 631-3431.
Roommate wanted for summer, 2 bedroom suite + utilities. Call Kim or Dan #844-1523. W. 24th St. st. (South Apt.).
COOPERATIVE LIVING—established student cooperative with the U. of Auckland campus Lawrence. Lawyers room rents $30-$40 including utilities and supper. Call 812-365-4700.
Largest 1 bedroom efficiency affi. 2 niks. from $790-$1,499.
Bedroom, fully furnished. Utilities paid
$115 monthly. One bedroom. Inv.,
$690-$1,399.
August 9th, 2019. Call 814-6238 or 851-714-7. Beautiful 4 bedroom house on 324 Clayton
Drive. Chevron to bus route. 440, reference
number.
Must sacrifice. Apartment to sublease. Phone 841-0084. 7-3
Large furnished rooms in house one block from Union. Share K&B deposit central cooling. 845-808-1290 Ohio. 6-26 Good living arrangements two blocks from
FOR SALE
3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now and in August; 1½ bath, attachage garrill, all appitions, pool. You'll like our looks Southern Parkway Townhouse, 26th and Kaliolz 842-755-0888.
These contemporary studios and 1-bedrooms are completely furnished and rental starts from only $195 per month Sundance is concessionary and Florida. just west of the Sanctuary, on KU bus route. Water paid
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
OLIVETT PRAXIS TYPEWRITER Office compact, ultra-modern style, like new condition, pice, $250. Call Mike, $42-5587.
Alternator, starter and generator specialties,
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9005, 3000 W.
1
PINTAX SLR 110 CAMERA. includes three, lightskilight lamps, lea roam, electronic drive, electric motor film advance, deluxe camera, new款 847. §§9. Call 842-5087.
841-5255 842-4455
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Makes sense to use them-1) As study guide, makes sense to use them-2) As study guide, makes sense to use them-3) New Analysis of Western Civilization, New Analysis of Western Civilization, New Analysis of Western Civilization, Matter, Bookstore and Oread Bookstore
Pine Bookcases-$20 & up. Tables, $35 &
all shelves, $15 & up. Mike Stough,
843-8892. 6-23
SINEMILLA—Herbal smoking mix and perfume essence. Mix containers mullein, lavender oil and 10% sugar in a mixture of navajo smoking mixes Perfume 30% ointment, Lightningigrate, Lid-Fo D-80.
1975 Camaro ps-hp-ab, excellent condition,赛车 $2.000, 842-1702, 6-26
Yamaha receiver, turntable with diamond head stylish, Professional Series Tachikawa
HANOVER PLACE
APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING
Toyota air conditioner—Radiator, compressor, blower assembly, $250, negotiable. 842-2352, Sunday and evenings. 6-19
1972 Ford LTD Station Wagon. Good tires.
960-513-4880. See "100" West 27th Street.
6-23
BOOK BARN. Why not come to Oaklanda
library? You'll love it! 91-432-8611,
alive-chip, Oaklanda library, 91-432-8611.
These all new and contemporary apartments are completely furnished and equipped with a new kitchen! Hammer out 1-br. starting at $250 per month and 2-br. with study area. Our location is placed between 14th and 15th streets on the west side of Massapequa Road, just steps from the beach.
841-1212
Ouation acoustical electric guitar with case.
$250. 841-0024. 7-3
Bicycle—Nihkhi custom sportman 23* 10-3
Speed. Excellent condition $80. 843-263-78
1976 Honda 350 XL street and dirt combo cycle. Good condition, safety inspected.
843-450). 6-23
Oldsmobile Omega 1976, ac, atp, p. B- 8, V-2
snow tires. Very nice, reasonably priced.
Buy now!
Keys behind Watkins. 4 keys; Subaru and office kebs, 841-9234. 6-26
FOUND
HELP WANTED
House managers, Menninger half-way house, Granger half-way house, and adult halfway house. College and graduate students find this job attractive as they gain experience in the nursing or husband. The spouse may be a full time mother, father, grandmother, or Foundation), and will be paid a salary on the basis of experience responsible for attending staff meetings, training department for resumes, and planning and cooking some evening meals. The spouse is also responsible for attending staff meetings, training department for resumes, and planning and cooking some evening meals. Apply in person, Personnel Office, The Menninger Anno 6180. ANO 6180. ENO
Experienced sales wanted. Part-time, week nights and weekends hours. Apply in person. 802 W. 23rd. Green's Liquor. 6-19
Part Time—3 to 4 hours per evening, 5 days per week with local cleaning service. Call 842-5430 for info & appointment. 6-23
The University of Kansas Audio-Reader Coordinator. Some broadcast programming coordinator. Broadcast equipment required. Ability to work with people, good vocabulary and read ability. Must not mandatory. College degree equivalent experience. Application deadline June 25. Send resume to university president upon skills and experience. Range of experience. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Director; Audio-Reader
Asst. 1 $150 ± $20 per month. 20 hours per week. Clinical and administrative capabilities. Apply. 150 BK 644-370. BK 644-370.
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Guitar, bando, mandolin from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock, jazz, bluegrass and folk styles. Experienced guitarist. Call Kait or steve Wesenman 841-807-6183 6-30
Sail into summer with the KU Sail Club. We offer Learn to Sail Classes with our own sailors, sailing camping, and partying. Drop by Burton at 1400, Union and Investigate. **6-23**
Homeless junior looking for fall accommodations. Prefer house, high ceiling, Oread Neighborhood. Jeannie, 841-9263. 6-30
PERSONAL
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC -abortions up
control, Nursing LIFEGRAIN in Control,
Counseling, Hospital for treatment call: 9 AM to 5 PM (812) 632-400
441. 100 W 1st St, Overland Park, PA 15601
CAR POOL: Haven't you been without one long enough? (Kamui Union Main Lobby)
Question=call-840-4644 8-19
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid. Bkd 864-5564. tf
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and Wednesday evenings. Call Bob Hills 864-4991 before 5, 842-1136 evening. 6-30
PRFGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
HIGH 843.4821. 6-31
Try the summer special at the cool Harbour! It's brightly during summer week, & pitchers with from 5 to 10 games with from 5 to 10 Sunday at The Harbour Lits-and get a discount on your new tee shirt.
TYPING
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-
Experimented typist, IBM Correcting
Electronic. Quality work. References available.
Sandy, evening and weekends 748-9818 tf
I do damned good typing Peggy. 842-
4476.
Experienced Typist-term papers, buenas.
Writing skills include lettering,
spelling corrected, 843-954, Mrs. Wright.
Your originals deserve an Encore! Encore Copy.
843-201.
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc.
Betty, 842-6897 after 5 weeks. tf
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. 842, re-
liable, accurate, IBM plca/elite. 842-2507
evenings to 11:00 and weekends. if
Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Ellite. Quality work,
reasonable rates. Theses, dissertations welf-
come; editing/layout. Call Joan B. 912-977-128
SERVICES OFFERED
Experienced typlist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selectlec.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. if
Thesis dissertation workshop can save hours of preparation, help with final defense. Sunday afternoon at 10 a.m., and Sunday morning at 11 a.m., Reports, distortions, legal forms graphics, editing, self-corrective Call *Ellen*, online research.
Printing While You Wait is available with Alice at the House of Uherss Quick Copy from 8 a.m. to p.m. Monday to Friday at 8 a.m. to p.m. Saturday at 838 Mass.
Question: How can you have fun, meet new people, save gas and money, and feelparty-like? What kind of self-serve Car Pool Exchange Board, Kansas Union Main Library, Questions-call-615-832-7900.
TUTOR: English 101, 102. Experienced in KU. system. $5 per hour. Contact Margle.
4-4050. 6-26
The University Daily
Get a Cool Tan, no need to suffer the heat outdoors. Tantalize Tan Center, 2210 Iowa, 843-4937. 6-23
Accurate, experienced typist. IB correcting Selective Call Donna. 842-2744.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE. 841-4989.
[ ] [ ]
WANTED
Mercury Skates Outdoor Roller Skating new hours-7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Monday through Friday. 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and Sunday 13 p.m. & Oweed $1.50 per minute. Please bring picture ID and seals, 7-10 min.
3. 5, or 10-speed bike, preferably woman's Call Debbie 842-6890, afternoons or evenings. 6-19
Male needs roommate to share apartment until August 2. Furnished. price $120 a month + utilities. 841-6611. Just off comp. 6-23
Roommate to share furnished 3 bdrm, hroom.
for summer. A C, dishwasher, waerier dryer,
stereo, cable TV, $120 month. Utilities free.
7-3
Liberal female needed to share nice 3 bedroom house. Located close to campus with two calls. Call 841-6072. 6-30
Wanted—Female softball players for city league coed team. Games played on Sundays. Call 842-6700. 6-23
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, June 19, 1980
CHUCK ISAACSON/Kansan staff
A pond of water bubbles at the Douglas County Landfill. The water is bubbling because of escaping gases.
Workers to develop own job evaluations
Staff Reporter
By PAUL CARMAN
Civil service employees will take part in developing their own evaluation standards in a new plan scheduled for presentation today at the University of Kansas by a representative of the state personnel office.
Don Pesmark, state personnel administrator, is scheduled to present the plan which requires a supervisor to discuss an employee's job with him.
The employee would help develop the criteria for his own evaluation, Pesmark said yesterday.
"The supervisor and employee set standards of minimum performance for the employee's job" he said. "It will be against these standards that the employee will be evaluated at the end of his pay period."
Pesmark said the standards would be developed by mutual agreement.
"If a case does develop where the two cannot come to an agreement on the standards of evaluation, then it is the case that the standards to develop the standards." he said.
In most cases, the supervisors and employees should be able to come to an agreement with each other. Pesmark said.
David Lowen, University director of personnel, and Jan O'Neill, president of the Classified Senate, agreed that the new evaluation plan had advantages.
Lowen said, "The new system is more objective. It lets the employee know before the evaluation period what are by which he'll be evaluated."
Landfill pollution could spread
Still Reporters Again, the city of Lawrence is looking for a place to dump its trash.
By HURST LAVIANA and KIRK TINDALL
Staff Reporters
The D Dragstrip Road sanitary landfill site, which opened in 1967 and lasted only three of an expected 10 years, was damaged by a fire that caused methane explosions and blowing trash.
The current site, described as temporary when it opened in 1970, has been in operation in spite of opposition from citizens and government agencies.
DAVID SHIRK, who lives near the present site, said all of the residents nearby were concerned about the safety of their water.
"It scares you when you see the whole picture," he said. "You can't help but worry about it, but we have to live with it.
He said a lot of people in the area have already dug their wells deeper.
"We bought a water softener and a water filter. We're thinking about drilling deeper," he said.
When the current landfill was being planned in 1969, there were no state or federal regulations covering landfills. Since then, the Environmental Protection Agency has imposed guidelines that forbid placing a landfill
BARRING FLOOBS, the biggest problem at any landfill is leachate—water that has percolated through the waste and picked up contamination. When any landfall is saturated by landfill leachate is fostered. Because of the larger amount of water on the Douglas Landfill, it has more than its share of leachate.
on a flood plain. EPA officials said there was a possibility that flood waters would carry pollutants out of the land and into streams. The ootamina water supplies downstream.
Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering, who worked on the design of the landfill site, said there was leachate at the landfill, but it was in small enough quantities that it was rendered harmless when diluted.
McKinney said the contaminants in the leachate were very high, but the concentration did not reflect the actual contents of materials leaving the landfill.
"WE FIGURED IT out," McKinsey said. "Even during a drought, if all the pollution from the landfill site were removed and not exposed to enough pollution to cause a problem."
Howard G. O'Connor, of the Kansas Geological Survey, said groundwater near the landfill site flowed toward the
river and away from wells in the area. Heavier metals tended to stay in the vicinity of the landfill, he said, and they could cause hard water if they got into a form. However O'Connor said lachance was a long way if it is not absorbed by clay.
David Tripp, assistant regional counsel for the EPA, said there was a need to move larger and moving long distances. He said the EPA is currently investigating an Iowa City, Iowa, manufacturing dumpster site where contaminated wells 60 miles away.
"There is no other way it could have gotten there," Tripp said. "There is nowhere else it could have come from."
The Douglas County Commission has tentatively approved a new landfill site at the Hamm Quarry, in Jefferson County a mile north of the present site. Residents of the area are now fighting to cover the landfill out of their back yards.
McKinney, one of the strongest backers of the present site, is one of the strongest opponents of the proposed site.
"If anybody's well is between Hamm's Quarry and the river, it's going to get full pollution," he said.
ALTHOUGH HE DOES not live near
the quarry, McKinney said a friend, Paul Smart, owns a hog farm at the bottom of the hill where the quarry landfill site would be placed.
"If there is a fissure in the rock, leachate can leak into the water supply," he said. "If the rock walls are damaged, the city is going to own a lot
McKinney said the EPA regulations were intended to promote recycling by making landfill operations too extensive.
According to Chuck Linn of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, the EPA regulations require the lake to keep lachute out of the rivers.
"THINK ABOUT WHAT'S under your kitchen sink," he said. "That's what's going into the river."
Linn said another problem with a "wet" dump was that surface water often made it impossible to cover water with the required 8 inches of dirt each day. He said if trash remained untreated and disease became a problem,
When the landfill was in the planning stages in 1989, the Army Corps of Engineers predicted that water would render the landfill site 1.5 days each year.
Housing . . .
from page 1
which includes parking lots, garages, pools and club houses.
Lutz and Lowe agreed that condominiums were a viable alternative for home ownership as the housing market tightens.
CONDOMINIUMS HAVE become more popular because people are moving back to the cities to be closer to home. In contrast, the high price of transportation, be said.
Another direction housing may go is toward more manufactured housing, in the form of modular homes and mobile homes.
"The building industry is becoming capital intensive just like the automobile industry has." Latz said. "The cost of steel in lower cost than human can produce."
MOBILE HOMES were originally built for buyers in lower to lower-middle income groups. But with the house crunch, buyers in higher income brackets have begun buying manufactured housing.
Juanita Baxter, owner of Baxter Mobile Homes in Ottawa, said mobile home sales have been increasing.
"Our more expensive double-wide that go for about $20,000 are becoming people who don't want a real big home with lots of grounds to keep up," she said.
Inexpensive mobile home sales are also on the rise, Baxter said.
LUTZ, WHO DESIGNED mobile homes for three years, said. "Although the quality has improved a little bit, the majority of mobile homes are built as cheaply as possible. Mobile homes are merely tin boxes putted up on the inside with expensive-looking cheap furniture."
But mobile home manufacturers are aware of their market and build what it dictates, he said.
The quality of a building suffers when today has improved in some aspects but has declined in others, Lutz said.
"Quality in housing has improved because of the governmental restrictions dealing with such things as insect infestations, ventilation and smoke detectors," he said.
The quality of a bulding suffers when the builder uses materials such as immation bricks, Lutz said.
"QUALITY IS A rare commodity," he said. "I think people would be really surprised to see how much of their house or house is made out of fake materials."
Houses being built in Lawrence are of better overall quality than those going up in the Kansas City area. Lutz said.
"People are very image conscious in Johnson County," he said.
Films . . .
from page 1
said. "After a while you kind of get a sense for selecting the right fittings."
selecting. Right flits.
*For examinations, it is necessary to pack in the house. It's a quick way to make 200 bucks for the film program. But I'm not saying that I'm opposed to a
Movies are shown at Woodruff Auditorium on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays this summer at 7 p.m. Films to be shown in the remainder of
the semester are "Strokes," "Sunset Boulevard," "Charles-Depar or Alive," "Fantastic Planet," "The Wages of Fear," "Inherit the Wind," "The Great War," "Warhol's Bad," "Promises in the Dark," "All the King's Men," "Smiles of a Summer's Night," "Dog Day Afternoon," "The Loved One," "Sade," "The Story of Adele H.," "Hirshima Mon Amour," and "Steppenwolf."
Interim
from page 1
and Robert Wagstaff, executive vice president of the KU Alumni Association, Conard said.
THE REMAINING eight members will be selected by the Regents from nominations submitted by the first four. Of the remaining eight, one will be a faculty member from the College of Health Sciences, two will be faculty from KU's Lawrence campus one will be a faculty member from the College of Health Sciences, two will be students from the Lawrence campus, and two will be alumni.
At least one campus group would like
to see these ground rules for the search committee changed.
Jan O'Neill, president of the Classified Senate, said she wrote a letter last week to Haines requesting information in an representation on the search committee.
Haines said he received O'Neill's letter and would submit it for consideration by the Regents.
"THERE are a number of parties interested in the search committee." Haines said, "all of who would like to be involved. Not all of them can.
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT ON SAVINGS!
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT ON SAVINGS!
FOGHAT
Includes Loose Ends
Too Late The Hero No Hard Feelings
Full Time Lover
Tight Shoes
AMBROSIA
Includes Biggest Part Of Me
You're The Old Woman, Rock 'N' A Hard Place
Great In The Koo
One Eighty
EMMYLOU HARRIS
Includes Wayfaring Stranger/Jordan
Green Pastures/You're Learning
VAN HALEN
Women And Children First
Includes And The Cradle Will Rock...
Loss Of Control
Everybody Wants Some!!
Roses In The Snow
CHANGE
Includes A Lovers Holiday Searching
The End Angel In My Pocket
The Glow Of Love
559
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Give the gift of music.
599
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STORE HOURS:
9-10 Daily
10-7 Sunday
2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas
GIBSON'S
DISCOUNT CENTER
VISA
master charge
FOGHAT
Includes Loose Ends
Too Late The Hero / No Hard Feelings
Full Time Lover
Tight Shoes
"I think their requests are well intentioned and well-founded, but I think it would be ill-advised to respond to these various contingencies."
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT ON SAVINGS!
FOGHAT
Includes Loose Ends
Too Late The Hero No Hard Feelings
Full Time Lover
AMBROSIA
Includes Biggest Part Of Me
You're The Only Woman, Rock N A Hard Place
Creat In The Rain
EMMYLOU HARRIS
Includes Wayfaring Stranger/Jordan
Green Pastures/You're Learning
Tight Shoes
One Eighty
VAN HALEN
Women And Children First
Includes Anal The Cradle Will Rock...
Loss Of Control Everybody Wants Some!!
Roses In The Snow
CHANGE
Includes A Lower's Holiday Searching
The End Angel In My Pocket
The Glow Of Love
559
LP/TAPE
MFG. SUGG. LIST 7.98
Give the gift of music.
599
LP/TAPE
MFG. SUGG. LIST 8.98
"Buy It Once. Enjoy It A Lifetime. Recorded Music Is Your Best Entertainment Value."
STORE HOURS:
9-10 Daily
10-7 Sunday
2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas
the Secrets*
★ This Friday and Saturday ★
THE SECRETS with THE METHOD
Rock, pop, and a whole lot of dancin'!!
Cheap pitchers & drinks 8:30-9:15.
★ This Sunday June 22 ★
Special Sunday double feature
THE BLUE RIDDIM BAND
(on the main floor)
BILL LYNCH & LEE MCBEE
(in the 7th Spirit Club)
★ Next Week ★
Wed. RIVERROCK
Thurs. ROCKY HORROR
Fri. SOUTHERN FRIED
Sat. THE ARTISTS
AMBROSIA
Includes Biggest Part Of Me
Are The Only Woman Rock N' A Hard Place
Crew In The Rain
One Eighty
GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER
the
Secrets*
Where the store are
7th & Main.
843-6930
Lawrence
Opera House
WALKING
tall
LADIES BOUTIQUE
Junior & Misses
Shoes
9 thru 12
All Widths
Gage Shopping Center
Huntington & Gape
Toperka, Kansas 66604
273-0090
THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD
COMMONWEALTH
THEATRES
The Empire Strikes Back
Eve. 7.00 and 9.45
David Matthews 2.00
Varsity
Downtown 843-1065
Granada
Downtown 843-5788
Bronco Billy
Starring Clint Eastwood. Sendra Locke.
Eve, 7:30 and 9:40
Hillcrest
9th & Iowa 842-8400
2. Rough Cut
Sharring Burt Reynolds
Eve. 7:30 and 9:30
1. Urban Cowboy
Starring John Travolta
Eve, 7:15 and 9:40
3. Wholly Moses
Starring Dutley Moore
Eve, 7:40 and 9:35
Cinema Twin
31st & Iowa 842-6400
1. Mary Poppins
Eve: 7:00 and 9:30
2. The Shining Starring Jack Nicholson Eve, 7.15 and 9.45
Sunset 635
West 81st St. 649-8172
Now open 7 days a week
The Jerk Starring Steve Martin Plus Animal House
Shows start at duck
1.943
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No.148
Monday, June 23, 1980
Director may be picked without Affirmative Action
By MARK PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
The permanent director of the office of Alfirmative Action may be chosen soon without the outside search that the office often recommends for other departments.
The position of permanent director became vacant last Thursday when Bonnie Ritter submitted her resignation. Ritter had been on leave for two years and she taught at the University of Texas at Arlington.
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel,
said Saturday that Dial Shankel, executive vice chancellor asked her opinion a week ago about the status of his education. Edwards from acting to principal director.
Thomas said she told Skankel that under the KU Affirmative Action plan persons holding acting positions could be considered for permission, as much of which they had been serving in an acting capacity.
Thomas said she based her decision on a section that said whenever positions were available, an attempt must be made to identify, consider and promote within the University
individuals who would further affirmative action goals.
Bob Shelton, associate professor of speech and drama, said the KU administration last week requested that Edwards be granted a less than part-time appointment from the speech division. Edwards was given a doctorate in that department last spring.
The division decided to defer action on the appointment until they were assured of an adequate search for permanent director of Al-firmative Action.
Shelton said that if Thomas had said an appointment without a search was legal then "that's stretching the rules, the letter and the spirit of affirmative action."
Shelton said the move from acting to permanent director was not a promotion, it was a rehearsal.
"If it were an academic department," he said,
"It would not be permitted."
The former acting director of Affirmative Action, Clarence Dillingham, said that if Eddie was involved in a lawsuit against him.
would be another example of the University's promoting from within.
Dillingham said the recent promotions of Del Shankel to acting chancellor, Robert Cobb to executive vice chancellor and Vickie Thomas to executive vice chancellors were examples of "in-house nominations."
Dillingham said the job description for acting director, under which Edwards was hired, was significantly different than the job description for permanent director.
"There will be at least one word that will be changed," he said, "that change from acting to permanent will make a lot of difference in the pool of applicants.
"I for one might be interested in applying for the permanent job."
Dillingham characterized a search that was limited to the KU campus as a "sham."
"Mike has displayed a level of competence at the job," he said. "He certainly would be the most skilled."
Dillingham said there should be a wide pool of applicants for the permanent post and that an open search would attract many top-flight minority applicants.
Turnpike exit sparks debate
By MARLIN BERRY
Staff Reporter
A. K. and Charlene Winter live on a farm northwest of Lawrence that was homesteaded by his parents more than 100 years ago. If a proposed Clinton-Lecompton turnip interchange becomes a reality, the Winters will lose part of their land.
Richard ice and his family also live on a farm adjacent to the proposed site and will lose land if the exit is built. Ice grew up on the farm now he had access to water, which he built and he does not like the idea of losing roos.
The proposed turnpike interchange was
presented last week in testimony before a special interim committee on transportation in Topek
THE HEARING was requested by Tom Kelly, 519 Abbey, a former marketing representative for Southwestern Bell, who bought 200 acres of farm land near the site last year. Kelly plans to buy the property, an exclusive housing development with swimming pools, tennis courts and riding stairs.
Kelly said he thought of the turnip excite in March 1979. He bought the 200 acres from Cecil
Kelly told the state Transportation Committee that a new turnip excision is needed to provide
better access to the Clinton and Perry Lane areas. He also told the committee that a new exit would benefit his development property, making room for commuters to get to and from Topeka.
The proposed interchange would be eight miles west of Lawrence and 12 miles east of Topeka. It would be the first addition to the turnpike since the $160 million toll road was completed in 1956.
KELLY SAID last week that the interchange would have several benefits besides providing the main access to the new housing development, whose homes would sell for $100,000 and
they would sell between $10,000 and
see TURNPIKE back page
Union losing thousands to bad checks
Ry CHICK HOWLAND
Staff Renorter
Said Prepbeat to the box full of bad checks totaling more than $2,000 sits on the desk of Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas Union. Ferguson said Friday that the union would lose over $5,000 because some checks would never be paid.
The amount of returned checks has Union officials worried and has forced them to consider several possible systems designed to curb the problem.
"The Kansas Union has been a relatively easy place to cash checks," Ferguson said. But due to the increase in returned checks, that is likely to change.
THE UNION HAS raised the fee for check cashing from 10 cents to 25 cents. But Ferguson won against it and the union won.
The Union makes no profit on check cashing.
he said. The fee from casing checks is used to offset the losses, and pay for handling and labor.
The Union is considering putting in more automatic teller machines like the one that is already there. It encourages the use of these machines to take the burden of the Union, Ferguson said.
The Union has considered not casing checks for those people who have automatic teller cards. Ferguson said that an automatic teller machine would not give out money if there was nothing on its account, but there was nothing stopping that person from casing a check with the Union.
Ferguson said that half of all the bad checks were from Lawrence banks.
The Union is studying other possible steps designed to reduce the number of bad checks,
A STUDY OF a national check verification system is being done by the Union. But Ferguson
said the system would probably be too expensive.
The system is run through a computer terminal that would be set up in the Union. In just 30 seconds, the system could verify any check in the U.S. The problem, he said, was that the system could only check 67 cents per check. The Union would then be forced to charge 75 cents in order to cover costs.
"The people who really want to write bad checks will usually do it," Ferguson said. "It all comes down to how much of a cost we want to pass on to the student."
Another system under consideration is a local computer system. It would check whether the person was a KU student and his check casing history at the Union. If the student had previously cashed a bad check, then the check would be refused.
see CHECKS back page
Mall's feasibility questioned
By RANDY MARTIN
By RANDY MARTIN
AMANDA RALKERES
And LAURA LUCKERT
Staff Represent
Staff Reporters
Lawrence shopping center owners, who have vacancies in all but one of their shopping centers, say a downtown mall would be impossible for Lawrence to support. But the Lawrence/Douglas Community Compact will allow a major mail developer are still purchasing a $40 million downtown mall.
OF THE SEVEN shopping centers in
one, the Malls Shopping Center,
is fully accessible.
On July 17, the Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs firm will return with their proposal for a downtown mall and the city commission will choose between building a mall on the edge of Lawrence or downtown, where the project would have to be tax supported.
The controversy began one and a half years ago when Jacobs, Visconi and Jaciens, shopping mail developers from Cleveland, Ohio, bought an option on 63 acres of land on the corner of Armstrong Road and Iowa Street to build a major shopping mall. When the Lawrence City Commission zoning permits, local merchants demanded that the mail be built downtown or not at all.
But people favoring the new mall said last week that the current types of stores would buy a share in an opening.
Steve Clark of W.T. Thomas Inc., which owns the Malls Shopping Center, said that although his company had tenants, a new regional shopping center could not survive.
"We are building a regional shopping center in Arkansas similar to the proposed one for downtown." Clark said. "We had a very hard time setting renters."
CLARK SAID that until the banking community get aggressively no one is going to start a
OR LEASING
NFORMATION
-CALL-
CARL HIRD JR
863-2907 OR-
STEVEN HIRD
843-2704
CHUCK ISAACSON/Kansan staff
"Let me put it this way, if Lawrence asked our construction company to build the mail and rent warehouse, how would we do it?"
Steven Hird, manager of the Westridge Shopping Center, Sixth and Kasaloid streets, is shown in front of him when he is trying to navigate new demands and the uncertain economy. Hird said Lawrence should move down a new downtown mall to find more space.
But Garner Stoll, planner for the planning commission, said that survey results showed a large percentage of persons in Lawrence would buy department store goods.
"We have several large department store chains interested in Lawrence," Stoll said.
STOLL SAID THAT it is not desirable to
overbuild because it results in vacant stores and a bad appearance. He doubled Lawrence would
Glenie West, vice-president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said that 1,100 Chamber members had been registered.
see MALL back page
PARK SCHOOL
Larry Stemmerman, head of the Lawrence Fire Department's Arson Investigation Unit, exits the chapel charmed at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1230 Oread, yesterday afternoon after a preliminary search for clues. The fire caused an estimated $15,000 damage to the building and killed three people. A man was taken into custody of the fire is under investigation. Stemmerman is using a device to check for possible gas leaks.
Ministries chapel damaged in fire
Staff Renorter
Bv TOM GRESS
Fire gutted a small chapel at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread, Sunday afternoon, causing an estimated $15,000 damage. Seven KU students in the building's basement at the time of the fire escaped injury.
THE PASTOR OF THE Ministries, a non-denominational church operated by the Presbyterian Synods of Mid-America, is the Rev. Jack Bremer. This Easter, Bremer and the 31 hostages being held in Iran. He said he has no connections between the fire and the trip.
The cause of the fire has not been determined but the head of the Lawrence Fire Department's Arson Investigation Unit, Larry Stemmerman, spent most of yesterday afternoon and early evening sitting through a briefing on the fire at the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for tests.
"We don't have any basis for that thought," Buber said, "I don't think they can be explained."
Fire department investigators did not say that arson was the cause of the blaze, only that the fire was under investigation. Investigators then noticed two witnesses at the scene of the fire.
A ladder company and an engine company responded to the one alarm fire. Firefighters quickly extinguished the blaze but were unable to save the chapel's contents.
The contents, mostly cushions and tables were completely destroyed and valued at $5,000. Another $10,000 damage was done to the structure.
THE INSIDE of the chapel was completely charred. Ironically, the only item left standing was a communion table with a candle on the candle appeared unharmed by the blaze.
Services were held in the building's large chapel yesterday morning. Bremer told investigators he worked in his office after the service, until 11 a.m.
Before leaving, Bremer checked all of the doors, including the door to the small church.
Bremer credited a smoke alarm with giving the residents an early warning.
"We had an integrated smoke alarm system installed a short while ago and did what it was supposed to do," he said. "It was so much easier than doing that. The building can always be shut down."
"I can't believe this happened," he told investigators.
Weather
COLD BACTERIAL BURNING
Today's forecast calls for clear skies with high temperatures in the upper 90s. Skies will be mostly clear with variable winds from the south at 10-20 mph. The overnight low temperature will be in the low to mid 60s with a 20 percent chance of
Skies again will be clear tomorrow with the high temperature expected to be between 99 and 55. There is a slight chance of thundershowers tomorrow night with lows expected to be in the 70s. Temperatures will continue to be in the 90s on Wednesday with a slight chance of thundershowers.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 23, 1980
Daily Kansan Capsules
Seizure condemned by allies
From the Kansan's Wire Services
VENICE, Italy - Without mentioning Iran by name, the heads of state at the seven-nation summit will be seriously condensed the seizure of Iran's internationally important oil refinery.
Summit sources said the United States didn't press its allies—Britain, France, West Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan—for specific language on Iran in the declaration, despite the 53 American hostages held in Tehran since Nov. 4.
The leaders of the seven industrialized nations also declared that the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan is "unacceptable." President Carter said the United States wouldn't attend the Moscow Olympics even if the Soviets pulled their troops out.
The president said the Soviet's announcement of intended troop withdrawals was probably aimed at increasing participation in the Moscow Ops. The U.S. military said it had no plans to join the
In a joint statement, the seven leaders 'reaffirmed' . . . that the Soviet military occupation of Afghanistan is unacceptable now and that we are deterring them.
Son of Indira Gandhi killed
NEW DEHLI. India - Sanjay Gandhi, 33-year-old the politically powerful son
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and granddaughter of the late Jawaharlal Nehru,
Joint Secretary of State for Information.
The United News of India said Sanjay was at the controls of the plane caught fire shortly after takeoff and crashed into a block of municipal apartments in New Delhi.
Sanjay, who has been taking private flying lessons, took off from a local airport for what was to have been a one-hour flight in a Pushak, a bus.
The plane crashed barely two-thirds of a mile from the airport and from the prime minister's residence where his mother lives.
Mrs. Gandhi arrived at the scene of the crash before her son was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead, UNI said.
The mention of Sanjay's name stirred deep emotion among Indians. They ranged from deep dislike to blind adoration.
Even as he stood trial in a number of criminal cases, including one of assault and battery of a police official, he was considered by some political commentators to be India's second most powerful political figure after Mrs. Gandhi herself.
Sanjay's influence in national politics surfaced during the 1975-77 state of emergency proclaimed by Mrs. Gandhi, giving her and other officials extraordinary powers. Although he did not hold an official post at the time, he "woulded enormous power."
GOP office yields no 'bugs'
WASHINGTON—Police technicians, who scanned the office of the Republican Party's co-chairman with surveillance detection gear yesterday said they discovered no evidence of an electronic bug. But they did not rule out the possibility that a listening device once may have been in place.
District of Columbia Police entered the increasingly bizarre case, involving the office of Republican National Committee co-chairman Mary Crisp, early yesterday. GOP officials conducting their own scan discovered evidence suggesting that officers, soficially, already had been in the office and handed some of the evidence.
"Our scan of the office and examination of the main telephone wires dislost no type of electronic surveillance whatsoever," said a police officer.
He said police technicians checked two wires which had been believed to be part of a bug. They found them to be "unspl融ed wires from an instrument."
The spokesman said, however, that the probe didn't conclusively eliminate the possibility that a bug might have been in place last Wednesday when the expert hired by Crisp surveyed the office with his own gear and opened the purpose of a listening device.
Begin moves to east sector
JERUSALEM -Prime Minister Menachem Begin will move his office to Jerusalem, Israeli officials said yesterday. The move is expected in April.
The future of East Jerusalem, captured from Jordan in the 1967 Sikh War, is a sensitive issue in the Palestinian autonomy talks over the Israeli-controlled West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip. About 100,000 Arabic inhabitants in the eastern sector of the city, which is holy to both Moslem and Jews.
The move appears almed at defacto recognition of what Israel calls the unification of the formerly divided city, but the officials said they did not evidence it.
"If this information is true, this a self-inflicted, unnecessary complication," said one Western ambassador when asked to comment.
The diplomat said the move could affect future visits by foreign heads of state.
"It can have repercussions on their willingness to come here at all if they know they have to meet the prime minister there." he said.
Foreign diplomats in Israel do not make official visits to Arab East Jerusalem for fear of implying recognition of the Israeli annexation. Israel and the United States have agreed on a plan.
The prime minister's present office is in a group of government buildings in West Jerusalem near the Knesset, Israel's Parliament.
Draft registration probable
WASHINGTON—President Obama is expected to get Congress' final approval this week to renew pacement draft registration late next month or
The House is scheduled to complete action Tuesday on a bill granting Carter's request for $13.3 million to register all 19- and 20-year-old men at patrol
Selective Service Director Bernard Rostker has said Carter will set the specific date for renewing registration but that it should begin in about five weeks.
Carter's registration plan would require all men born in 1961 to fill out forms at local post offices one week and all men born in 1990 to register the men.
The maximum penalty for failing to register is five years in jail and a $10,000 fine.
The Senate has approved the registration bill and House approval of a minor Senate amendment will send the bill to Carter.
Carter asked for authority to register women as well as men but Congress rejected the request.
Newsmen fight Byrne's ban
CHICAGO—Journalists and civil libertarians closed ranks yesterday to resist Mayor Jane Byrne's eviction of the Chicago Tribune from the City Hall press room for printing what she called "lies" and "character assassinations."
James Hoge, publisher of the Chicago Sun-Times, called the action "indefensible," and the American Civil Liberties Union said it clearly violated the First Amendment. The Tribune said it would continue to publish news without getting City Hall approval.
An angry Mary. Byrne Saturday night ordered the Tribune to remove its desk from the press room. Her press secretary and husband, Jay McMullen, said city officials would be ordered not to talk to the newspaper's reporters because of their record records. Tribune reporters would not be barred from City Hall, he said.
The announcement came after the newspaper published in its Sunday editions parts of a previously suppressed report on city government. The mayor had opposed release of the 600-page document, which was prepared prior to her request to ease the transition when Mayor Michael Bilandic left office.
The report criticized the performance of several city departments and suggested that several city officials be fired.
MILITARY CENTRE
MONDAY. JUNE 23
The Museum of Natural History will hold six workshops for children, including "Fossils," "Mammals," "Facts and Fairy Tales" and "Astronomy." They will be offered daily through June 27. For reservations and information, call
The SUA Monday night movie will be
"Sunset Boulevard." Showtime is 7
p.m. and tickets are $1.
Faces," by Elizabeth Broun, curator of prints and drawings. The topic is painted and sculpted faces.
The Spencer Museum of Art Gallery will hold a lecture on "Exploring
Daily Kansan On Campus
SUMMER CONCERT
Erie Hills, opera soprano star, will perform in concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall as part of the Summer Concert Series.
TUESDAY, JUNE 24
Orientation will be held all day for entering freshmen and transfer students in the Kansas Union and Wescoe Hall.
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 25
Registration for the KU Piano Institute is at 8 a.m. in Murphy Hall lounge. The session runs through July 1.
A piano recital will be performed by Jack Winerock at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
WOMEN'S LECTURE
Nona Glazer, of Portland State University, will speak in the Women's Public Lives Lecture Series at 10:30 a.m. in spencer p. in Spencer Library Auditorium.
Restaurants wary of freeloaders
"It happens now and then on the graveyard shift and we press charges even if it's only a nickel," she said.
The SUA Wednesday night movie will be "Charles-Dead or Alive." Showtime is 7 a.m. and tickets are $1
The KU Sailing Club will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas University parlor.
By SHELLY COKER Staff Reporter
However, if a person has no money and is willing to pay at a later date, Sambo's the patron's drivers for the car. You can for the patron to pay at a later date.
"We have a manager on the floor at all times," she said, "I think that prevents a lot of problems."
The manager of Country Kitchen, 1503 W. 3rd St., summed up the situation by saying dining and dashing, "is more of a prank than anything."
For the manager at J.B.'s Big Boy restaurant dining and dashing is not a problem.
A local restaurant loses nearly $100 a day on weekends because of people who dine and dash.
"We lose a high volume of sales from the patrons who don't pay," said the manager of Perkins Restaurant, W. 23rd St.
These dine-and-dash patrons neglect to pay the regular price of a meal and sneak out without paying the check.
The manager of Sambo's Restaurant, 1511 W. 23rd St., said dining and dashing was not an everyday occurrence, but agreed it was a problem.
Perkins keeps track of all prepared meals by using a documentor in the computerized cash register. The computer shows an accurate reading of all the meals and prices as well as the total cash amount rang up by the end of the month.
Restaurant managers say they curtail dining and dashing by prosecuting people who refuse to pay.
Three KU students are still paying the consequences for their unsuccessful attempt to dine and dash last spring.
The three are now working 20 hours each for the city of Lawrence as punishment for being charged with theft at $100, a misdemeanor for theft under $100.
The restaurant will drop charges after a six month probation period if the students stay out of trouble and have no further charges against them.
After the restaurant pressed charges, the students were handcuffed by police, finger printed, photographed, placed on $500 bond, and then put on probation for six months, proving there is a real price to pay for not paying the price.
Who is that KEG-MAN?
Daily Kansan Police beat
Police said an officer heard noise in the 800 block of Louisiana Street and discovered Michael Stupica, 23, and Steven Mikksi, 22, on the front porch of their home at 828 Louisiana attempt to break open the meters.
Two Lawrence men will have their first hearing Wednesday on charges of grand larceny in an incident involving the theft of seven city parking meters worth $1,800 and $4 worth of change.
Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-W. Films are $1.50 and start at 7:00. Frists are $1.50 and also start at 7:00. Frim 5th Level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
An acclaimed science-fiction allegory from France, a particularly beautiful example of animation. "Rich in imagination ... different worlds," she said. "I never seen it, and I think that you'll think about it for a long time after you've seen it." "Gene Shalit. Plus: 'Imprint,' (1972/7/21)."
Health plans will cost less
Fri. June 27 FANTASTIC PLANET
The new company, Lone Star Life Insurance Co., Carrollton, Texas, submitted the lowest bid to the Student Senate last spring.
Students will save $70 a year on individual health insurance policies because of a change in the company providing the service.
The idea behind the contract is to get lower rates for students, he said.
A witty fable about a businessman who goes more than a little crazy, a girl born in the 1920s, JONAH WILL BE 25 IN THE YEAR 2000. Often compared to LOVE OF HEARTS, usually tattooed with "Last Word." (1989 93/12 inch)
Individual policies will cost $207 annually. Student-spouse policies will be $162.60 annually, and family policies will be $134.50 annually. Savings over Blue Cross and Blue Shield
The Student Health Services Advisory Board contacted 13 agents and two companies requesting bids, Dong et al., to complete an representative for Lone Star Life, said Friday.
Davis said the contract with Lone Star Life does not mean a student has to get his health insurance from the company.
By ERNIE DAVE Staff Reporter
A comparison of the companies' brochures showed that the benefits were identical.
SUA FILMS
Blue Cross and Blue Shield has covered students in the past because it was the only company to submit a bid, body vice-president, said yesterday.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield was the only other company to submit a bid.
Any full-time student is eligible for coverage.
Billy's Wilder blit black comedy about a young screenwriter (William Holden) who serves as diggle to a girlfriend (Gloire Swanson). Even stranger, its largely true, and largely brilliant. Billy's Wilder and Busk Keaton. (1950 110 mm.)
Mon. June 23
SUNSET BOULEVARD
Goracle said a letter would be sent to every student by mid-July informing them of the change and explaining the policy.
Wed. June 25
CHARLES—
DEAD OR ALIVE
Students can apply for coverage either by returning the application accompanying the letter, or they can sign up during regular enrollment.
Lone Star Life is a new company in this part of the country, but has handled health insurance for several large universities in the South, Goracle said.
Vista RESTAURANTS Great Food * Great Service * Vista and you! for the Fun!
Vista RESTAURANTS
Great Food • Great Service • Vista and you!
for the Fun!
VISTA'S SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY
Anniversary
Three Day Price
Roll Back
June
22, 23
& 24
SPECIALS
Your Favorite Sandwich *
only 75¢
In a dinner
only 1⁰ more
*Vistaburger, Pork Fritter, Hot Cham, Fish
TEN CENT CONES
Regular 30C size
(Limit 5)
Vista RESTAURANTS
Great Food • Great Service • Vista and you!
1527 West 6th
842-4311
SPECIALS NOT VALID IN COMBINATION WITH ANY OTHER OFFER
for the Fun!
Visa
Vista RESTAURANTS
Great Food • Great Service • Vista and you!
for the Fun!
D
MIDDLE SCHOOL CAFE
SPECIALS
Your Favorite Sandwich * only 75¢
in a dinner only 100 more
* Vistaburger, Pork Fritter, Hot C Ham, Fish
TEN CENT CONES
Regular 30C size
ILimit $1
Vista RESTAURANTS
Great Food • Great Service • Vista and you!
1527 West 6th
842-4311
SPECIALS NOT VALID IN COMBINATION WITH ANY OTHER OFFER
Frozen
Mild C Marin
Pork Foister
Vintageburger
for the Fun!
University Daily Kansan, June 23, 1980
Supreme Court ruling opens doors to microbe research
By PAUL CARMAN
Staff Renorter
A partial solution to the energy shortage, a possible cancer reduction and genetic engineering compete in genetic engineering were all encouraged by last week's Supreme Court decision on the General Electric氨氮 according to KU professors.
The Supreme Court voted 5-4 that General Electric could patent a microorganism it developed to eat oil slicks.
The decision could also be applied to microorganisms which are being used to produce insulin and interferon, a possible cancer reducing agent.
Henry Stone, professor of microbiology, said, "The technology would have continued to develop even if the Supreme Court had ruled against it. Now some of the smaller companies are more likely to invest in research.
"I think the Supreme Court decision will increase the rate at which the benefits of the research will reach mankind."
Presently, insulin for diabetics must be taken from a pig's pancreas and refined until it is relatively pure.
RESEARCH IS NOW underway to find microorganisms that secrete insulin. Stone said.
"This would ensure a uniform preparation of insulin, and a cheaper one," he said. "In other words, we have a have a cheaper and a better product."
The significance of the microorganism to create insulin may eventually be dwarfed when compared with the potential for cheap production of another chemical produced within the body, interferon.
Interferon is the chemical white blood cells produce when they are attacked by a viral infection.
STONE SAID that all the interferon now comes from Sweden, where it is produced using white blood cells.
He said that in the experiments using interferon, it was found to be effective not only against hepatitis and other viral diseases, but also against cancer.
"In one test, 60 percent of all cancer and tumor patients had substantial remissions when injected with interferon." Stone said.
The American Cancer Society reported success in using interferon for the treatment of cancer.
In a study conducted by the society, 21 of 38 cancer patients had remissions after being given interferon.
COST IS NOW the barrier for mass distribution of interferon Stone said. But that may be solved by more genetic engineering research.
"It is just too costly to make interferon any other way," he said.
According to the E.F. Hutton Biochemistry Report, a full interferon treatment now costs $30,000-$50,000 per patient.
"It is estimated that a DNA culture method for interferon could bring the cost down to perhaps $2 per dose from $2.00 per dose," the report said.
The possible profits from being able to produce interferon are also great.
Stone said, "It has been estimated that if you had interferon in hand it would bring you at least $6 million a year."
There is also a possibility that genetic engineering could be applied to the fuel crisis.
THE HUTTON REPORT said, "DNA techniques may soon create more efficient enzymes that would make corn a material than natural gas or oil.
"The Department of Energy has indicated that with certain government incentives, ethanol fuel production could be increased from about 60 million gallons a year currently to 500 million gallons to 400 million gallons by 1985."
The benefits of genetic engineering are many, but there are also dangers. Richard Cole, professor of Philosophy who calls himself a philosopher of science said, "The potential evil and the special benefits are both mind bongling."
Stone said that an old fear, that of accidental release of dangerous microorganisms, is now unlikely.
"The bacteria which are now used can't survive outside the laboratory," he said.
Cole agreed, but said the greatest danger was not an accident.
"The greatest potential evil is the intentional production of virulent microorganisms for biological warfare," he said.
A LOCAL PASTOR, Jimmy Cobb of the First Southern Baptist Church, agreed with Cole on the potential for danger.
"The tung that disturbs me is the manipulation factor, but I'm not going
Belt found guilty
A 28-year-old former Lawrence police officer was found guilty of arson Friday in the Dec. 2, 1979 blaze that caused three firefighters to be injured in private party room at 204, W. Eighth St., Wichita.
The former policeman, Scott Belt, said he would seek an appeal of the verdict. He remains at liberty on his own recognition until the new trial.
Arson, a Class C felony, carries a 5-to 20-year penalty.
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10 say it's all wrong." Cobb said. "This situation puzzles me, frightens me and challenges me."
Bicycle
Although the Supreme Court decision was by only one vote, there was little disagreement in the KU community with the result.
Stone said, "The Supreme Court could have come to no other conclusion. You can patient roses and seed corn. To say that you can't patent bacteria would be to make a legal distinction between life forms."
"It's not so much the creation of life but a modification. The precedent had already been set with hybrid corn and wheat, and the techniques to produce new species."
Cole said, "This was a mere extension of what has always been done in breeding.
COBB SAID, "I don't really see an ethical dilemma at this point, this is a legal question."
The information came to police after a witness talked to a friend who works as a clerk in the police department. The witness had been arrested and docked by Dockery's Liquor, 1014 Massachusetts St. when it was robbed.
Lawrence police knew for weeks that two liquor store robberies occurred in the city on June 5, but only last day did they learn of a third.
Only minutes before the robbery at Dockey's, the Clark Gas Station, 511 W. Ninth St. was robbed of $150 and Burn's Lugar, 1918 W. 24th St. of $70. All three robberies took place between 10 and 11 p.m.
According to police, the robbery at Dockery's was never reported.
Liquor robbery unreported
Wayne Schmille, a detective investigating the robberies, said last week that he had only heard about the robbery in the last couple of days.
"I'm on another case right now,"
By KIRK TINDALL
SCHILLE SAID he did not know why Dockery failed to report the robbery. He said, though, that he was wrong. Dockery had heart trouble.
Witnesses, who did not want to be named, said Dockery was given a description of the getaway car and other witnesses could identify the
Staff Reporter
One witness gave Dockery a partial license plate number.
he said, and I haven't really be able to check into the Dockery thing."
"He was really upset," the witness said. "I gave him the license number. He picked up the phone, started to dial and I left."
Schmille said "If we had gotten the report when it happened, we could have gotten those turkeys."
ACCOUNTS FROM ALL three robberies described the same man, but only witnesses at Dockery's saw a car, a driver or a license plate.
a clerk at Burn's said the store had been robbed before, but the
"All I saw was a black man with a short barrelled 38." he said.
suspects had been arrested. With the information available to police at Dockery's, the robber might have been apprehended, the clerk said.
Mark Brothers, who heads the police department's Crime Prevention Unit, said if a robber was successful, "it's only a matter of common sense that he will try it again."
"A person who uses a gun to commit a crime has to be psychologically prepared to use it. He'd better be," he said.
Cobb found guilty of murder, plans appeal
3v MARK PITTMAN
Nohe contended that Judge E. Newton Vickers' instructions to the
Kansas has no saturates that require citizens to report crimes even if they are felonies, a spokesman for the state attorney's office said. Thursday,
Staff Reporter
The public defender for Cobb, Camille Noh, he called the verdict "the worst case of manifest injustice I've ever seen." Noh said Saturday the Cobb case would be appealed to the Kansas Supreme Court.
TOPEKA - Kathleen Cobb, 23,
Topeka, was found guilty Friday in
Shawnee District Court of first-degree
murder in the Feb. 27 death of 22-year-old
Henry Davis. The jury deliberated
two hours.
Cobb is the daughter of Robert Cobb,
dean of the College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, who will take over as
executive vice chancellor July 1.
POLICE OFFICIALS SAID there were many reasons why people did not report crimes. Fear of retaliation is one, not wanting to get involved can also make a witness or victim reluctant to report a crime.
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"It couldn't be voluntary man-slaughter," Fokamy said, because the lawyer discussed for two weeks. "It couldn't be second-degree because it was premeditated. The jury followed the law, determined the facts and
Sally Pokery; assistant Shawnee County district attorney, said Saturday that the jury had no other choice than a verdict of first-degree murder.
The penalty for first-degree murder with a firearm in Kansas is a mandatory life sentence with no possibility of parole.
The defense said that on Feb. 27 Cobb and her roommate, Ramona Moon, 27, drove to Lawrence to try to talk Davis
jury should have included the option of finding Cobb guilty of assisting a suicide.
slaughter, second-degree murder or first-degree murder.
The defense said that Davis asked Cobb to inject him with the drug and not to leave him until he was dead. If the overdose attempt was unsuccessful, she was to shoot him with a 22 caliber pistol Davis had with him.
Davis went into convulsions. The defense maintained that Cobb could not tell whether Davis was dead. Cobb then shot the pistol and shot Davis in the head.
THE JURY WAS given three options by Vickers: to decide if Cobb was guilty or not guilty of voluntary man-
Cobb and Davis then went to a rural area southwest of Topka, according to the defense, where Cobb pushed the plungers of two syringes, each loaded with a gram of cocaine, into Davis' veins.
NOHE'S ARGUMENT throughout the three-day trial was that Davis requested help in taking his own life by an overdose of cocaine.
out of attempting suicide. The two women and Davis drove back to Topeka where they left Moon at her apartment.
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan, June 23, 1980
Opinion
The right man
Del Shankel has a new lease on life.
A week from tomorrow he was scheduled to step out of the hot seat of the executive vice chancellorship and return to a less position as professor and researcher.
Now he's next in line to assume, on a temporary basis, the highest administrative post at the University of Kansas. The Kansas Board of Regents Shankel Thursday to act as chancellor until a permanent one is appointed.
Characteristically, the job of acting chancellor has not been an easy one. Only three men in the history of the University have served in that capacity. W.C. Spangler held KU's reins after the Francis Snow administration ended in 1900.
John H. Nelson took the post for a boy, two months in 1851, then Raymond Nichols presided over the University after the death of Laurence Chalmers Jr. in the early 1870s.
The search for a permanent chancellor probably will take a year. During that time
the university must continue to improve, but the growth should be subtle.
The University is at several crossroads in its development. The pursuit of academic excellence has declined. Bigtime athletics have encouraged foul recruitment practices. Concessions are being made to state legislators to gain money for programs that may benefit part rather than the whole of the University. Academic freedoms cannot interfere with the University's public image.
But for Shanklet to suggest fundamental changes would be an invitation to dissent and turnover. Within the existing environment of the University, revitalizing the University and that only.
There is plenty of room for experimentation in curricula, courses, methods and ideas. Acting chancellors must provide balance—that is, neither understressing nor overstressing certain issues. Moderation insures the University's stability, and places an acting chancellor in a self-efacing position.
Fortunately Shankel is the right man for the job. His reputation and record stress compassion. He sympathizes with those who seek his counsel, but he acts decisively after careful consideration of the facts at hand.
In fact there are those whose only objection to his appointment is that it cannot be permanent.
Registry an omen
All available signs indicate that registration for the military draft will be revived by the end of this summer. After a five year slumber, registration has again returned to trouble the consciousness of the youth of the United States.
The Senate voted two weeks ago to spend $13.3 million to begin registration of 19- and 29-year-old men. The Senate legislation has already been passed by the House, but the measure must again come up for House House of an amendment added by the Senate.
House approval and the signature of President Jimmy Carter are the only steps that block the legislation's passage into law.
If the registration plan passes both steps, it will be only a matter of weeks, or perhaps days, until about 4 million young men fill out registration forms in post offices throughout the nation. Registrants will list their names, addresses, dates of birth, telephone numbers and social security numbers on the forms, which will then be sent to the Selective Service System.
Supporters of the plan to revitalize registration claim that the move is a prudent one. Supporters claim that registration is necessary to insure a swift mustering of troops if the United States should suddenly become involved in war. The all-volunteer army's failure to attract volunteers is but another reason why registration is needed the proponents claim.
Critics of registration warn that the lessons of America's long and bitter struggle in Vietnam have been lost upon today's leaders. The God-given right to
refrain from waging war and other civil liberties are violated by draft registration, the onponents claim.
Another large group is critical of registration because women are excluded from registering under the current plan.
The American Civil Liberties Union claims that any registration program that does not include women is unqualified. The ACLU has said that it will file suit.
Registration is not harmful at face value. The registration form is simply another form of governmental red tape, similar to identity numbers or other identifying cards.
But resistance to registration can be easily understood when one remembers that the United States has always offered boundless room for individual freedoms. Registration for a possible draft obviously restricts some of these freedoms, and naturally, criticism results. There are times in all democracies, however, when certain individual freedoms must be sacrificed for the common good. An aggressive and unprovoked attack upon the U.S. would be one of those instances.
But one result of registration that cannot be overlooked is that a move to register men for the draft moves the U.S. one step closer to war. Seldom in the history of there been draft registration without an actual war, and, eventually, an actual draft.
As the events in Iran and Afghanistan unfold this summer, and as the U.S. has been embroiled with the Iraq seems as if the nation is edging nearer and nearer to global war. Let us hope not.
Letters to the editor...
Old Green misnamed
To the Editor:
Amid the often positive and occasionally negative judgments of the administration of Archie R. Dykes, there is one event which has made a large mark on the lore of the University. This is the decision of the administration to rename Green Hall after an obscure 20th century chancellor
This might not seem very relevant to old Green Hall until one realizes that Kate's father, Judge Nelson Timothy Stephens, was the individual responsible for the establishment of a school of law at the University of Kansas.
Students and faculty might be interested to know that this Joshua Lippincott was responsible for one of the most outrageous displays of sexist discrimination that this university has. Professor Lippincott persuaded the Board of Regents in a closed-door meeting to dismiss the professor of Greek, Kate Stephens. Lippincott cited subordination as the cause of dismissal, but no talks were to cover the fact that he was a member of a woman in the University's Greek chair.
Long before the term "sexism" became popular, Kate was writing about the evils of "sexualism" in society. For us at KU, the most important single face that Kate's life is portraying is her role as a student at the University, she was one of the most active supporters in the history of the Alumni Association. This University has had few friends as loyal to Kate, yet the naming of Old Green after the man who fired her for being a woman seems a rather callous flow to her memorial.
If Kate were alive today, she would certainly be fighting to have this building named
Although the naming of a building may seem insignificant in light of the many issues facing our school, it would be an honorable task to finalize the story in the book Kate Stenhens.
after her father. This seems appropriate, and I would suggest this as a worldwide project to any of the several women's groups on campus. Kate was the first feminist at KU, and I dressey the most outspoken of any of the University's feminists, then or now.
David Ramsey Wilson Lawrence Graduate Student
Protesters disruptive
Banner-wavers at Commencement reflected favorably on the university? Yeah, sure, and the 1986 Democratic Convention favored a gun ban. The Police Department's crowd control methods
regarding Kanye Kase's column in *summer Kansan*, what could she be thinking of?
To the Editor:
Kathy, how would you like to have banner-waving radicals at your wedding? Come to the organ. Take a look at the organ. Put Tim Miller (lecturer in religious design) on the stage, and it will be amazing.
As much as anyone else, I respect the right of citizens of this country to protest against things they do not like or want. However, calling the Commencement protestors 'rambunction students' is like calling Billy the Kid an unruly boy.
Bill Menezes Overland Park Senior
4
It is just a bit of an understatement.
But you guys just graduated from high school...
I'm sure you can find a job-
Here, read these want ads...
Yeah, well, we sorta never really got into reading, y'know...
Gay Services deserves funds
It's taken 10 years, but the Gay Services of
Kansas finally eligible to receive Student
Senate funding.
Since 1970, GSOK has battled the University of Kansas to be recognized as a student organization eligible for funding. But the University denied GSOK recognition because the group, according to the University, supported homosexuality, a personal proclivity.
GSOK, known in the early seventies as Lawrence Gay Liberation, responded to the denial with a series of court cases. They got as far as in 2014 and 2015 when the judge Colo., which sided with the University in denying GSOK recognition. That decision was appealed to the United States Supreme Court, but the court refused to hear the case. And since that time, the case has been denied for recognition and has repeatedly been denied.
GSOK'S MOST RECENT application for recognition was made to the University this past fall and, predictably, the University denied recognition. The denial was appealed to Caryl Smith, dean of student life, with GSOK planning to take刀 to court if the appeal was denied. But the university did not be appointed or denied the University changed its policy for registering and recognizing clubs.
Previously, the University required that all campus organizations had to register with the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. If an organization wanted to be eligible for Senate
funding, it had to apply for recognition. But any group that the University felt supported political stances religious viewpoints or personal pro-
test views was not given access, and subsequently, access to Senate funding.
But now the funding eligibility process has changed. Groups will no longer have to be recognized by the University because the University is dropping the recognition policy, as well as the clause that forbids "particular, personal and university private activities, habits or proclivities."
Columnist Kathy Kase
IT IS SIGNIFICANT that the personal proclivities clause has been dropped because it was the only barrier to GSOK's recognition. And GSOK is the only group to have been barred from funding by that clause, according to GSOK members.
The clause's biggest problem was its vagueness. Although it forbade the support of personal habits, it did not specify which personal' s were to be permissible and which were not.
Obviously, the University had to make the value judgement that the personal proclivity of homosexuality was bad. And who is the University to judge bad personal habits from good?
sonated proclivity was. It also did not specify what constituted support of such a proclivity.
The clause was not only unclear in what a per-
IN A STRICT SENSE, GSKO supports homosexuality. GSKO will support those who have chosen homosexuality as their sexual preference. The organization does not, however, support any type of sexual preference or practice to the exclusion of any other.
Despite the fact that GSOK's "support" of homosexuality is conditional, it was still enough to deny them access to funding. And that's too much. Because GSOK is a group worthy of funding by Senate.
GSOK, a service and social organization for gays and straights alike, serves to educate the public about homosexuality. In a community, as well as a nation, where 10 percent of the population is estimated by researchers to be homosexual, education on homosexuality is needed.
Furthermore, GSOK is the only service organization on campus and in Lawrence that deals solely with homosexuality. It would be difficult to replace the services this organization offers. Therefore, the university community should support GSOK monetarily.
Hooray.
NOW STUDENTS WILL have that chance.
It's overdue, but it's a welcome change for perhaps it signifies a new era of freedom at KU, freedom of sexual expression. At the very least, it signifies that no organization will again have to wait 10 years to be eligible for funding just because it supported a "personal proactivity."
Bureaucracy steps on the little guy
Have you ever noticed how the government is always looking out for you? Take the Transparent website to see.
Last week, Wilford Sorrell, my best friend,
stopped his 20-foot Ford car, the Infarto, to
drive home.
JUST AS WILFORD knelt down to check the rear left tire, the van's transmission slipped into reverse and ran over his foot. All 20 feet and 2,500 pounds of van—including a half-foot of water—flattened Wilford's toes, much to his distress. At last the truck rolled on, but imagine Wilford's front wheel lifted off the ground as parked bicycles and smash into the glass window of a pearly car dealer's showroom.
Wilford was relieved to see that the showroom belonged to a Ford dealer. He marched—somewhat lamely—into the dealer's office. After
Columnist
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Wilford shouted something unprintable and limped out of the office.
The dealer shouted after him, "Whatever you do, don't buy one of those imports. be patriotic."
An outraged Wilford called the Transportation Department from a hospital pay phone. After hearing the story, a tired government voice told him that but a single incident in a very complex case.
"No dice," said the dealer. "It's your fault for not securing the shift lever. Our cars are as safe as any other maker's. You could just as easily have been run over by a faulty Chevy."
J.V. Smith Jr.
an explanation of the problem, he demanded
that the injured foot and water
damage to the interfoot's nerve be
problem for over three years. Trust me, we're about to make a decision. We first must give Ford the chance to prove its innocence. Justice, you know."
"Listen, yours is the twenty-three thousand, four hundred seventy-seventh complaint," the court declared.
Wilford indignantly told the dealer, "Well, I wasn't run over by a Chevro, it was a Ford. If you don't settle with me properly, I'm going to report you to the Transportation Department."
WHICH BRINGS ME to the government.
WILFORD HOPES the decision is soon forthcoming and he has some doubts about Justice. He's now in jail because of complaints by 17 irate bicycle owners and one derisive Ford dealer who's demanding payment for the plate glass. Wilford, the hardhead, won't pay up.
Poor Wilford. He'll never be able to get a job in government looking out for people. He can't understand why the government more than three years to discovers what he had learned in less than three seconds.
"knock yourself out," said the car dealer, stifling a wawn. "We are not I need you." A neighbor said, "Can I
He thinks he has a better idea.
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2018
The University Daily KANSAN
(USPS 609-649) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 86454. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daisan Kalfi, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas University of Kansas Unissigned editors represent the opinion of the Kanaan editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers.
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The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor and guest opinions that present different points about topics of concern. The must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. The Kansan reserves the right to change columns. Letters must be signed and must include the writer's address and phone number. If the writer is affiliated with the university, you should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position.
University Daily Kansan, June 23, 1980
Nancy Dykes is both adviser and wife
By DAVID STIPF
By DAVID STII
Staff Reporter
Before Chancellor Archie R. Dykes decided to leave the University of Kansas, he sought an opinion about his move from one of the University's most highly regarded public relations experts, his wife.
Nancy Dykes, whose work with the University has closely paralleled the chancellor's during the past seven years, said in a recent interview, "I never wanted to make it happen. He would never have made the move without discussing it with me.
"I advised him it was the right decision—sometimes opportunities come up and you don't know if you'll win them again, so you have to take them."
This advice probably played a large part in the chancellor's decision to resign because it was given by one of his most indispensable aides.
As chancellor's wife, she has shared many of the social obligations required of the chancellor-planning and acting responsibilities and parties—as well as the chancellor's long hours, which start at 6 a.m. and end at 11 p.m. seven days a week.
Slightly out of breath from carrying in grocery early Saturday morning just before the interview, she said, "Sorry I'm late. Sometimes, I can't find time to go shopping later in the day.
"I do all the things a homemaker does. And I do all the planning for social events, including purchasing food, sending out invitations and hiring extra
MRS. DYKE'S attention to the details of social planning has given her a reputation as a consumate hostess. Carol Shankel, program coordinator at the University of Utah, has worked at Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said. "She's concerned about every detail of a dinner or luncheon, from the recipes and menu right down the chain."
"She has been a great asset to Chancellor Dykes. She's been very dedicated to her role and has worked very hard."
But dedication and attention to detail are only prerequisites for her work as one of the primary molders of KU's public image. More important are her gifts of tact, warmth and humor. And there is another, less obvious quality, suggested by her light southern accent and elegant clothing. Her character will be characterized as unaffected gentility.
HER APLOMB and diplomacy,
tested and proven in the world of social
engagements, have also served her well
in some of the more spontaneous events
connected with her life in the chancellor's residence.
"Once, soon after we came to KU, a shirless young man came to the front door with a package under his arm," she said.
"I answered the bell and he said, 'I've got a bomb here that will blow up the whole campus, the whole county, the whole state.' He went on and on like that and I was pretty frightened until campus security came."
the KEGGER
Looking back on the incident, Mrs. Dykes expressed concern for the man's mental health and said, "He was just a misguided individual."
DESPITE SUCH incidents, most of
Mrs. Dykes life at KU has been one of constant activity, handling the chancellor's social engagements. Although she is a teacher for many years to spend on her hobbies of tennis
PENNINGTON
and golf, she has found time to do volunteer work at the KU Medical Center and Watson Library. She also has served on the Lawrence Savings Association board and the endowment board of Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Additionally, she's found time to be a mother for her two sons, John, 25, and Tom, 22.
"It's been hard to spend time with our sons," she said, "but they never expressed any resentment.
"Archie's been in administration so long that they started out not getting to spend as much time with us as some children do with their parents, so they never felt that something was taken away."
TOM, WHO WILL ENTER KU's medical school in the fall, and John, who lives and works in Lawrence, are still deciding to see the Dykes have decided to stay in Kansas.
CHUCK ISAACSON/Kansan staff
Nancv Dvkes
"We like the people here and both our children are here," she said. "Our older son just love a girl from Kansas.
"I think Kansas is pretty unique in the Midwest. It has been on the forefront of a lot of social issues and has been more liberal about a lot of things than other midwestern states—passing Rights Amendment for example."
ONE OF HER job possibilities after leaving KU is elementary school teaching. Mrs. Dykes, who has a degree in elementary education, taught kindergarten, first and second grades for chancellor Nancy Willems' wife precluded teaching.
"I missed the first year after I quit, but I've been so involved in a different sort of way that I haven't felt that I missed anything," she said.
"I don't know about teaching again when I leave KU. I have to take classes to renew my teaching certificate. To have renewed my certificate while I've been at KU would be ideal, but I didn't have the time.
"But who knows? Maybe I'll be batting back and forth between Lawrence and Topeka to go to school after all."
Headquarters offers friendly ear
By SHAWN McKAY
Staff Reporter
It was 8 p.m. when the telephone rang. A crying female voice, on the verge of hyterics, began explaining her problem.
It was not the first call of its kind to Headquarters that night and it was not the last.
Thirty-five minutes later the crisis was over. She had stopped crying and felt calm enough to hang-up the phone and continue life on her own.
Headquarters, a personal crisis and short-term counseling center at 1602 Massachusetts St., received more than 12,000 calls last year.
SOME OF THE Calls were from people on the brink of suicide. Some were from people on the verge of divorce or running away from home. Others, like the woman who called in, were simply in need of a friendly voice.
"We serve as a listening ear to anyone who needs it," Marcia Epstein, director of Headquarters, said last week. "We don't feel like we have a lot of problems to solve their problems. We're just here to help them sit through them."
"The only staff then was just the people who lived there and a few of their friends." Epstein said. "Today, we have 50 to 70 staff members who keep the center open 24 hours a day, 363 days a year."
Headquarters began in 1969 when three KU students opened a 24-hour drop-in center for students with drug problems.
HEADQUARTERS TAKES applications for new volunteers in May, August and January. Staff members receive 45 hours of training, suicides, drug abuse and sexual problems before they take their first call.
"Our people are drawn here for a
wide variety of reasons. Some are here because they seek personal growth and others to gain practical knowledge in their field of study." Frosten said.
Larry Carter, Lawrence graduate student, said he volunteered because he thought people should be involved in something larger than them-
"You should discover what you do well and then do it," he said. "I've gotten a lot of life and I feel that I owe something in return."
Carter, who has worked at Headquarters for more than a year, said that people called just to talk about their problems.
"It may well be that people are also talking to their friends about their problems, but when you hear someone talk to them, need someone to talk to. It puts quite a strain on your friendship to call them every morning at four," he said.
MANY OF THE people who call are also seeking professional help.
"Many are seeing a counselor two times a week. But the question is, 'How do you make it from your Monday to your Friday appointment?' We're here to help someone needs it." Carter said.
People will often respond to a voice on the phone when they won't to a friend or a relative.
"We try to be non-judgmental when we listen," Carter said. Same thing, but with that that's not always the case. Friends think they need to tell you what you've done wrong and don't realize the need, to just tell someone your faults.
Jeff Eggerman, a volunteer, said that people were more willing to talk when they didn't have to give their name.
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The deadline for entering Intramural Tennis (doubles) is Wednesday, June 25th at 5:00 p.m. in 208 Robinson.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan, June 23. 1980
Shankel plans 'stylistic' change
By DAVID STIPP
Staff Reporter
Del Shankler, executive vice chancellor, who was named acting chancellor by the Kansas Board of Regents Thursday, said Friday that there would be some "stylistic differences" between his administration and that of former Archie Dykes, but that he did not expect to make any major changes.
"I want to do whatever I can to maintain and enhance the quality of academic programs that have been developed at KU," he said. "There will probably be some changes, but I think the direction of the University is in a good direction and I don't anticipate making any dramatic changes."
SHAKENL WILL BEGIN his duties as acting chancellor Aug. 15 when Dykes' resignation to become chief of the Life Insurance Co. in Tokeka takes effect. The Regents set Shankel's annual salary at $60,000 while he serves as acting chancellor, a post he will leave on permanent chancellor is appointed.
Shankel said that at the Regent's request, he would live in the chancellor's residence during the 10 or 11 months he expected to be chancellor.
"We would just as soon have stayed in our own home," Shankel said, "but the Board thought it was important that the chancellor live on campus, so we'll move to the chancellor's residence when Chancellor Dykes leaves, then go back to our home well in advance of the permanent chancellor's moving in."
Before his appointment as acting
chancellor, Shankel had resigned as executive vice chancellor to resume teaching and research in microbiology June 30. He said he planned to begin teaching after his duties as acting chancellor ended.
"I look on serving as acting chancellor as a temporary responsibility that I can devote some time and energy to the work of the chancellor back to teaching and research," he said. "The Regents, faculty and students have expressed their support for my taking the job and I will be glad to help with a permanent chancellor is appointed."
Before his appointment, Shankel was considered a leading candidate for acting chancellor by many University officials. He was one of three faculty members on the committee. University Senate executive committee for the position of acting chancellor.
DVKES SAID FRIDAY that he was pleased with the Regents' appointment of Shankel as acting chancellor.
"He knows the University very well through his service as executive vice chancellor." He said. "I'm sure he will understand the university well during the interim period."
Dykes said he would be in close contact with Shankel concerning University matters during the next few weeks, but that "there isn't really much need for a period of transition because he already knows the University very well."
Negotiating KU's 1982 fiscal year budget with the Regents and Kansas Legislature will be an important part of Shankel's job as acting chancellor. The legislature will also budget for fiscal year 1982, which begins July 1, 1981, to the Regents next week.
PETER T. HOWARD
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KANSAS UNION
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A RESPONSE TO MESSRS. CLARK, FORER, BREMER, ETC.
In the June 17 issue of the Kansas City Times there is a letter supporting the recent meandering of former Attorney General Ramsey Clark. What is it about the Islamic state that Mr. Clark, Prof. Forer, Rev. Bremer and others find so appealing? Within the last few days of his tenure he has attempted to eliminate the alleged remnants of the regime of the deposed shah and demanded the removal of all non-Moslems from the state-run radio and television networks. Just a short time ago the Ayatollah's attempt to purge leftists from the universities resulted in a week of rioting and ever since his ascension to power the firing squads have been kept quite busy. Not a few of their victims had been rather hurriedly brought to earth—a phrase which includes adultery, prostitution, homosexuality, the smuggling and/or sale of drugs and the seduction of "girls";
Through frequent references to "Satan" the Ayatollah's condemnatory term for the United States this oppressive theocracy has successfully diverted the public's attention from the real problems, i.e., unemployment, the complaints of the various intranational warring parties in Iraq and Afghanistan et al, with which it or its successor must deal. For every day that this evolution continues both the chances of full-scale civil war and the danger to the hostages increase. If this proposition is correct then it follows that every individual or contingent member should be able to rabble in charge over there only prolongs the ordeal and increases the likelihood of this whole affair ending in bloody tragedy.
William Dann
2702 West 24th Street Terrace
Lawrence, Kansas
WESTERN WORLD WATERBEDS
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Wildflower Waterbed Reg. $387.00
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Present KU ID with purchase
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Lack of funds threatens Clinton Lake security
Clinton Lake is a recreational paradise and a law enforcement headache. It is 23,000 acres, according to a 1974 Corps of Engineers study, will have an estimated 1.2 million visitors annually.
By IAN SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
But there will be no sheriff's deputies to patrol its 26 miles of road until the county receives federal aid.
The lack of resources has some county residents worried.
"Knowing what they are going to have out here, they are underdermened. I assume Bronkson, Jesse Hornie. Her home is within sight of the lake.
"Without question they are going to need some help."
ROSS WULFKUHLE, Route 1,
said, "I don't think they can handle
it. They can't be here all the time.
"I don't know what it will be like when the camping starts."
Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff, said his department could presently maintain order at the lake, but that the real problems would come in 1981 when the camping facilities were completed.
Johnson said he asked the county commission last year for six additional deputies to patrol the lake, but it added only three.
The Corps of Engineers contracted with the county to pay for deputies to provide 24-hour security. The contract expired in September.
Since then the lake has been under regular department patrol. There is no full-time Clinton security, Johnson said.
HE SAID A water resources bill
"Everybody knows the cost of doing anything these days is tremendous," he said. "Hopefully the will come through with persistence."
Cragen said he thought security for federal projects should not fall solely on local governments. He said the funds needed to pay for law enforcement were insignificant in terms of Clinton's total cost.
"If you have a $67 million project, what is another $1 million for law enforcement? It's nothing," he said.
before Congress would help the county pay for three more deputies. He doubted the county could pay for additional aid otherwise.
THE PARK HAS three agencies responsible for law enforcement besides the sheriff's department.
Three Corps of Engineers rangers are responsible for protection of the environment and for enforcement of law enforcement training and can issue citations for violations of federal property, Tim Carey, Clinton federal ranger, said. *repeated*
But they cannot make arrests. They have no jurisdiction over fish and game violators and cannot enforce civil statutes, Carey said.
Mike Ensch, chief ranger at Clinton, said the state fish and game officer assigned to Douglas County can issue citations for violations of laws that has no arrest powers, and like the other rangers, cannot carry weapons.
County Commissioner Walter Cragen said the county would be hard-pressed to cover the park without federal help.
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University Daily Kansan, June 23, 1980
Page
Homers power KC to 7-4 win
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP)—R is usually considered professional suicide to try to outgolf Roberto Duran, to try to match strokes on the golf course with Tom Watson or to try to play home run derby with the Milwaukee Brewers.
Usually.
The Kansas City Royals tipped into a home run derby contest Sunday with the Brewers, a team that set a club record in 1979 with 185 homers and already had lashed 84 through 63 games this season.
But the usually Punch-and-Judging Hoyts got a pair of tape measure solo shots from Amos Otis and Wille Aikens and another by U.L. Washington to capture the home run because and as a result the game by a 7-4 score.
DON MONEY started off the fireworks for the Brewers with a 410 drive to left for field for a 1-4 Milwaukee lead in the first innning. It was also his third homer in less than 24 hours against the Royals.
Otis then became only the second player in the last five years to hit a ball into the left-center field fountain (Chet McClure) and be hit with a 42-foot blow in the off-mike Caldwell. Aikens followed two batters later with a towering drive to dead center.
But the biggest blow of all was also the shortest of the day's four homers. Washington delivered his first home run ever in Kansas City with a man on base in the fifth inning to put the Division leaders ahead for good, 5-3.
WASHINGTON'S THIRD homer of the year fell 10 seats deep into the left field bleachers, a mere 345-feet from home plate, to drop Caldwell to 6-4 and put a halt to Kansas City's three-game losing streak.
"The way things have been going for
the KEGGER
me," said Washington, "I'd have to say he (Caldwell) just hit my bat with the ball. The only way I can get a hit these days is to knock it out of the yard. I always heard it to tougher to get hits up (or league) but now I'm seating it."
Washington, in his first season as Kansas City's starting shortstop, has hit 245 in the past month to mark .26 during the past month. It was only his second game-winning RBI of the season. As a team, the Royals raised their team total to a humble 47
"Saying we can't hit home runs is a myth," said Kansas City Manager Jim Frey.
"We've got five or six guys who with good power. If you put us in Boston or Milwaukee or Detroit, we'd hit an other team those teams and in some cases more."
Rich Gale survived a shaky initial two innings—allowing four hits and three runs—to coast to his third straight win in upinning his record to 4-7. Gale
allowed only two hits from the third inning on, both coming in the ninth to account for Milwaukee's other run, to record his fourth complete game.
Gale set down 13 straight Brewers at one point and struck out: six batters to raise his lifetime record against the Brewers to 4-1.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet. GR
Montreal 30 27 16
Philadelphia 34 27 55
Chicago 34 28 16
Chicago 38 35 49
New York 38 35 44
New York 38 35 12
Houston 40 24 625
Los Angeles 64 38 395
San Diego 34 32 119
San Francisco 39 36 455
Atlanta 30 36 111
New York 36 38 112
s. Louis 12, Cincinnati 2
new York 9, Los Angeles 6
Miami 8, Washington 5
Philadelphia 4, San Francisco 3
Chicago 8, Atlanta 7
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
"M. Gale gave us three runs on four hits the first two innings and then shut the door on us," said Milwaukee Manager George Bamberger. "It looked like we had him early but he bounced back."
W L W L Pct GB
New York 43 22 16 9
Boston 33 20 247 8
Cleveland 39 23 524 8
Detroit 37 34 318 15
Toronto 31 30 315 9
Toronto 32 32 492 11
Kansas City 40 26 600 693
Oakland 31 36 603 693
Texas 30 36 605 693
Texas 30 36 605 693
Minnesota 27 38 415 112
Minnesota 27 38 415 112
Detroit 14, Chicago 14
Seattle 7, Baltimore 8
Milwaukee 9, Oakland 2, New York 2
Pittsburgh 5, Kansas City 5, Milwaukee 4
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841-8540
Schedule revamp due
By TOM GRESS Staff Reporter
Revisions in KU's future football schedules will be announced either Tuesday or Wednesday. Bob Marar said the director told yesterday.
Marcum said the changes would be more beneficial to KU than current schedules are, but did not say what changes would be made. Because of rising travel costs Marcum is been looking to hire a roadside witch who spoke that KU would have to travel long distances to play.
KU is already in the process of canceling a three-game series with the University of Tennessee. A contract made between the schools in 1969 called for Kansas to play two games in Knoxville in 1981 and 1985 and for Tennessee to play in Lawrence in 1983.
Marcum said that after expenses
it would not be profitable for KU to travel to Knoxville.
When reached by phone, Tennesse-
would refuse to comment on the cancellation. Kansas will have for pay Tennessee a $10,000 penalty to
Marcum has wanted to change KU's schedule to a regional schedule because of travel costs.
Many of KU's future schedules were made in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Marcum said, before the rising costs could be foreseen.
"We can't travel coast-to-coast and border-to-border anymore," Marcum said. "Costs are going too high for that kind of thing."
Marcum also said that Oregon State University, a school scheduled to play KU in Lawrence in 1982, had not invited him about canceing the game.
It costs as much for them to travel east as it does for us to travel west," Marcum said.
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ANSAN WANT ADS
Call 864-4358
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AD DEADLINES
one two three four five six seven eight nine ten
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Monday Thursday 5 pm
Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday 5 pm
Thursday Tuesday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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.
Pound items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in online stores, by calling the business office at 844-310-5672.
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 8644358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER: Scholarly, literate,
knowledgeable, confident. We also, buy,
sell and trade good condition
paperbacks: sitenure fiction, classics, fiction,
nonfiction, graphic novels, paperbacks,
841-8444. Open every day except
Saturdays. 841-8444. Open every day
except Saturdays.
Students—to Mails Bookstore for Western-City Analysis, Magazines, Hallmark cards, George Booth cards, Posters and more! **6-25**
The man that has protected decent Kanans from the tide of scyff radicals now extends his coverage to auto, home, and life. "A man you know, a face you trust." 3-6
FOR RENT
Renter(s) wanted to share. House-3 bedroom, 1/8 bath, formal dining room, carpet, large backyard, basement, bachelor. No pets. Neeb, 36% per month. Call 613-3043.
Village Career Appointments. Uninformed
Bilboard Career Appointments available.
Centralized by 2 &
business-hall or w-work center,
w-time card office, queuing
central office, quitter office
similar to 50's office.
shop size 5 to 30 feet.
These contemporary studios and
1-bedrooms are completely furnished
and rental starts from only
conveniently located Sundance is
conveniently located on Ponds,
just west of the Sanctuary on KU bus route Water paid.
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
841-5255
NAISMITH HALL has openings for summer. Both male and female. If interested contact business office at 843-8595 any time of the day. tf
Must sacrifice. Apartment to sublease. Phone
841-0084.
7-3
COOPERATIVE LIVING-established student cooperative, located in easy walkway between town office and lawn courtness. Private room rent $85-$120 including utilities and supply. Call 864-722-8391
Mark I & II hpt. NEW RENTING FOR
15-80 (b-14-81) Quaint I & II bedrooms;
15-80 (b-14-81) Quaint I & II bedrooms;
tioning and heat Carpetting, balconies,
furniture, and laundry facilities.
and laundry facilities Call mgr. for
-231 NAIMSH HALL has openings for
both male & female rooms.
842-4455
These all new and contemporary apartments are completely furnished and heated with tile flooring in the townhawt. Hanover offers 1st- start at $255 per month and 2nd with study area. Place is located between 14th and 15th floor. Reserve your time. Reserve your time. Water Paid
HOUSE- 3 Bedrooms. 118 baths. turnover 460 square feet. Basement. CA Shawnee Avenue. No paths. Large furnished rooms in house one block Large furnished rooms in house one block Deposit cost $1,950. 943-888-1200 Ohio
HANOVER PLACE
APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING
Beautiful 4-bedroom house on 324 Clayton Court. 2 years old, 2 baths, fireplace, culsea. Close to bus route. $440, references needed. 843-0221. 7-3
Apartment, fully furnished. Utilities paid.
$11 monthly. One bedroom, bathroom, living
room. Kitchen, females only. June to
August 8th. Call 641-8452 or 631-0414. -7
3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now and
August 15, thru August, attached kitchen,
appliances. You'll like our looks. Southern
housebuilders. 26th and Kakao, 850.
Burtonwoods. 18th and Kaolon, 850.
Large 1 bedroom efficiency apt. 2 bikes. from.
union $200 + utilities $41-845 7-4
841-1212 842-4455
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-1386.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter and generator specialists,
Parts service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 483-9069, 3900 W.
tf
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale!
Sale makes sense to use them-1) As study guide,
sales make sense to use them-2) As study guide,
New Analysis of Western Civili-
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If you need more, go to www.westernciviliza-
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SINEMILLA - Herbal seedled smoking mix and perfume essence. Mix contains muleen, milk extract, gentian root, greedion of Navajo smoking mixes. Perfume blend of Navajo smoking mixes. FO B. 2015, Cottonwood, Arizona. At 86326. 1975. Camaro psb-ph-excellent condition, saffron. $2.00, 942-170. 6-26
Pine Bookscape-$20 & up; Tablets, $35 &
shelves, $15 & up. Mike M. Store
$4-882-982
Yamaha receiver, turntable with diamond head stylus, Professional Series Tachnics loudspeakers. Best offer, 841-1356. 6-26
BOOK BARN. Why not come to Oksalaoa some Saturday? Thousands of books available—cheap. Oksalaoa library: 913-863-2651.
Ouation acoustical electric guitar with case.
$250, 841-0024.
7-3
Blecycle='N'hiki custom sportman 25' 10" speed. Excelent condition. $80.843-623.7-3
Oldsmobile Omega 1976, ac, at pb, ps, V-8.2
snow tires. Very nice, reasonably priced,
843-1735. 7-3
1976 Honda 350 XL street and dirt combo cycle. Good condition, safety inspected.
843-4501. 6-23
30 miles per gallon. 1979 Honda CT 90 street/trail motorcycle. Excellent condition. Call 841-3933. 6-26
1977 Pontiac Ventura V-6. 4 door, automatic. Excellent condition. $2800 or best offer. Call 81-4619. Keep trying. 6-30
Complete unfinished waterbed, $150. sheets
Completely World Waterbeds, 841-190-600
& Kasand
FOUND
1969 MGB convertible AM-MF cassette,
good condition, at 1007 West 27th—$199.00
HELP WANTED
Complete set of Arisa books from the 40-
Day Training. Call Ruth, 843-5272. Keep
rying.
set of keys, including Volkswagen key,
Found in Chancellor's office. Call 841-1212
to identify. 6-30
Keys behind Watkina 4 keys; Subaru and
office keys. 841-9234.
6-26
Open July 1. Student Senate Administrative Ast. $150-$200 per hour 20 hours per week. Clinical and administrative capability 844-3710 165 I B Kanae 844-3710
6-30
The University of Kansas, Student Assistance, Inc. (SAS) is a nationally recognized institution available July 1, 1980. This institution provides programs and services for people with disabilities and facilitates federal regulations that impact students and faculty who make inquiries of any kind; and other resources to help students grow and graduate student status required. Some who are disabled also required SAS's Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall at the University of Kansas.
Part Time—5 to 4 hours per evening, 5 days per week with local cleaning service. Call 842-5430 for info & appointment. 6-23
Lecturer in Art History. Temporary, part-time (31) faculty position for one year only, based on specializing in American Modern art, with graphic arts and museum research teaching experience. Expand university research offered. To teach one survey course of American modern art in spring. 1981. Salary: $24,000 per month of specialization in spring. 1981. Salary: $24,000 per month of specialization in spring. 1981. Salary: $24,000 per month of specialization in spring. 1981. Apply to Dr. Stephen Addis, Search Committee member of Art History, University of Kansas Law, Lawrence, Kansas. 1980. Art Qual Opportunity.
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Guitar, banjo, mandolin
from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock,
jazz, bluegrass, and folk styles. Experiment
with various instruments at Steve Mason Hall.
6-301 - 84-617 RTU
Sail into summer with the KU Sail Club. We offer Learn to Sail Classes with our partner, sailing camping, and partying. Drop by Day or night. 6-23 Union and Investigate.
Homeless junior looking for fall accommodations. Prefer house, high ceiling, Oread Neighborhood, Jeanie, 841-9263. 6-30
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC -abortions up to 15 weeks of gestation. Counseling. Toulmin Ligation. For appointment call: 9 AM to 5 PM (913) 642-4401. Wk 109. St. Overland Park PA
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 854-5564 tt
C car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and Wednesday evenings. Call Bob Hills 864-4991 before 5, 842-1138 evenings. 6-30
Try the summer specialist at the cool Halloween party. Try a nightly during summer school * $ pitchers for softball teams at Art & Design such as such clubs.* The Haunt Your lives—and get a discount on your next event
PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4821. 6-31
Wanted—Female softball players for city league coed team. Games played on Sundays. Call 843-6700. 6-26
Pepsi hour! 10c off all soft drinks. Small.
5, medium 35, and large 45! Bucky's, 2129
W. 9th. 6-26
Women—Are you questioned? Is your daily routine changed? Are you the solution? Two college students we have the solution! An unnervous summer into one you can't wait to see if interested cell or Bob at Lee University!
SERVICES OFFERED
Reporter, dissertations, resumes, legal forms.
Reporter, dissertations, resumes, legal forms.
Elman or Jennaan. 841-2172. 7-31
Ellen or Jennaan. 841-2172. 7-31
Thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-416 for reservations. tr
Printing While You Walk is available with Alice at the House of Uwbers Quick Copy room. From 8 a.m to 5 p.m. Monday to Friday; 9 a.m to 1 p.m. Saturday at 828 Mass; 9 a.m to 1 p.m.
TUTOR: English 101, 102. Experienced in KU. system. $5 per hour. Contact Margle.
4-4050. 6-26
Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna. 842-2744. tf
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-
4989. tf
Get a Cool Tan, no need to suffer the heat outdoors. Tantalize Tan Center, 2210 Iowa.
843-4937. 6-23
TYPING
Mercury Skates Outdoor Roller Skating new
Tuesday, January 28. Friday's friday of
Friday at 10:23 Mass. Saturday and Sunday
at 10:23 Mass. Send resumes to
min. Please bring picture ID and socks, 7-10
Math Tutoring - Competent. experienced T-10
skaters. Mail resume to Math Tutoring,
115, 116, 121, 122, 125, 128. Open time is
11 a.m., 12 p.m., 1 p.m., 4 p.m.
Session Rates: Call 841-269-5348.
T typing prices discounted. Excellent work by all of us.
Bell, 842-6697 after 5 weeks. **tt**. If typist Editor, Ibm Pica Elite. Quality work.
come; editing./layout. Call Ibm 842-9117. **tt**. Experienced typert Ibm Correcting Selection.
Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-9118. Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-9118.
Experienced Typist—term papers, thesis,
memoirs, articles. Mail resume to:
843-9544, Ms. Wright. Spelling corrected. 843-9544, Ms. Wright.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. 842. re-li-
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan. June 23, 1980
Turnpike .
from page one
$150,000. He also said he planned to build a $200,000 home for himself.
"The interchange would increase tourism to the Lake Clinton and Perry areas and to the city of Lecompton," he said.
With the new interchange, cars would exit, use the county road to U.S. Highway 40 and continue to the Lakewood road. The state said that without the new exit he would go ahead with his construction plans. Residents in the new area would use the gravel county road to travel to and around Lakewood and use Highway 40 to get to Topeka.
THE WINTERS' and Ice do not think the proposed interchange is in a good location.
"The placement of the exit doesn't make sense," Charlene Winter said. "It would be farther to the Lake Clinton campus than it is from the present Lawrence exit."
"Besides, people would have to travel on the country road which isn't nearly as good."
County maps show that it would be about twice as far to the Clinton road from the proposed interchange as it is from the west Lawrence turnpike exit.
THE WINTERS PLAN to fight against the interchange and the Country Club Acres development.
"We would lose land for the interchange and if they had to improve the county roads we would lose more roadway miles." Mr. said. "We oppose this strongly."
ice said, "I can't understand the thinking behind this. When Lake Clark State University in Kansas City was improved to bring people through Lawrence to help business. Now a new tarnipike in town is getting people around Lawrence to the lake."
Kelly said he was aware of the opposition by the land owners but said the residents might not have a choice.
"We just have to show that the proposal would be in the best interest of the public," he said. "The land would be considered condemned and the land
. .
But Ice said, "We had to find some new land when Clinton came in, and it wasn't as good as the bottomland was. It was better. The economies about us, we lose more land again."
owners would be paid a fair price."
ROD FOGO, Wichita, chief engineer and general manager of the Kansas Turnipke Authority, also addressed the proposal. Although he took no stand on the proposal, he said it would cost $1.5 million to $2 million to build the infrastructure.
It would take an additional $150,000 to $200,000 he said, to operate it annually. The interchange would be built with the company in order to offer Heineman, a consultant engineer, said.
THE INTERIM COMMITTEE will decide if a feasibility study will be conducted. No date was given for the committee's decision.
Fogo said that a feasibility study would cost $25,000.
Beverly Bradley, Douglas County commissioner, said she did not know what part the county would play in the turnover decision.
"We'll have to wait until we know a little more before we decide if it will benefit the county," she said.
The county zoning commission did not approve Kiley's bid for subdividing his land, but Kiley said it was not important because of the size of the plots.
"We don't have to have zoning approval because each plot would be above the 5.2 acres needed to be exempt from zoning," he said.
Kelly said he was confident the interchange would be built and his $1 million project will be constructed.
"I'm sure it's going to go through," he said. "No one has ever gotten a proposal this far before and I sure we'll succeed."
Ice said that before a decision was made, the land owners hoped to have their case heard.
"Everyone thinks the farmer has it made out in the country, but we don't."
"We pay more taxes than most people and we end up getting told what to do."
75 percent said Lawrence needed additional retail. Sixty-six percent favored the additional retailing in the downtown area.
With the uncertain economy, Lawrence should not consider a new downtown mall, Hird said.
Steve Hird, co-owner of Westridge,
said that prospective renters are
curious, but nothing is panning out.
from page one
Westridge, on the corner of Sixth Street and Kasold, and Southern Hills shopping centers, on the corner of 23rd and Ousdahl streets, have 23 store vacancies combined and it is unlikely those vacancies will be filled.
Mall ...
Holt said that if Lawrence supported the new mail through taxpayers money, the mall would survive.
"Lawrence is not big enough to support a new mail," Hird said. "If we had a population comparable to Kansas with 80,000 people it is not possible."
RON HOLT, OWNER of the Holiday Plaza which has four vacancies, said that most of his merchants had recently sold their sales were ten percent below average.
West said that leakage, the problem of shoppers going to another city, is already happening to Lawrence on a large scale.
The new shopping mall, West said, would be a regional center, meant to serve Lawrence and the surrounding areas. Presently, the shopping areas in New York are of as nighborhood borders and differ in the types of goods offered for sale.
Murray Levin, associate professor of business and formerly a lawyer with a shopping mall developing firm, said
Who is that KEG-MAN?
many major retailers would buy space in a regional mall but would not buy space in the existing neighborhood malls.
The type of shoppers in an enclosed, climate-controlled regional mail will be the "foot-browsing" type, Levin said. Specialty shops, clothing stores and major shopping retailers like Sears or Penney's, prefer shoppers who spend larger segments of time in a shopping area.
NEIGHBOORHOOD MALLS GENERALLY draw shopmers who have a specific product in mind. They would not go to major shopping malls. Instead, they park their cars and walk the streets where the product is located where that item is sold. Levin said.
Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs presented a proposal to the city commission which predicted the new mall's impact on the Lawrence tax structure.
In the proposed plan for the Iowa Street location, the company predicted that it would have $182,000 and $233,000. In addition, incremental property taxes would be nearly $30,000. The cost of the project was at between $18 million and $19.8 million.
The cost of a downtown mall would be much higher. West said. The cost of a city center mall would serve the area could cost as much as eight to ten times more than the suburban mall. In that case, city inboxes could be have to be issued, he said.
Co-Op to buy into Wolf Creek
TOPEKA-After five controversial years and $1.3 billion, nuclear power's future in Kansas may hinge on a rural economy, a study shows that the state needs more electricity.
Rv NANCY SEARLE
The plan is vitally important to the nuclear project's owners, Kansas Gas and Electric Co. (KGKE), Wichita, and Kansas City Power and Light Co. because it will provide $200 million for the financially-suiling utilities.
THE COOPERATIVE, the Kansas Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (KEPCO), Topeka, must convince the Kansas Corporation Commission during hearings that resume July 1 that future decisions should justify the purchase and that the cooperative examined all alternatives before making its decision.
The controversy involves an attempt by the state's largest rural electric cooperative to purchase 17 percent of the controversial and financially troubled Wolf Creek Nuclear Station being built near Burlington.
Staff Reporters
Without this money, many of the interveners in the case said, completion of the project was doubtful.
Through the purchase, KEPCo would become a licensed utility with its own generating capability.
KEPCo represents 26 of the 36 smaller Rural Electric Cooperatives (REC) in Kansas. The super cooperative was formed in 1975 to give its 93,000 customers autonomy from the state's utilities.
DIFFERENT LEGAL, environmental and farm organizations are intervening in public purchases, representing the groups questioned officials of KEPCo and Wolf Creek co-owners in the first round of public hearings before the court.
Kansas Farmers Union, Hutchinson, intervened on behalf of its members who the organization, who said would suffer from an injury by buy power generated from Wolf Creek.
The union questions the validity of the study on which the cooperative based
Joe Muhholland, KEPCo manager of power supply and engineering, said that even if the lower projections were accurate, he still thought a 17 percent purchase of Wolf Creek was both necessary and economical.
Hudson, without taking a stand for or against the purchase, said KEPCO projected a 5.2 percent load increase in electricity demand and a 6.4 percent load increase or a 41 percent difference.
Hal Hudson, KPL director of public affairs, questioned projections the cooperative had made for the future power load of KP&L's system.
"Personally and professionally I feel that Wolf Creek is a good investment," he said. "We are basically a non-profit organization. Our only interest is in supplying the farmers with electricity as cheaply as possible."
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REP. BOB MILLER, R-Wellington, said, "With proper conservation practices we can avoid the need we needed. We have a surplus of electricity in Kansas great enough to supply our energy needs for the next 10 to 15 years." Miller heads the House Energy Committee.
"The real question in the case is not whether KECPc should be allowed to become a utility or purchase part of a nuclear power plant," Ron Henickers. "The real question is whether we need any new plants at all in the state. All the hard power growth figures we have indicate that there is an electricity surplus in Kansas, and that this will be to the case for many years."
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THE STUDY, completed by the Southern Engineering Co. of Atlanta, GA., projected an annual electrical growth rate for the state of six percent customers would save as much as $200 million by purchasing part of the plant.
But Kansas Legal Services, Inc. (KLS), Topeka, which intervened on behalf of a low-income consumer, said the annual growth rate was closer to 2 percent.
BUT LYON disagreed. "All this talk about savings is so muchoghwash," he
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Ferguson said that the local system is a "real possibility."
take TIME OUT
AFTER THE UNION receives a bad check it will send the check through a second time. If the check is returned again a $$ fee is added to the check. If it hasn't been paid by the time a second time is due, the bank will charge $10 if it still isn't paid, they then turn it over to a credit bureau. The bureau charges $6 on the first notice.
its decision to buy into the nuclear facility.
5-8 Mon-Thurs.
3-6 Friday
2408 IOWA
The Union currently waits until a third bad check has been cashed by a student before the student is not allowed to cash checks at the Union. It is considering changing it to one bad check.
Checks
A SURVEY OF other Big Eight unions found that the amount of returned checks is not as big of a problem elsewhere.
"If it is more than $3,000 (in returned checks) I would be surprised," Bob Brock, director of the University of Missouri union, said Friday.
from page one
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said. "There isn't any. The Wolf Creek Plant will provide the most expensive power possible."
Betty Vodenhal of the University of Nebraska union, said that it had a very low percentage of returned checks. A study was done two years ago, and it found that only one percent of all checks were returned. Although the number has been done recently, she said the numbers had not increased dramatically.
Vodehnal said that small checks were generally more of a problem there.
"People think, 'oh that's only a couple of dollars.' Maybe the ones who are cashing smaller checks don't have any money in the bank," she said.
By KLS estimates, the plant will cost each customer in KEPCo an additional $3,000 over the next 30 years.
KCPKL1's Wolf Creek problem was aggravated by a bitter spill the company had to swallow Friday. The Missouri Public Service Commission, Jefferson County, said it not to charge its customers for its new Indian plant, in Platte County, Mo.
The commission ruled the plant could not be included in the KC&P/1 rate base because the extra power was unused and it would cost the utility $15 million this year.
The Kansas Legislature, concerned that the utilities were getting in over their heads with the Wolf Creek project, asked the governor to convert the plant to a coal-fired facility.
The company also requested a $36.1 million emergency rate increase for its Missouri customers Jan. 28 saying its financial survival was at stake. The commission granted a $25 million increase.
When the KCC hearings reconvene next month, KEPCo is expected to testify on what alternatives were
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MULHOLLAND SAID the cooperative had investigated alternatives to the Wolf Creek project, but could not take advantage of the alternatives because of "procedural problems and scheduling."
1
Staff Reporter
"Kansas Power and Light might have sold part of its Jeffries Plant. They offered powered from the KCP&I latan Plant and a Colorado utility offered. All of these plants are coal fired."
"We would still like to participate in these alternatives. But currently, there are none available." he said.
By MONICA MARKIEWICZ
"Apparently, KEPCo has had many opportunities within the last five years to buy generating capacity from many different sources," Jody James, a Lawrence senior in economics doing research on Kansas utilities, said.
Pat Donahue, attorney for KLS, said: "KepCp's proposal will not result in KLCs being large investors. The large investor-owned utilities. The 17 percent interest in the Wolf Creek generating capacity they propose to acquire is not sufficient to enable a viable business relationship held by Kansas Gas and Electric and Kansas City Power and Light."
Plant's problems linger
The Wolf Creek Nuclear Power Plant has been plagued by an almost endless string of problems since its conception by Kansas Gas and Electric and Kansas City Power and Light in April, 1975.
The plant, located three miles east of the John Redmon Dam near Burlington, was originally budgeted at about $1 billion and was scheduled to be finished in mid 1982. It is now more than $7 million. The plant and is expected to cost almost $1.5 billion.
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EVEN WEATHER CLOUDED the project. The winter of 1978 was so severe that construction had to be shut down temporarily. In an attempt to
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Complaints of shoddy workmanship and ignored quality controls were filed against the contractors for the majority of the Wolf Creek project, had conflicts with union representatives and sympathizers over the handling of the contract.
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KANASS ANTI-NUCLEAR groups have often demonstrated at the plant, slowing construction even more. At one point, members of the Kansas Natural Guard and its supporters blocked the entrance to a forestry director for the Wolf Creek station arrived.
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make up for lost time, on some of the workers were put on 84-hour work weeks until the project was back on schedule. This brought accusations of worker overload and lack of quality control.
In June 1980 a rainstorm caused flooding that submerged more than 100 safety related components under 18 inches of water.
The project was not even safe from the inside. Problems were compounded by bomb threats and the theft of $60,000 worth of tools from the site.
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The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
149
Vol. 90, No. 150 Thursday, June 26, 1980
KINGFISHER
Randy Rudy, 17, at left, Trefor Locke, 10, in the air, and Vanessa McTaggart, at right, found the pool at Gaslight Village, 900 W. 31st St., to be the perfect place to escape from the week's humid weather.
Satellite Union losing money more activities may be cure
Bv CHICK HOWLAND
By CHICK HOWLAND Staff Reporter
The Satellite Union, built to serve student needs on the west edge of campus, is losing money. It will cost the Kansas Union almost $20 million a year. The associate director of the Union said this week.
Final figures for this fiscal year will not be completed until late July, Ferguson said. If the deficit is as great as he predicts, it would be the Union's worst loss since 1970. That year the Union lost $62,000 because of a fire that gutted the top two levels of the main building.
THE KANASS UNION's operations might be the largest in the world, but the Satellite Unions will affect the overall organization.
"It will have to correct itself." Perguson said, because we can't operate at a deficits level.
Ferguson said that when Satellite Union planning began in 1976, economic conditions were extremely poor.
lack of publicity have been significant problems for the Satellite Union this year.
"We think the timing of the opening, certainly from an economic standpoint, was not the best," he added.
"There still are a lot of students who I don't think really know that the Satellite building is there."
Some of those who do know about the new buildings that tell Terguson that there are not so many.
"There is a lounge for you to study in," be said. You can buy food and you can buy things at the bar. You can eat a sandwich, drink a coffee or just relax.
To remedy these problems, Ferguson said a Friday afternoon beer special and local bands were being considered. An electronic game room may be added by fall, he said.
THE SATELLITE UNION will also undergo some personnel adjustments. Ferguson said the Satellite Union director opening would not be the job recently was vacated by Pat Wolfe.
"We have taken the opportunity to rearrange the responsibilities and duties in an effort to cut cost."
Although planners of the Satellite Union expected a slow start, it must make a lot more money in the next two years to avoid drastic changes, he said.
"Within three years it ought to be self-supporting," Ferguson said. "If it isn't by then, I think a hard look will have to be taken at the operation.
"We would probably have to cut further the operating hours, raise the student operating fees and increase prices to offset it, or use it for other purposes."
Ferguson said selling the Satellite Union is a possible, but unlikely, solution.
"I don't want to say that it couldn't happen," he said, "but I don't know of any reason why it should."
Draft registry refusal urged
Bv HURST LAVIANA
Staff Reporter
The Kansas Anti-Draft Organization is urging people to ignore draft registration, which next month will require 4 million men to register for the draft at local post offices nationwide.
Nick Paretsky, Lawrence sophomore and spokesman for the organization, said yesterday that plans are being made to picket the post office during the two-week registration period. He said he would not register and he is urging others not to.
"IT'S NOT JUST registration," Paretsky said. "Registration has almost always led to a draft. I think we are preparing for war and people should think very seriously about that. They're not going down to the post office to register for a license. They're going down to register for war."
The bill, which was approved by the Senate yesterday, would require all men born in 1960 and 1961 to register or face a possible penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.
Carter's draft registration plan was vigorously debated in Congress and anti-draft groups across the nation are promising resistance now that the program has won approval.
The American Civil Liberties Union said it would file suit to have the registration plan declared unconstitutional because women were excluded.
Carter asked Congress for authority to register young women as well as young men, but both the
"People who don't register risk prosecution,
but I consider the risk to be minimal." Paretsky said.
They may just decide to prosecute certain
cases, but I don't believe they I really don't
think I'm important enough."
Paretsky and he did not expect to see a return to cost-sensitive deferments that were available during the pandemic.
"It's going to be tough this time," he said.
"A few people counselled just right could get conscientious objector deferences, but most kids are just not prepared for that."
ROBERT STREEPY, an assistant attorney in the U. Attorney's office in Topeka, said he had not heard from Washington about the registration law's enforcement. He said the government probably would not issue guidelines for prosecution of those who do not register until 2015, even when the government would follow a uniform procedure for prosecuting offenders, he said.
LAWRENCE RESIDENTS CHARGED with violating federal laws come under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Attorney in Kansas City. One from that office was available for comment.
Jack Harris, Lawrence postmaster, said he would go to school soon. "He's got a good job with an administration procedure."
ACCORDING TO figures from the Office of Admissions and Records, there were 1,248 men enrolled at KU last fall who were born in 1960 and 1,538 born in 1961. No figures were available on the number of draft-age men enrolled this summer.
Regents begin hearings on new budget
By DAVID STIPP Staff Reporter
The battle of the budget for fiscal year 1982 is about to begin.
The Kansas Board of Regents is scheduled tomorrow to begin hearings on KU's proposed budget, which includes raises of 10 percent for faculty and 8.1 percent for student employees. The proposed budget also includes $1.4 million for program improvements, to help KU catch up with laa peer institutions.
The proposed budget for fiscal year 1982, which begins July 1, 1981, provides $137 million for the Lawrence campus, 12.5 percent more than was approved for fiscal year 1981 by the University. The budget includes $142.4 million for the KU Medical Center, an 11.3 percent increase.
If approved, the 10 percent faculty pay increase for 1902 would be 1 percent more than the 1901.
STUDENT SALARIES ARE also scheduled for slightly larger increases in fiscal year 1982. The 8.1 percent increase would be 1.2 percent more increase, the 9.9 percent increase approved for fiscal year 1981.
Classified employee salary increases for fiscal year 1982 will be based on a four-step system that includes (a) Martin Jones, associate director of business affairs, said Monday. But he said salary increases for KU classified employees will depend on between 7 and 10 percent in the proposed budget.
Some of the more important requests in the 1982 fiscal year budget are for program improvements based on formula funding, Jones said. Formula funding recommendations are made by comparing KU with five peer institutions, the universities of Oregon, Colorado, and Michigan. The deficits are assigned in those areas in which KU is found to lag behind its peer institutions. These areas include such things as course offerings, equipment availability and library expenditures.
THE REGENTS HAVE recommended that KU's 1982 budget include program improvements to erase about 20 percent of this $6 million deficit. Jones said.
Jones said that for fiscal year 1982, KU engaged behind the average accumulated expenditures of the institution.
Among formula-funded improvement items for 1982 are the creation of two new faculty positions, one in the School of Business and one in the School of Journalism.
Dykes criticized by former director
By MARK PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes has lived up to the letter, but not the spirit, of federal affirmative action laws. Bonnie Ritter, former president of Kansas Affirmative Action, said this week.
RITTER SAID her frustration with the University's lack of commitment to the goal of equal opportunity caused her to leave the University for two years. She has been teaching at the University of Texas at Arlington.
Ritter said Dykes refused to do anything not specifically required by federal and state law. And Dykes would only reluctantly perform actions that were required, she said.
She said Affirmative Action had an "adversary relationship" with the University administration because of differing views on equal opportunity.
Dykes was in Chicago. Ill. last night and unavailable for comment earlier this week.
Although Ritter's resignation was announced a week ago, she would now like to be considered for the position from which she could cause the change of administrations.
"There will always be an impasse when the teacher says, 'I will not what is not required by law.'"
Ritter said that Del Shankel, who will assume the post of acting chancellor Aug. 15, had the commitment necessary to make the affirmative action program work.
"I resigned assuming there would be no change in the administration," she said. "The
"DEL SHANKEL FULLY understands the relationship between quality in personnel and equality of opportunity," Ritter said. "There is sufficient certification for treating an applied unfit."
Ritter may not be eligible to enter a search that would or may be limited to campus, according to Robert Cobb, who takes over as director of the college. He was very unusual for a faculty member or administrator to resign and then wish to reapply for that same position. Cobb said he did not know the circumstances surrounding his experience and did not make any determination without study.
Shankel defended Dykes' commitment to the program.
"While under the chancellor the program has made some progress," he said. "It could not have made this progress without his commitment."
Ritter would be considered as a candidate for the permanent directorship if a national committee approved it.
Skanel, who is currently executive vice chancellor, said he would decide this week to hire a new administrator of affirmative action would be conducted nationwide or only within the University, or whether Mike Edwards, the current acting president, would be appointed to the permanent position.
But Edwards could still be appointed to the permanent position without th2: search process that affirmative action often requires of other departments, and Shankel did not rule this out as one of the options he might choose.
Dorothy Chang
Bonnie Ritter
BLAZING
Weather
The weather forecast for the Lawrence area calls for clear skies and hot humid days through tomorrow. Thunderstorms may move into the area lowering temperatures this weekend. It will be mostly sunny today with the temperature climbing to 99 and high humidity. Winds will be from the east at 5-15 mph and the skies will be clear. Tonight the skies will remain clear and warm light winds will blow from the east. The overnight low will drop to about 74. Tomorrow will be almost identical to today with clear skies and hot humid weather. The high will again be 99 and the winds will be from the east at 5-15 mph.
Tomorrow night skies will again be clear with a light breeze from the east.
Physicians refuse to aid those who desire childbirth at home
By LESLIE SPANGLER
Staff Reporter
Pregnant women in Lawrence have few alternatives to a traditional hospital delivery.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital voted last week to delay a decision on the proposed birthing room for six months. Temporary rules and regulations for the certification and licensing of nurse-midwives have been approved, but currently there is no working program.
FOR REASONS RANGING from malpractice to economics to disapproval of home delivery, local obstetricians, Henry Buck, RL. Hermes and Howard Wilcox, said they were very interested in maternal care to women considering home delivery.
In addition, none of the certified obstetricians in Lawrence, provide prenatal care for women.
Gary Owens, a Lawrence obstetrician, said he would not answer any questions on the subje
Buck said, "I think that all pregnant women need prenatal care, but if their ultimate goal is home birth, then I will not provide that care."
The doctors expressed concern about the statistics on infant mortality rates. The
See BIRTHS page nine
Page 2
University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
Capsules
Daily Kansan
From the Kansan's Wire Services
Thai border fight diminishes
ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand—Fighting diminished yesterday along the Thai-Cambodian border, but Thai military officials said Vietnamese troops were maneuvering for a possible all-out attack against guerrillas loyal to ousted Cambodian Premier Pol Pot.
The Chinese, who fought a border war with Vietnam in 1979, warned Hanoi to get its troops out of Cambodia but stopped short of threatening direct military action. Diplomatic sources in China said tension along the border were higher, but reports the Chinese were on full military alert could not be
The Thais have asked the United States for increased military assistance and stepped-up delivery of equipment already promised. State Department officials said Wednesday that the U.S. had a warhead.
The Thai military command reported large Vietnamese troop movements in western Cambodia near the border and land. Vietnamese units had already attacked the army's positions.
No new significant Thai-Vietnamese clashes were reported, however.
Most of the Vietnamese troops were believed to be just across the Cambodian border, but they also held small areas north of Aranypathet which the Thai military considers to be inside Thailand. The fighting had been in the areas Monday and Tuesday, the first two days of the Vietnamese offensive.
Soviets set to strike again
KABUL, Afghanistan—The division of Soviet troops reportedly withdrawn from Afghanistan has been stationed on the Soviet border ready for another mission to the region.
One source said the Soviets thought tanks were useless in fighting widely scattered groups of Moslem guerrillas and that was why more than 100 tanks were pulled out. Helicopter gunships with their devastating firepower have been used in suppressing rebel resistance and are being sent in, the source said.
The sources said the Soviets were believed to have pulled out 12,000 to 15,000 troops, but only as far as the Soviet border with Afghanistan. Unconfirmed reports said another 5,000 to 10,000 fresh Soviet troops have been deplored inside the country as replacements.
"If pulling them out means the Afghan army will do the fighting, it won't work," one source said.
work, so source said.
"Wherever they left there will be a resurgence of rebel activity. The rebels
"And the Afghan government didn't say a word about pulling out any helicopters."
A Bulgarian journalist who was invited by the Afghan government to film the withdrawal said he saw about 10,000 troops and more than 100 tanks rumbling out of Khair Khana in northern Kabul, on the highway to the Soviet Union through the Salang Pass.
Carter trails Reagan in poll
NEW YORK—President Carter's popularity has dropped to the level it was before the hostages were seized in Iran and the president now traits Ronald Reagan by 10 percentage points, according to a New York Times-CBS News poll.
The poll published in yesterday's editions of the Times said 30 percent of the public say they approve of the way Carter has handled the presidency—the same percentage giving him a favorable rating in the poll before the Americans were seized in Tehran Nov. 4.
His favorable rating two months ago was 40 percent—down from 53 percent in February, the Times said.
And, the poll said, only 20 percent of the public now approves of Carter's handling of foreign policy—the smallest number of his presidency. The favorable rating for his handling of the hostage crisis declined to 29 percent and 18 percent approved of Carter's handling of the economy.
Grain embargo to continue
but he persists to specify where Wheeler will be coached.
"It depends on their behavior in Afghanistan," he said.
WASHINGTON—Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland said yesterday the American grain embargo against the Soviet Union will continue indefinitely, but he refused to specify what the Soviets will have to do with it lifted.
Bergland's statement to the House Agriculture Committee followed indications from President Carter on his European tour that he will consider negotiating with the Soviets to establish a transitional government in Afghanistan.
Carter imposed the embargo Jan. 4 in retaliation for the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
"I can't answer that because I simply don't know," Bergland told the panel. "I haven't spoken to the president yet."
The secretary repeatedly dodged questions from committee members on whether a withdrawal of Soviet troops would be a prerequisite for lifting the embargo, indicating the embargo could be used as a bargaining chip in future negotiations with the Russians.
Carter returns from his eight-day trip today. Bergsland said the embargo is working because the seven million ton shortfall of grain has reduced Soviet exports to Europe.
"The Russians have felt the sting," he said. "They're scrounging all over the Soviet Union for enough meat to send to Moscow for the Olympic Games."
He said, "I recommend we keep the heat."
Reagan says tax cut urgent
LOS ANGELES—Calling the nation's economic situation "desperate," Ronald Reagan yesterday urged Congress to enact immediately a $20 billion spending bill.
Throughout his presidential campaign, Reagan has said that if elected he would propose major cuts in federal taxes.
At a news conference, the Republican candidate said the nation was reading into "what could well become the worst recession in half a century". He said he expected the number of people who
"Now, the situation is desperate," he said. "Now, I am saying to Congress, don't wait, do it now."
Reagan said that as a result of President Carter's economic policies "production lines are being idled. Factory gates are closing across the land. Housing construction has gone into a tailspin. In just 100 days, the ad-venture have thrown 1.8 million American working men and women out of jobs."
The Reagan plan was the first segment of the three-year cut in income tax rates that has been a keystone of his economic program. That plan would cut taxes for many Americans, and it has helped the economy.
KU to get unclaimed money
TOPEKA-State Treasurer Joanne Fainny announced yesterday her office is returning $4, 423 to 24 persons and institutions in Kansas under the state's rules on cash donations.
Largest of the amounts, Mrs. Finney said, is $1,502 to the University of Kansas. She said that amount had been held by the state of California.
Under the law, the treasurer's office searches the nation to locate unlicensed or Kansas citizens or institutions in various public and private accounts.
She said her office presently has more than $2.5 million held in trust to return to its rightful owners in Kansas.
She said she is continuing to review more than 250 claims people have presented to her office, seeking amounts ranging from $2 to $8,000.
"I am particularly pleased with the number of senior Kanans who have made claim to funds forgiven over the years," Mrs. Fritson said in a
博物馆
On Campus
The Graduate Women's Group will meet at noon in the Cork Room in the Kansas Union.
THURSDAY, JUNE 26
GRADUATE WOMEN
OPERA HOUSE
The Rocky Horror Picture Show will be shown at the Opera House at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $ 50
Daily Kansan
Maurice Hinson will give a lecture and piano recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
RECITAL
The summer bar exam review course opens in Wescoe Hall. It will run through July 17. Registration is $100.
FRIDAY, JUNE 27.
LAW
Ray Ehrhart, legendary jazz pianist,
will celebrate his 72nd birthday at Paul
Gray's Jazz Place, 926 Massachusetts
Dixieland Band and Gig Dixieland Band starting at 9 p.m.
Southern Fried will perform at the Opera House. Doors open at 8:30 p.m.
JAZZ
OPERA HOUSE
MOVIE TIME
The Biology Club will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in the Kansas Union.
FACULTY RECITAL
The SUA movie will be "Fantastic Planet." Showtime is 7 p.m. and tickets are $1.50.
Richard Angeletti will give a piano recital at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
BIOLOGY CLUB
SATURDAY, JUNE 28
ORIENTATION
Orientation for entering freshmen and transfer students will be held all day in the Kansas Union and Wescoe Hall.
ANTI-DRAFT MEETING
The Kansas Anti-Draft Organization will meet in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
OPERA HOUSE
The Artists will perform at the Opera House. Tickets are $2.
MUSIC CONCERT
The Junior High Music Camp will hold its closing concert in Hoch Auditorium at 10 a.m.
Karen Gould will hold a batk/iweaving show from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday from now until next month. The reception is today from 2-4 p.m.
BATIK/WEAVING
SUNDAY, JUNE 29
AUDITIONS
Auditions for Leon Fleisher's piano master classes will be held at 1 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
CARILLON CONCERT
Time Out.
Albert Gerken, University carlionearne,
will perform at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Campanile. The concert is free.
A free introductory program about Guru Maharaji JI and the knowledge he revels will be presented in the course. For more information call 842-1741.
TUESDAY, JULY 1
Managing Editor
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Bob Pittman
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Lawson Editor
Gene Myers
Wire Editor
Mary Alice Coyote
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The University Daily KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
More teacher education to pay off for students
By LAURALUCKERT
Staff Reporter
The June 16 issue of "Time" magazine reports that 20 percent of the teachers in the United States have not received basic skills in English and mathematics.
BUT JAMES GOWEN, professor of English, said this week that the quality of teacher education had not declined.
"We have always had the 'why Johnny can't read' problem in our schools," he said. "We have always had poorly prepared teachers, just as
the medical profession has its share of poor doctors and the legal profession has its share of poor lawyers."
Gowen said the influx of children into the public school system in the United States during the 1980s and 1980s forced schools to accept unqualified teachers.
AS A RESULT, some unqualified teachers gained tenure. With tenure, which is usually granted after two years, the teacher cannot be fired without cause.
"Then we had many teachers tenured that we wish hadn't been," he said. "I still don't feel tenure should be granted so soon."
But David Bays, director of undergraduate studies in history, said there was a general agreement in the history department that American and European history must be covered in detail than they were a few years ago.
Students are not being prepared adequately in high school for college work, he said.
"A lot of high school history teachers have not studied much history on the college level." he said.
He said that when he was a student at KU in the 1960s it was not unusual to be assigned seven or eight books for a history class.
"Now there is real resistance from students to assign four to six books," he said.
BAYS, WHO TAUGHT history at KU for 15 years, said writing skills of students have definitely declined.
Walks, humor define Senate bid
Staff Reporter
Rv DAN TORCHIA
To dramatize the oil crisis, James Maher, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, has been walking across parts of Kansas carrying an empty gas tank.
He is also planning a 53-mile hike to Wichita to honor the hostages held in Iran. Maher shows no sign of slowing down.
In addition to walking, Mather, 43, has been using the telephone. Yesterday he staged the first of three "telecoms with 29 newspapers across the state.
Mahar, an Overland Park stockbroker, is running, or in this case walking, against John Simpson on the Aug. 5 Democratic primary. He said he planned to spend only $2,000 on his team as it was made up of volunteers and family.
THE TELECONFERENCES were consistent with his concept of conservation and low cost, said Paola Shumaker, Maher's press secretary.
"The total cost was $225," she said.
"It was a good way to keep in touch with the press."
MAHER READ two statements over the phone, outlined plans for public appearances, discussed his campaign issues, and answered reporters' questions.
This is Maher's second attempt at the Senate. He ran against Bill Roy in the Democratic primary two years ago, then opposed Sen. Nancy Kassamba in the general election as a candidate of the Conservative Party.
He has acquired an offbeat reputation. Some of his proposals could be considered outlandish.
In this campaign he proposed storing part of the Library of Congress in the salt mines of Kansas. Another idea was to form a Western Hemisphere Baseball League to strike out the OPEC cartel.
Maher's wit is often directed toward the other candidates.
"Giving a campaign contribution to my opponent is like giving food stamps to the Rockefeller," he said, making note of Simpson's wealth.
Bob Dole, who will he face if he wins in the primary, he said, "Dole has a slogan in his office that says 'you can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, those are good enough odds for me.'"
He said humor was budgeted as part of the campaign expenses, and was an essential part of it.
"Along with hard work and walking, you have to have humor." he said.
He will be walking for the next few weeks, traveling through towns in Western Kansas. He left for Hays
yesterday by airplane and will walk to McPherson and Manhattan. His walk for the hostages will conclude July 4 when he walks into Wichita
Mather said his campaign would start to focus more on Simpson. Switching parties, as Simpson has done, was not in the interest of Democratic voters, he
"WE NEED TO dislodge a little support from him," he said. "Our goal is the betterment of the party."
he said his campaign was gaining
heism in turn against Dole as an
independent if he lost the primary. For
now he is concentrating on the Aug. 5.
"We think we are doing pretty well, but we have a lot more to do," he said. And more walking of course.
And more walking, of course.
Roy Laird, professor of political science, agreed that students entering KU are less prepared.
"Students' skills in writing, their knowledge of history and foreign language have definitely deteriorated," he said.
ALSO, IN DECEMBER the faculty of the School of Education proposed to increase the number of graduating from KU by increasing the number of credit hours education students must take from 124 to 160 and should increase the program to five years.
Scannell said that since January a series of committees has been trying to improve the teaching of teacher education. The program would require education students to complete at least 100-110 hours outside the School and 50-60 inside the School.
But Laird said although the public school system should not be absolved from blame, the problem is a basic problem in society.
"We have always felt that the state requirement of 22 hours of professional education courses was not sufficient," he said. "We are hoping this proposal to approve the school of Education in July be approved for effect in Juniors by the fall of '18."
But Scannell said KU was taking several steps toward improving teachers' education.
DALE SCANNELL, dean of the School of Education, said that educators were upset with the decline in ACT and SAT scores among high school students, but he did not think teachers were to blame.
SCANNELL SAID HE was not worried that KU would lose prospective education majors who would turn to schools to get a four-year education.
Presents
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an essay section and problems in grammar and usage.
Fri-June 27/ 7:00/$1.50/Woodruff Auditorium
An Animated Science-Fiction Fantasy
In the spring of 1978, a program was established between the School of Education and department of English at Stanford where both students had basic competence in English.
"A very large number of other universities are working on a similar program to improve teacher education," he said.
from
PRINTING
The program consists of an English placement test that the prospective education major must pass in order to be admitted to the School of Education. The program also still wishes to enter the school, he must pass English with a C or better.
The House of Uber is also the Quick Copy Center This service provides quick print work at you whenever a low cost (eg. 100 copies for $300,200 for $500,500 for $700 or more) paper is needed. We provide only 0-5% face value on only 5+ address labels reduction copies up to and including *11 x 17*, large paper selection 2-tested copies, the very best reproduction available on a Copier. Utilizing four different machines if it can be done on a copier we can do. **Quick Copy Center** also offers copying and wording work We have been doing these work for KU students for 12 years.
We are Lawrence's one stop source for all your printing needs. The House of Uher takes the small to medium size business into their hands and uses its powerful microcomputer and effective way. The House of Uher uses the latest equipment from sophisticated computer driven photointerpreters to high-speed presses. Move importantly, the House of Uber is people dedicated to laser experienced users.
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Gowan, who designed the English placement test, said the test contained
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Wherever one places the blame does not change the fact that students today are less prepared for college, said Bays.
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11 ECHO CLUFF
12 JANET JAMESON BAND
12 MOVIE SEXTOONS
18 SHEET ONS
Bill Lynch
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
Entertainment
'Folk art' puts band in national spotlight
A
Members of the Lawrence rock group "Thumbs," from left to right; Marty Olson, Steve Wilson, Dede Mosier, Karl Hoffmann and Kevin Smith.
By VANCE HINER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Thousands of restless young Americans become musicians and struggle each year to get their hands on the great American rock "roll put."
Although many new bands tour and produce albums, few are able to attain a high following. They often sign contracts with unsupportive record companies from desperation,
BUT THE LAWRENCE rock band "Thumbs" is more concerned with working at daily jobs and cultivating the 'hipstick folk art form around since
The band's independently produced album was recently praised by Rolling Stone and New West magazines as one of the year's best releases.
"I'm a great believer in all different kinds of folk art as some of the most valid forms of expression of any people at any given time in history," said Steve Wilson. "I am so proud of 'Rock'n' roll as a folk tradition and I feel we are a part of it."
Wilson and Karl Hoffmann, 27, the group's bass player, were both born in Memphis. They played 28, guitarist and background vocalist, and Dede Mosei, 21, are from the Kansas City area. Marty Olsen, 28, plays keyboard, considers Lawrence his home.
THEUMBS' ALBUM, titled "Thumbs," has made only enough
money to pay for its $3,250 recording and production costs but is beginning to sell nationally, according to Wilson.
"We're working on setting up a tour on the East Coast and if the bank account looks good, and it probably will, we will start production on our second book or March. Wilson said "It will sound technically better than our last album."
Numerous reviewers have found the raw, no-frills sound that characterizes the group's album a refreshing change.
BOB DYLAN, the Beatles, Elvis Costello and the Sex Pistols were performers who have influenced the band's musical direction, Wilson said, but the band members were not imitators.
"I don't mind comparisons as long as they're not facile," he said of critics' attempts to categorize the group. "The rock 'n' roll music I like is that which you can intermittently dance your ass off to or think about.
Most of Thunbs' songs are love songs or social/political commentary. In Fourth of July" for example, Wilson wrote the memoir *patriotism he sees on national holidays*.
HOFFMANN SAID he probably was more interested in the musical side of playing in a rock band than the rest of the group.
Wilson said he doubted anyone in the band was playing with the ambition of "becoming a rock star."
"Hopefully, we're making music that people can think about or get choked up by," he said.
Photos reveal child's growth
By MONICA MARKIEWICZ
Staff Reporter
After countless hours and hundreds of rolls of film, intimate glimpses of a child's world from the mother's pregnancy to the child's third birthday are shown in "Visions of a Child."
Dan and Cheryl Younger are exhibiting a series of photographs of their daughter, Mercedes, at the 7 E Gallery through Saturday.
GREGORIO GIACOMEO
"In this kind of photography you are committed to the subject matter for a long time," Dan Younger said.
The Youngs live in Bemidji,
Minnesota, where they teach
photography as art and as journalism at Bemidji State University.
Dan Younger also teaches filmmaking. They are in Lawrence this summer to make a film on John Tallarue, a local printmaker.
"Face" is a blurred image of Mercedes face as she turns away
BOTH PARENTS are photographers, but with distinctly different styles.
Dan Younger works on a large format in gentle synecis tones. His piccasso prints are of movement and dimension. They are closeups of fragments of his daughters life, and because of the unevenness of a fairy tale atmosphere prevails.
All of their work shows a great deal of perception, but two works stand out. They are "Face," by Dan Cyrillou, who reallyolly Dancing," by Cyril Younger.
NANCY SEARLE/Kansar
Cheryl Younger works in stark black and white images. Her pictures are in sharp focus, and the sense of documentary representation.
Dan Younger
from the camera. A series of shadows are created that lend an almost cubist quality to the photograph.
"BELLY DANCING" is a series of repeated exposures of Cheryl's pregnant abdomen that form a strip of
images. The forms, in their repetition, actually seem to dance across the surface of the paper. The piece was supposed to be about 30 feet long and three feet wide, but because of space restrictions it had to be presented in a smaller form, Dan Younger said.
"We believe that it's possible to take pictures of your kids without taking kiddie pictures," Dan Younger said.
The Youngers, like other parents,
like to take pictures of their kids,
but to steer away from vacation
snapshots.
'Bronco Billy' old-fashioned fun
Staff Reporter
By DAN TORCHLA
Hollywood's nee-infatuation with the cowboy continues with "Bronco Billy," Clint Eastwood's latest starring and directing effort.
Eastwood is Bronco Billy, a
"Billy" now showing at the Varsity Theatre, is a fun two hours, a meal of westerns where the cowboys were a humble folk and said "ma'am" a lot.
character far removed from his "Dirty Harry" days. Billy, a former shoe salesman and ex-counsor, is a simple man who wants nothing more than to travel around the country with his Wild West Show.
His group includes an army deserter, a phony doctor and an Indian couple. He has befriended them, and they are now in touch. They have not been paid for six months.
They play the small-town circuit to
half-empty crowds, with the dream of buying a ranch where kids can go for a taste of the old days.
Billy always thinks of the kids, calling them "little pards" and admonishing them to say their prayers and listen to their parents.
The group picks up an heirse, Anonette Lilly, played by D砂Locke Love. As she is by her husband, she is forced by Bily to join the show as his assistant.
There is an old-fashioned charm to the movie, but the "gee whit" sentiments can be too much sometimes. The characters are generally believable but almost too sweet. And Lilly coining "Barroom Buddies" after she and Billy spend the night, is pushing things.
Eastwood's direction is solid, and there are quite a few funny moments. But mostly the movie charms and entertains.
JAZZ UP at Paul Gray's Jazz Place a unique private club upstairs at 926 Mass.
TINY TROMBONE SHOP
tonite: the MIKE BEISNER TRIO 5-8 pm drinks 2 for the price of 1—no cover!
friday: 72nd Birthday Party for
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saturday: Chuck Berg and his Band
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University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
Page 5
Minor parties seek recognition in state and national campaigns
By IAN SIMPSON Staff Renorter
Kansas' minor parties are the grape notes in the fuse of state politics. Their opinions fashioned from arch-conservatism rashened liberalism to Community.
They all suffer from lack of recognition and organization. All but one of the parties join in a common government interference in daily life.
The Prohibition Party changed its name to the Statesman Party because it did not want to appear to be a single-issue organization, Sharon Scoggin, Statesman Party convention secretary pro-tem, said this week.
“To be a politician one thing, and to be a statesman is another.” Scoggin said. “He is more than a politician; he takes a stand on the issues.”
SCOGGIN SAID the party platform included planks opposing the Equal Rights Amendment, the sale of alcohol, and gun legislation. She said the party supported a return to the gold standard, the teaching of the biblical theory of creation, the schools, and mandatory sentencing for persons convicted of drunken driving.
Scoggin said the party had little national organization, and she was not sure of its size.
"It is very difficult for us to get registration," she said, "and it makes it very difficult to have an organization."
She thought the party was active in about 30 states.
Alvin Carvins, Pawnee Rock, was surprised to hear from a reporter he was on the Conservative ticket in Kansas as a presidential candidate. He said he had no plans to campaign, and said he would get little or no funds from the party.
"When we get our platform straightened out, and we have some literature, Carris said, "we might be an idea. The party's not strong, but we've got ideas."
CARRISE SAID his party, when he mailed list of about 2,000, called for a tax reduction of 50 percent, a limited inheritance tax, a stronger military, and less government intervention in the economy and in local government.
Social legislation, said the party's former chairman, Ray Hall, destroyed fundamental freedoms.
"When you give people things, they are no longer able to take care of themselves," he said.
- Hall said that "Please, I'd rather do it myself" summed up the Conservative platform.
Hall said American political opinion divided not on party lines, but on conservative-liberal issues. The canon of John Anderson showed that, he said.
Hall said Anderson was the choice for
president of the Trilateral Commission, a New York-based think tank whose members have included Jimmy Carter and Henry Kissinger.
"The Trilateral Commission is dedicated to the destruction of America as an individual nation," he said.
"WE CONSERVATIVES do not have to broaden our appeal, we have the appeal already. It is the matter of respecting what is which is Triatal-related, Hall said.
The ideas of the Conservative Party are in concert with those of the American Party. George Wallace formed the American Party to run for president in 1968. The party has two nominees on the state ballot in 1972, Frank Shelton, Independence, and John Davis, Tecumseh.
Shelton, who has what he calls "the most patriotic address in America": "Freedom Sentry Ranch, Liberty Township, PO Box 1775, Independence, Indiana, idolized not to run for the United States Senate because of its business."
HE SAID THE national party had broken into state parties, each able to nominate its own candidate for governor. He had nominated Rep. Phillip Crane of Illinois after Ronald Reagan requested his name be withdrawn from the party.
Crane's Washington office had no comment on the nomination.
Davis is running for a seat in the Kansas House of Representatives from the 51st District. He said he wanted greater morality in government.
"Moral decay is the main problem in the United States today," Davis said. "The devil's people have controlled our country too long. That is the problem."
Davis said the country needed more Christians in all levels of government. He said the states in both the major urban and the lower river for the past 50 years."
HE SAID HE was against the Panama Canal treaties, gun control, and government intervention in business and the family. He wanted less government spending and a 50 percent tax cut.
"We should get government off our backs and out of our pockets," Davis said.
The Libertarian Party candidate for president, Ed Clark, is on the Kansas ballot as an independent. His Kansas campaign chairman, George Pearson, said it was easier to file as an individual than a party.
Kansas requires 2,500 signatures to get on the ballot as an independent, or 3 percent of the total votes cast in the previous governor's election—23,000.
"We would love to have permanent status." Pearson said.
Pearson said—to be able to register as a party.
Pearson said the party had a platform based on civil libertarian principles and "18th-century liberalism." It also called for the Libertarians oppose government interference in the marketplace and in local governments, prosecution for vicious crimes, and government laws like mail service and public schools.
TOM PALMER, the national assistant communications director for Clark for President, said he was confident his party would be on all fifty-one ballots in November. He said it would have 960 candidates nationwide.
He said the party received 1.3 million votes in the general elections two years ago.
Pearson said support for the party was growing in the state.
“五 years ago people would say, 'You're Libertarian?', and I'd want to duck below the table. In the past year people are asking, 'Are you Libertarian?' or me about it? People are only interested in an alternative," Pearson said.
KANSA S STATUTES ban the Communist Party from appearing by phone or by mail at the political science instructor at Kansas State University, petitioned to get Gus Hall, the Communist presidential candidate on his behalf, an independent with no party affiliation.
Althoff said he wanted to have the Communist Party on the ballot by 1984. He said he either going to bring suit against the state, seek legislation that would repeal the statute, or a get-ruling court in the attorney general that would overturn it.
The fight to get the Communists on the ballot will be "a long, slow process," he said.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan, June 26.1980
Young marathoner ignores disputes and runs on
By VANCE HINER
Staff Reporter
Seven-year-old Buckminster Cox rolled out of bed at 5:30 Saturday morning. He knew that his usual breakfast of pancakes and syrup would be waiting for him. But first he had to run.
After three and a half hours of pounding his feet against the Lawrence asphalt, his 20-mile run was over. He could return to the things that seven-year-olds do—playing with his toy cars and trucks.
"I just finished a 50-mile marathon in Wyoming," Bucky said of the world record he set last week for his age. He had completed a 1400 miles and then a 24-hour marathon.
SINCE BUCKY WAS five he has been breaking every existing age group marathon record. But no more than 20 children his age compete in the 26-mile, 385-yard races that few adults would even attempt.
Although Burcky's mother, Joan Maxwell, and his stepfather, Ray Foster, 1121 Vermont, train him and are proud of his accomplishments, he wrote in the center of a dispute that began when he was barred from the 1979 KU Marathon.
Articles about Bucky have appeared in magazines such as People and Sports magazine, the Washington World that criticized Bucky's marathon competition was accompanied by the magazine's policy statement against allowing children under 12 to commute.
BOB TIMMONS, head KU track coach, said he kept BUC out of last year's marathon because he thought marathons could be physically and
psychologically detrimental to children.
"I asked myself how a 6-year-old could tell his coach or parents he's not going to run." Timmons said of his decision. "I know I'm not an expert, but before I allow this I've got to see some research done. It could be dangerous."
Bucky's stepfather, a research associate for the Bureau of Child Research, said that no research had been done that indicated physical or psychological injury to children who participate in long distance running.
"A computer search has been done and no information has turned up that supports the criticism." Foster said. "Besides a couple of small blisters, Bucky has had no injuries whatsoever from running."
CHILDREN SHOULD BE watched closely when they run, Foster said, and caution should prevent any serious injury.
"I think that anytime there is any indication that a kid is hurting or being forced to run, he should be immediately disqualified from the race." Foster says kids from the nation nursing. That's like throwing the baby out with the bath water."
Carl Inserillo, Lawrence physician,
saw Bucky as a patient two years ago
and said that at the time he was in
excellent condition.
"As long as he's not having physical injuries it is ours," Inserillo said. "The only problem some doctors see is the risk of getting burns from long distances on hard surfaces."
Timmons said he was concerned about Bucky's reasons for running.
"When you're striving for physical and psychological limits, it's necessary
Bucky said he ran because, "it's fun."
to have the maturity to make your own decisions," Timmons said.
"I want to be in the Olympics," he said.
WHEN PEOPLE visit Bucky for the first time, he always shows them his trophies. There are dozens.
"This big one is what I got in the Jayhawk jog," Bucky said with a smile as he held up a large silver trophy.
KU is Bucky's favorite university and he hopes one day to be on the track team. But trophies and ribbons are not the only things that have inspired him. When he runs smoothly and without complaint, he gets a nickel from his parents.
"What we've done is to set up a token economy," Foster said. "Normally, when children do something they want it Right?" He says he knows when he's doing something right.
"Instead of just doing it a little bit, we put our money where our mouths are."
BUCKY IS NOT allowed to spend the nicks at stores or with friends. In the kitchen at home there is a shelf with toys and objects Bucky has told his parents he wants. When he has saved mother and bargains for one of the toys.
"I've got 328 nickels now," Bucky said as he played with the army truck he recently bought. "I used to have 500."
Foster said Bucky also received nickels for being good.
"Actually, that is what psychologists call assertiveness training." Foster uses it to ease office and cleaning up his room. They are really short-range reinforcers.
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Bucky Cox admires the trophy he won during the recent Jayhawk Jog, which was held in Lawrence.
SR
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
We suggest two ways effort might be made to stop these extreme ads: One is that you face squarely their contents, refuting and showing where they are wrong and in error. Flip the switch in a dark room, and instantly the ads become dark and darkness. "The lip of truth shall be established forever, but a lion tongue is for it a moment." — Prov. 12:19.
SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE
Mick's Bicycle Shop
1339 Massachusetts
There are some who are offended because this column calls attention to these Truths from God's Book, "What churchman should not do?" Churchman, sending one of his own church ads that cries Peace, Peace, but takes no notice of the evil all around about to swamp us! "Extreme conditions" require "Ex-treme conditions" that is loose with a net made to catch "butter-lux."
If there be untruth and lies in these articles you will do us and the public a noble service to expose them. Surely you are not in favor of doing away with freedom of speech and the right to express your opinion and authoritative reasons given for the opinions expressed. To silence one by force instead of debate and argument would be oppression! God's Word says: "Surely oppression makes a wise man mad!" Ecclesi. 7. Hope you have the assumption, or presumption, that you are a wise man?
in our day and century has not God laughed at, held in dersion, spoken in His wrist, and poured contempt upon many a king, prince, or rule? What about the late Czar and Stalin of Russia, the late Kaiser and Hitler of Germany, the former German dictator has not most of the nations, including our own, to drink of "the wine杯 of His wrist and indignation?"
"The heathen rage against God, and His King, seeking to overthrow their Kingdom by doing away with its Laws and Commandments. No kingdom or government can endure them. But God's Kingdom is an everlasting Kingdom that shall not pass away, and men and devils who rage against it will suffer no red iron, and dashed in pieces like a potters' vessel."
Bicycle
MOTOBECANE
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The other suggestion as to what to do to get these extra adms stopped, is that you pray and call on your god for help. We are praying and calling on our God for help. We think your god and curs is not the same! In the 16th chapter of 1st Kings there is the account of the testing of your god with another god, and we will still sit to Elijah's God!
Christ speaking in Luke 12:4, 5 says: "And I say unto you my friends, Be not afraid that they can take the body, and put it on me, but that they can forewear you whom ye shall fear: Fear Him, which after them will hath power to cast into hell; ye, I say unto you, Fear Him."
Another letter has come bitterly attacking this scribe for cowardice, and other "little things" that are not likely to harm her, and that she is still charged for comfort. But we are ashamed of our entire "crop of cowardice," and sincerely hope to overcome and heal.
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BUCKY IS IN the "gifted program" at Cordley School, Maxwell said, and is exceptional in math.
Bucky's mother said her son could choose not to run, but he would not be allowed to run marathons if he did not train.
"This is really what persistence is all about. You can train a pigeon to pick at a stock thousands and thousands of birds. That's what we've done with Bucky."
FOSTER SAID that people often objected to the token system because they thought it harmed Bucky's dignity.
"But Bucky's the one who sets the goals and he does the running," he said. "We just help him assemble the most effective strategy for reaching those goals."
"The only thing we require him to run is three miles a day." Maxwell said. "That's just to keep him healthy. Everything else is his choice."
"Bucky takes piano and ballet lessons," she said. "Running is actually only a small part of his life. It just gets all of the publicity."
Bucky's second-grade teacher, Sandra Sanders, said that he was popular at school, but not because he was a celebrity.
"He's a very sensitive and considerate person," Sanders said. "And he enjoys being the center of attention."
Sanders said there were advantages and disadvantages to Bucky's strenuous training program.
THE GOOD EFFECTS are that it helps Bucky to work toward long-range goals and develop self-discipline.1 Sanders said. "On the other hand, when he's at the peak of his training period, it affects so much energy that other areas suffer."
"Sometimes he's just not able to function as well academically."
Despite the contention over his running, Bucky is more interested in his career than his cat just had than fame. He would wear a hat on the planet Princess Leah is on in "The Empire Strikes Back" or the German pancakes he is going to eat at the Village Hall. Ask him if he ever wants to drink and he will say, "No. Why should I?"
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University Daily Kansan, June 26,1980 Page7
Splittorff, McRae power KC to win
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)—B Paul Splittor and Dan Quisenberry berryed Minnesota to six hits and Hal McRae slammed a two-run City Royals to a 4-1 trumpet at Twins Wednesday night.
splittorff, 5-4, did not allow any runner to get as far as the third base until the ninth inning, when Roy Smalley singled with two out and then scored on a double by Jose Maldonado. Danny Goodwin and retired pinch-hitter Danny Goodwin on an infield grounder to record his 13th save.
Geoff Zahn, 6-10, went all the way for Minnesota. He allowed 10 hits and struck out four.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City took a 24 lead in the second inning, Arnos Otis opened with a single, Willie Aikens walked and John Wathan signed to load the bases. Otis scored when Darrell Porter grounded into a double play, and Aikens scored on a single by Frank White.
McRae, who had struck out in six of his previous nine at-bats, capped the scoring for the Royals when he drove a two-run homer, his fifth of the season, over the left field wall in the sixth inning.
W L W Pct GB
New York 48 17 56
Milwaukee 38 29 57
Detroit 38 30 58
Detroit 30 30 58
Cleveland 33 13 29
Cleveland 33 13 10
Illinois 33 13 17
Kansas City 42 28 600
Chicago 12 38 679 9
Detroit 32 36 150 9
Oakland 31 39 443 11
Miami 39 40 143 12
Minnesota 39 40 143 12
Colorado 39 40 143 12
Washington 2, Oakland 1
Milwaukee 5, Toronto 3
Detroit 13, Chicago 4
Boston 6, York 9, Ottawa 1
Detroit 6, Seattle 1
Rochester 6, Seattle 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W W L W Pct GB
Montreal 35 28 28 1.0 1%
Philadelphia 35 28 315 1.0%
Pittsburgh 35 28 315 4.0%
Chicago 29 28 365 4.0%
Chicago 29 28 417 11%
WEST
Houston 41 20 612 1
Los Angeles 40 29 380 2
San Diego 41 38 449 1
San Francisco 31 38 441 11
Arizona 31 38 441 12
Wednesday's Games
New York 9-11 Chicago 14 Philadelphia 3 Montreal 10, innings Cincinnati 15, Atlanta 3 Sacramento 2 San Diego 7, San Francisco 3
'Hawksqualify at Olympic trials
Clifford Willey, ex-KU spruer, led a bevy of current and former Jayhawk stars as well as the U.S. Olympic and Fielder during yesterday's trials in Eugene, Ore.
By TOM GRESS
Staff Reporter
Wiley, who last ran for KU in 1972, finished second in the 200 meter finals with a 20.54 time at the cold and wet University of Oregon track. James Butler, a former Oklahoma State basketball Adversary led Wiley for the win with a 20.49 time.
"Clifford ran a great race all the way through." Gary Pepin, KU assistant track coach, said last night. "He was poised and in control."
ANOTHER EX-KU star who wore well was pole vaulter Terry Porter. Porter, who competed for KU from 1973 to 1976, made tomorrow's finals when he cleared the qualifying height of 17-ft. He could be one of the favorites in the finals.
"He jumped real well today," he said. "He's got a good shot at winning it."
Former Jayhawk and four-time Olympic discus champion A尔勒 Otert failed in his bid to make the Olympic team for a fifth time. Otert was in third place, good enough to qualify, when the final round began, but former Blunke hatched over Otert thrower Ben Plunket hitter of Otert with a 121-foot shot. Otert's best throw was 215-7. Mac Wilken won the event with a 225-foot toss.
Oerter, 41, received a standing ovation after the competition
"Stan had a fine race and almost made it, but Deen probably had his worst战 the outdoor season," Pepin said. "I don't think the cold weather bothered Hogan but he just couldn't run well.
the top four from the two heats went to the finals.
"It was terrific," Pepin said. "The fans just kept going and going. I had
Stubblefield, the Kansas City high school who has yet to decide whether to attend KU or Arkansas State, also didn't make the height.
KU has one athlete left in the trials.
Higher jumper Joel Løel, who had his best jump of 7-2 against the University of Oregon in Eugene last April, completes Saturday. The opening height in the Trials' will be 7*13^4.
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Pole vaulter Jeff Buckingham failed to clear the qualifying height. Steve
Stan Whitaker and Deon Hogan both tailed to make the finals of the 400 meter. Whitaker finished fifth in his heat, a 47.54 to seventh in his heat. Only
THE SUCCESS FORMER KU athletes had did not carry over to the current KU stars competing in the meet.
tears in my eyes."
Owolabi looks to 1984 Olympics
By TOM GRESS
Actually Owolabi already had two good jumps that could have propelled him from Saturday's qualifying round into Sunday's final. But Owolabi's foot left edge the takeoff board on jumps, disqualifying him each time.
EARNING A SPOT on the Olympic team would have capped a year that many jumpers would be envious of. Owolabi led the NCAA indoor championship in March when he popped a 54-46 jump. On June 7, he won a $13% jump that gave him second place at the NCAA outdoor championships.
Sanya *Owolabi*, KU triple-jumper, need one good jump at last Saturday's Olympic Track and Field trials to see his chances at becoming an Olympian.
through the qualifying round, the prelims and got that good jump in the finals. It just all came together."
"I'm already looking forward to 1984," Owlabi said. "I had a good season, a big improvement over his freshman year, so it wasn't so bad."
Had Owolabi not fouled on the two jumps, he would have had a good chance at finishing in the top three, the placing needed to earn a spot on the Olympic team. Owolabi's best jump is 54-11%, not off warille Banks' win, but off 83% at the trials. But Owolabi did not leave the trials disappointed.
Staff Reporter
SO ON HIS third and final jump, Owolabi approached the board cautiously and leaped 51 feet, about two to three feet short of his usual jump. He landed with missed qualifying because only the top 12 jumpers went to the finals.
It didn't all come together at the trials, however, and Owolabi is now looking for consistency.
"At the outdoors I kept com up short of the board. It was the opposite of the problem I had at the trials, and I was worried," he said. "But I got
"They were good jumps." Owolabi said about the tainted leaps. "They were good enough to get me qualified. But the official said I was over."
Although the United States isn't going to the Moscow Olympics because of the boycott over the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the trials were still held. Owolabi thought the boycott took away the importance of the meet.
"It was just another meet," he said. "OWOLABI HAS ONE more meet left this summer, a July 3 invitational in Canada. After that meet he said he would spend the rest of the summer training and studying."
"Things didn't go the way I hoped,
but I learned a let that will help me later,
Owlabi said. "I'm still young."
A jumper doesn't hit his prime until he is 25. I'm 19."
"All the men are in Europe and I'm going to summer school," he said. "I's pretty tough to go to men in Europe in summer school at the same time."
Owolabi wants to improve me, his
His goal is to win both the indoor and
outdoor championships and he will be 24,
the tropics in 1848, when he'll be 24, he
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STUDIO 600
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan, June 26.1980
CETA loses job funds
By SUSANA NAMNUM
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Congress last week approved a 1981 federal budget that would slice in half the number of Comprehensive Em-
ploysment Act Public Service jobs nationwide.
It could cost Lawrence at least 30 jobs and thousands of federal dollars, and could increase unemployment, CETA officials said this week.
CETA was created in 1973 as a consolidation of various Department of Labor programs and is completely funded by the federal government.
OFFICIALS IN LAWRENCE and Topeka agreed that in times of tight money, CETA funds were the first to get the Congressional ax.
They also said that CETA's Public Service Employment (PSE) jobs, which place people with non-profit organizations, might be the first to go.
CETA also sponsors educational programs with vocational and technical schools, job training with private internships, summer and in-school youth programs.
Debbie Smith, who directs the Lawrence CETA program, said 220 youths were enrolled in the city's summer program and roughly 80 adults were active participants in the city's job-training programs.
LAWRENCE AND TOPEKA CETA directors said some of their participants were divorced or widowed mothers with eight-grade educations, girls just out of high school who were pregnant and without job skills, and 18-year-old youths with families to support.
Although Title VI funds—under which many CETA jobs fall—have been frozen by the federal government, Lawrence and Topea officials predicted that rising unemployment would preclude drastic cutbacks.
Some Lawrence organizations that sponsor CETA trainees are the Douglas County Drug Abuse Center; Independence Inc., a center for the handicapped; Project Acceptance and Ballard Dav Care Center.
Torn Rodriqueu, a CETA information officer in Topeka, said 1981 funds had been cut "across the board" and Title VI allocations had been slashed.
CREATED AS A means of combating unemployment, CETA programs fall under sections of Title II, which focuses on training, and of Title VI, which emphasizes employment. Different security standards also distinguish the two.
According to program directors, Lawrence currently has about 60 active PSE participants and Topkai has about 40. The other 25 fall under Title VI, the directors said.
Although officials predicted that those affected by the Title VI cutbacks could be shuffled under the Title II umbrella, for some, slashed the CETA in half could "shatter their words," said a one-time CETA participant.
"If it hadn't been for CETA," former participant Debbie Richardson said, "quite honestly I would've been sitting at home on the welfare rolls."
RICHARDSON SOUGHT HELP from CETA on April 10, 1975, when she was a young, pennille mother of three children. After working seven months under Title II as a receptionist in CETA's administrative office in Topeka, she was pregnant again, then widowed.
"CETA was a lifesaver and an inspiration," said Richardson, who joined the program as an administrative assistant, Title VI Topeka program manager and then director of a federally-funded day care staffed mainly by CETA participants.
Another CETA success story is Juana Prattia, who runs the computer in Lawrence's Job Service Center and administers Civil Service tests.
Bridget Doyle, Lawrence PSE coordinator, said Pringle had been hired under Title VI a year and a half before being promoted to a permanent position.
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IN ITS EARLIER stages, CETA came under fire because its trainees tended to jump from one subsidized job to another rather than seek permanent positions. The program also was cited as an example of the cases that CETA officials said constituted only a tiny percentage of the program.
James Weekly, Topека PSE program manager, said CETA funding was endangered and was immersed in the emples. The programs included more federal programs. He said that more than 70 percent of his participants stayed in permanent jobs, and that slashing CETA funds would be a foolish move in times of high
J. W. Murray, public information officer for the Kansas CETA program, which serves 101 of 105 Kansas counties, said, "CETA is one of Congress' favorite playthings. What they'll do from here to be seen."
"They found a woman in San Francisco who had a CETA job and was living in a $100,000 house," Rodriguez said. "The public decided that CETA was a fraud, so Congress cut back and revamped the program."
Government predictions for the quarter ending July 31 reflect an economic activity drop of 8 percent. The depression did not drop on record since the Depression of the 1930's but local retailers, bankers, employers, realtors and car dealers said this week that the labor market is more than the dismal national trend.
Hundreds of people are looking for work in Lawrence, but an improving local economy is indicated.
By RANDY MARTIN Staff Reporter
Unemployment in Lawrence is at a 4.5 percent level, compared to the Kansas City rate of 13 percent, Freq of the Lawrence Job Center said.
Lawrence economy improving
LAWRENCE HASH has a relatively low employment rate because the University of Kansas has a stabilization program, and the University, the largest employer in Lawrence, has a freeze on new positions, but vacancies and replacements.
Bob Glass, of the KU Institute of Business and Economic Research, said Douglas County usually had a slight increase in employment and
sales in the spring months. But several local business people said the current increase was more than a spring spurt.
Food service chains are also a solid area in the Lawrence employment picture, Francq said, because students provide abundant business.
The construction business ... Lawrence has suffered recently, Fortune reports. Lawrence Building Inspectors Office revealed that building permits are up for the month of June. Sixty-seven permits were issued in April 2014.
Local employers have had to use rotating lay-offs, he said, a situation where a few employees will take off each week but stay on the payroll.
Iona Ramsy, real estate agent for Stephans Realty, said that trends discussed at recent local realtors' meetings indicated that houses were being sold faster than a few months ago.
Linhardt said the public still was not borrowing as much money as could be expected with such low interest rates, would not drop lower than 11 percent.
SHE SAID many people who hesitated to buy in the early spring months were now looking at houses again.
Much of the increase is because of falling interest rates in the area. Bill Linhardt, officer at the First National Bank, said that loans for single family dwellings at 12.25 percent.
KANSAS COLOR PRESS put all employees on one week vacation recently to allow work orders to be processed and they eliminate the likelihood of layoff.
Jose Perez, assistant manager at Montgomery Wards, said sales were down significantly in March and April but had been higher in June.
John Ellenna, general manager of Ellena Buick-Oldmobile, and Jon Bomberger, owner of Landmark at local car dealers had increased.
Clinton White, manager for the K-Mark Distribution Center at 240 Kresge Road, said the goods distributed to Lawrence stores were up 15 percent last quarter. Profits had decreased 13 percent, he said, but it was good considering the general economic situation.
Staff Reporter
By NANCY SEARLE
Meteorology program swamped
Meteorology students who want jobs with the National Weather Service have to take correspondence courses. Students who are not offered at the University of Kansas.
This is just one of the students' problems when they try to major in meteorology, but not the only full-time professor of meteorology, said it was sometimes difficult for students to get into the course because they had no experience with it.
Meteorology is becoming more popular, possibly because of increased job opportunities, Eagleman said.
More jobs are opening for meteorologists with industry and with radio and television stations, he said.
Although special degrees are intended to offer specialized opportunities for study, a regular degree for meteorology students will be impossible until more meteorology instructors are hired. Earleman said.
Students who want a degree in meteorology must petition for a special degree, Eagleman said. So far, 46 degrees in meteorology have been颁授 in special degrees in meteorology, he said.
Bruce Linton, director of the Radio-TV-Film sequence in the School of Journalism said there are only 700 television stations in the country. He also said not many radio stations can afford to hire meteorologists.
Glen Marotz, chairman of the department of geography-meteorology, said, "The department has decided, at least this point, that it will not go
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forward with a regular degree."
Until the last few years, many meteorology students transferred to other schools, he said. Within the last two years, more students have been hired for the CU weather service, and the experience they can get working for the CU Weather Service, he said.
The weather service has been a factor in the hiring of some students, he
said. "It is a competitive edge over some of the big schools," he said.
Meanwhile, he said, "We have the interest; we are twnet between turning students off for their interest, and waiting to get the staff so we can really know what should be. We just don't have the staff to properly treat that many students."
KU ID deception unnecessaryv
Although part of the spring semester activity fee supports KU recreation services in summer, students without summer stockers on their IDs think they must break the rules to use the facilities.
But they don't have to.
Bernie Taylor, KU pool director, said yesterday, recreation services wanted to help students not enrolled during the summer.
If a student was enrolled in the spring
Who is that KEG-MAN ?
Matt Davis, student body vice president, said he was unhappy that students thought they had to use other students' IDs to use the facilities.
People can borrow an enrolled student's ID or get in without an ID by telling the guard an ID number.
Taylor said although the guards are not supposed to let people in without an ID, they usually tell the person to be taken into ID the next time, and then let them in.
One girl, who is not a student, said she was going to use an enrolled student's ID every day she could this summer.
"We operate on the assumption that people are honest," he said.
but could not use the municipal swimming pool downtown in the city to participate in an arrangement with Taylor, Tom Wilkerson, director of recreation services, or Wayne Osmens, head of the recreation department at education and recreation, Taylor said.
Most students are not aware of this policy, so they use other methods to get into the pool.
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University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
Page 9
Births
from page 1
maternal death rate is about 80 for every 100,000 home deliveries, compared to the overall U.S. average of 2 for every 100,000 for hospital deliveries, he said.
In February 1978, a breech baby, was born feet first, with the help of laymivides in Lawrence. The baby died.
Wilcox said, "Home birth was common years ago, but with the better odds today, infant death rates have been added to fantastically low numbers."
HERMES ATTRIBUTED PART of the doctors' unwillingness to provide prenatal care for home deliveries to the potential of m.practice suits. He also said doctors avoided home deliveries for economic reasons.
"Right now," he said, "I have two women in labor at the hospital, right across the street. It would not be possible for me to spend 24 hours with them and deliver at home, especially with the number of deliveries in this community."
One local general practitioner, Carl E. Olson, said he would provide prenatal care for women interested in home birth.
"I will provide the care for them," he said, "as long as they understand that they will have no medical backup by me and I will be responsible, no legal responsibility for the birth."
Catherine Dryden, a Lawrence woman whose baby was delivered at home by birth attendants, said she knew that Olson provided prenatal care
. .
without medical backup, but still chose to go to Topeka for care.
"I KNEW THE obstetricians in Lawrence were hostile toward the idea of home birth," she said, "so I did not actually confront any of them and demand that they give me prenatal care. I knew that they would refuse it.
"With the Topeka physicians, you can say you are planning a home birth, and they think it's a responsible decision. They do not use the scare tactics on you or their patients and use in Lawrence. They give you a lot of emotional and physical support."
Deby Herren, a Lawrence mother of four, delivered her last two children at home with the help of birth attendants.
"I had my first home delivery around the time a baby died," Herren said, "and there was all that flap about home deliveries in Lawrence. I had a backup doctor who had taken care of me during my first two pregnancies.
"With my last pregnancy, I went to him again and told him that I wanted prenatal care, but that I was going to have the baby at home. He agreed to give me the care, but said that he would not be involved in the birth. This was a shame," she said. "He particularly interested in having him at the birth."
ALL THREE WOMEN declined to give the names of their birth attendents to protect their identities.
Buck, president of the Kansas Obstetrical and Gynaecological Society, said that at the group's May meeting, a woman in opposing home birth was approved.
Fad diets mix fact with fiction
Unaware of the harm fad diets can cause, dieters turn to any number of them in an attempt to shed unwanted pounds.
The diet sounds simple. The first week eat nine wieners a day, the second week nine bananas, the third week nine berries, the fourth week nine wieners, three bananas and three eggs.
--minded cars
F. Gene Martin, professor of Pharmacy, said yesterday that anytime a balanced diet was replaced with a fad diet, the dieter runs the risk of nutritional complications resulting from high complexes or nutrient deficiencies in the diet plan.
One of the newest weight loss schemes was invented by the pharmaceutical companies which market diet pills promising to curb the app
"Over the counter diet pillies are safe and effective for short term use," Martin said, "but will lose their effectiveness after several weeks."
Rv SHAWN McKAY
Where economy comes first
Staff Reporter
MARTIN SAID THAT the main problem with the diet pills occurred when an overdose was taken.
"Many people believe that if one works well, three will work better," he said. "This can excessively stimulate the heart and blood pressure, running a risk of too much cardiovascular stimulation."
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Marsee Bates, diettian at Watkins Hospital, said there had been an increase in the number of students enrolled in the program at Watkins in the past three years.
"It goes in cycles," she said. "More students come in before and after the holidays and right before spring break. The problem is that people come in two weeks before they go to Padre Island to swim, all of their winter fat before they leave."
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BATES SAID a great deal of misinformation existed about fad diets.
"The Food and Drug Administration has advised people with high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, thyroid disease to avoid using the drug," he said.
"It gets hard to decide what is factual and what is not," she said. "Some fad, some mix fact with fiction so some students take it seriously as basics on the diet."
The high protein-low carbohydrate diet is the most popular among students. Bates said.
"If you don't get sufficient carbohydrates to provide protein to the body, the digestive system may begin to break down and produce key residue product called 'keytons' can
The drug works as a stimulant on the central nervous system which suppresses the appetite center, according to Martin.
MANY TIMES THE person will experience, fatigue, light-headedness, headaches, loss of appetite or pain when he develops a lack of protein. Hates said.
Marie Cross, a nutritionist, said any diet should supply all the essential nutrients, not limit caloric intake to less than 250 calories to train the食 habites of the dieter.
"Liquid diet mixtures give you the essential nutrients," she said, "but when you go off the diet you go right back." "If you're on the diet and you put the weight right back on."
Liquid protein diets are a dangerous alternative. Cross said.
"Liquid protein upsets the electrolyte balance and gives a pretty good jar to the body," she said. "The mineral imbalanced because by the liquid protein diets can have a rather dire effect on the heart."
SEVERAL DEATHS HAVE been attributed to the liquid protein plans and the FDA now requires manufacture, place a warning on the products.
accumulate in the blood and cause an added stress to the renal system."
Cross also cautioned against extended fasting.
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The University Daily
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KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Students—to Malls Bookshop for Western Civ Analysis, Magazines, Halmark cards, George Booth cards, Posters and more! **6-28**
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER: Scholarly. Literary.
We also buy, sell and trade good condition
books on behalf of students at
scholars' and scholars' in all fields. 1401 Mansur
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FREE BEER—GREAT SHOWS! The Lawrence Opera House. This ad good for a free charge if presented when you pay cover charge this Thursday, Friday or Saturday.
FOR RENT
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These contemporary studios and 1-bedrooms are completely furnished and rental starts from only $195 per month. Sundance is concluding in Florida, just west of the San Antonio. On KU bus route Water paid
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COOPERATIVE LIVING-established student cooperative, located in easy walkway to the campus and town lawrence. Private room rent $80-$120 including utilities and supply. Call 812-456-3030.
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THE CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE has a few openings for the upcoming school year. Become an active part in this growing campus ministry. Call 642-853-1888 at 6-31.
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Excellent. Condition $^{40}$, 843-263-86.
Wait, the text is:
Bicycle—Nishiki custom sportman $^{23}$ '10-5
Excellent. Condition $^{40}$, 843-263-86.
1977 Pentia Ventura V-6, 4 door, auto-
1977 Pentia Ventura V-6, 4 door, auto-
841 call 841-6191, keep trying 6-30
90 miles per gallon. 1979 Honda CT 90 street/trail motorcycle Excellent condition. Call 841-3933. 6-26
1969 MGB convertible AM-MF cassette,
good condition, at 1007 West 27th $-1900.
Complete set of Arica books from the 40-
Day Training. Call Ruth, 843-5272. Keep
trying.
7-3
TENNIS RACKET. Donny graphic, wood.
Beautiful responsive frame string with
Blaque fantasy gun fit. (90 day guarantee).
Contact C. Geit 822-545-8311. 3-630
1964 12X55 mobile home. All major appliances with AC. $4,500. 843-1889 afternoons & evenings. 7-10
FOUND
Keys behind Watkins. 4 keys; Subaru and office keys. 841-9234. 6-26
Found envelope belonging to Joan Guerrer
Kansas Union Dell Call All 23
@ 864-4170
Open July 1. Student Senate Executive Secretary, $150-$200 per month, 20 hours per medical and administrative capability required. Apply 105 B and Kanaka university, 864-3710. 6-30
TONIGHT
One Show-8:30
THE ROCKY
HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
When life stares at
7 West
Lawrence
Opera House
612 Mass St. Lawrence, OH 43020 (813) 842-6931
The University of Kansas, Student Association, will accept applications available July 1, 1860. This semester programs and services for people with disabilities will include a variety of federal regulations that impact students and faculty who make inquiries to our kind; and other resources that support their learning. Training and or experience grants per semester deadline June 27, 1860. Come by the Student Affairs Office at 464-6404 for a position description.
★★★★★★★★★★
TONIGHT
One Show-9:30
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW
50' off cover charge with this ad any night this week.
★ Friday ★
SOUTHERN FRIED
★ Saturday ★
THE ARTISTS
Where the stars are
Jawrence Opera House
642 Mass. Lawrence, KS 98124-6420
**Lecturer in Art History. Temporary, part-time (3). facility payable. PhD. D in art history, specializing in American Modern art, with a focus on the graphic arts and contemporary art. Research and publications preferred. To teach one course survey of America from 1900 to 2000, specialized in spring. 1811. salary: $5,500 per year; apply for position of application with resume and历来 experience
Wanted: Spanish-spaking pianist instructor
Specially trained yet humble, cute yet manicured tabooed instrument. Must also have fabulous taste in music. Size and sex are optional. Libraries, Size and sex are optional. Libraries, Size and sex are optional. Libraries, Size and sex are optional.
For growth. Position available imminently. Send resumes to: Sisters Twin Oaks Music Conservatory and Veterinary Center, 393 Sunset Drive, #26
KS 80044
Coordinator-Coordinator, Adult Life Resource D U. seeks half-tail appointment Aug. 1. Perform data management D U. serves half-tail appointment Aug. 1. MA in guidance and counseling or related field. Prior experience as a career adult care provider. Sensitivity to communication skills required. Work shop with CMC, Vivian McKenna Cooper, JCMC, Vivian McKenna Cooper, JCMC 1980, Vivian McKenna Cooper, JCMC 1980 or call 914-3644-7999
Wanted: Female bartenders, Time Out and The Huddle. Apply in person. Ask for Terry, 2406 Iowa. 6-30
The University of Kansas Budget Office has announced that it will be available July 18th. The position will assist with transferring for the Universities $1.5 million in financial aid and will also help with the technical preparation of the position. Assuming this position will gain a good exposure to public funding accounting and have experience in the financial environment. Acceptance in the position will require a Bachelor's degree and good written work. Candidates must also apply time beginning August 26th. For information about the job, go to www.ku.edu/budget-office-343.
343-136, applications available in 39 Strong
NOTICE
MUSIC LESSONS-Guilt banjo, mandolin from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock jazz bansque and folk styles. Experienced bass Calf Kurt at Stave Mason 841-807-168.
6-30
Homeless junior looking for fall accommodations. Prefer house, high ceiling. Oread Neighborhood, Jeanie, 841-2823. 6-30
PERSONAL
Can't afford or find a local attorney? Call Legal Aid 864-5564. tf
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - abortions up to 30 weeks
Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For appointment call: 9 AM to 5 PM (193) 624-8000. 4401 W. Hill St. Overland Park, PA 16704
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and
Wednesday evening. Call Bob Bohl 864-4911
for 5, 842-1136 nights.
PRENATAL AND need help? Call BHL
PROGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH-
RIGHT 843-4621. 6-31
SERVICES OFFERED
Try the summer special at the cool Harbor
Auction. Buy a golf bag or a nightly during summer school. $1 pitchers for during softball games. And try a sandwich
deli-like and get a discount on your next life-and get a discount on your next
Wanted—Female softball players for city league coed team. Games played on Sundays. Call 842-6700. 6-26
Pepal hour! 10c off all soft drinks. Small 35, medium 35, and large 45! Bucky's, 2120 W. 9th. 6-26
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-
4099. tf
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE, 841-
4099.
Accurate, experienced typist IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna. 842-2744. tf
TUTOR: English 101, 102. Experienced in
K.U. system. $3 per hour. Contact Margle,
4-4050. 6-26
Mercury Skates Outdoor Roller Skating seven hours - 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. at 13th and 18th $1.50 per hour or 1 hour min. Please bring picture ID and seals. To Kill.
Thesis dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4476 for reservations. tr
Women—Are you bored? Is your daily routine boring? Are you tired of life? We have the solution! Two college courses are an untenewful summer into one you can take at a local university if interested call Alex or Bob at 843-285-9701.
Printing While You Wall is available with Alice at the House of Ushers Quick Copy from 9 a.m. to 8 a.m. to p.m. Monday to Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at 838 Mass.
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutor can help you through courses 002, 102, 115, 116, 121, 122, 123, 558. One-time test rates. Reasonable rates. Call 814-7497.
TENNIS LESSONS. From an experienced instructor. Beginner. intermediate sessions begin Monday, June 30th. Details: C. Gels. 825-558, 841-355. 6-30
TYPING
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc.
Betty. 842-6697 after 5 weeks. **tf**
Typtist/Editor, IBM Pica/Ellen Quality work,
fingerprinting, and customizing layouts /IBM 942-8137 /tf.
Experiential typtist, IBM Correcting Select-
ness, Sandy, evening and weekends. 942-8138
tf. Experiential Typtist-term paper, papers,
paper letters, and reports. 942-8139 tf. Spiral
corrected, spotted. 942-8140, Mrs. Wright.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast, re-
liable. accurate. IBM picture/elite. 842-2507
evenings to 11:00 and weekends. ff
Your originals deserve an Encore! Encore Copy, 842-2001. If
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-
4476. If
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-
Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations,
term papers, mise. IBM correcting selectite.
Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-231. tf
Experience typist wants to do summer
job. Send resume to:
hilary.d.askew@uva.edu
hilary.call 817-392-3095, ack for Gavin.
7-17
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms
Reports on legal cases, legal issues
Elan or Jeannean. 841-212-731. 7-31
Experienced typist, with carbon ribbon bill
encapsulation. Resumes. 842-154-846. 6-30
Dissertations. Call 842-154-846. 6-30
Liberal female needed to share nice 3 bedroom house. Located close to campus with two females. Call 841-0072. 6-30
WANTED
Female roommate for summer. Large 5 bedroom house, Clean, cleaned. Available now or July 1. Come see! 1301 Vermon. 842-4456. 7-7
Roommate to share furnished 3 bdm. room for summer. A.C., dishwasher, waker/dryer, stereo, cable TV, $120 month. Utilities free. 814-1634. 7-7
Mature, non-smoking female roommate starting August, $135/month apartment on Tennessee, own room. Write: Grad Student. 128 Stanton, Iowa, Ameso 50104. 7-10
K. U. witness, Professor, single male, wants to rent furnished apartment, Aug. 15-Dec. 20 approx. Write with information: Kissam, rm. 202, New Green Hall. 7-7
Female roommate for furnished 2 bedroom apt. with storage, AC. Within 5 minutes of KU and shops. $130 + 1$ utilities. Call 81-686-842 or 847-1077. 7-7
Housemate needed: $85 mo. + share of utilities.
842-1306 after 5. 7-7
The University Daily
SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T!
LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 7,500 PLUS
ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM
If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansas to: University Daily Kansas. 111 Flint Law, Lawrence. Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Sell Power!
CLASSIFIED HEADING;
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Page 10 University Daily Kansan, June 26, 1980
ONE FOR THE ROAD
Test-drive some of the best auto-audio buys of the summer!
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140 watt booster for your car stereo, ultra-low distortion.
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Cassette deck with Ferrite heads, Dolby, and Sony's "no cog" motor.
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SONY TC-K35 CASSETTE DECK
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This deluxe radio has a leatherette case and AC/battery operation.
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SANYO VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDER
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NOT AS SHOWN
Some of these items are one of a kind and limited to store stock only. Emporia . Lawrence . Manhattan . Topeka . Salina
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NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS
The University Daily
University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
Vol. 90, No. 150 Monday, June 30, 1980
ALEXANDRA SCHNEIDER
CHUCK ISAACSON/Kansan staff
Rozelle Sanderson of the Samaritan Lodge Adult Care Home points out weeds to pull in a garden tended by Bridge Goebel, 1 of, Lawrence and other children from the New York Elementary School. The grade school children and residents of the home are growing a garden together in an effort to better unite the elderly with the Lawrence community. See related story back page.
Yearbook's future uncertain
By TAMMI HARBERT
Staff Reporter
The 1981 Jayhawker yearbook may be the last one published because of its unsuccessful business dealings with Rappaport Studios last spring.
"The 1980 Jayhawker is badly broke." Tom Yoe, adviser to the yearbook and assistant director of internal publications for University Relations said last week.
The yearbook spent 88,000 in advertising and clerical expenses to process students having their pictures taken. Rappaport was supposed to reimburse the Jayhawker.
But the company, based in New York, has disapeared.
Although the Kansas attorney general's office
allough to locate the owners, the owner has little
interest in them.
"The attorney general's office is not overly hopeful, and frankly I not," he said.
DESPITE $14,000 in a reserve fund, printing
costs for the 1980 Jayhawker must be still被聘, Yoe said. He said he was not sure how much the costs would be, and had no idea how much would be left in reserve.
Usually, the yearbook starts financially from the sale of yearbooks and资金 from the sale of yearbooks at enrollment.
Yoe said he feared sales would be down this year, and the company plans to survive on reserve funds.
However, if reserve funds are depleted and yearbook sales do not increase, Ye said the yearbooks must be sold.
"Theoretically, the 1811 Jayhawker may be the last one we have." he said.
PAM McCOY, of the consumer complaint division of the attorney general's office, said Rappaport's telephone had been disconnected and he received no reply to letters of inquiry to the company.
She said the office was working with the New
York attorney general to try to locate the owners of the company,
McCoy said the office had received many requests for photos that did not receive photos ordered from Rampart.
The other students have received negatives of their photographs and a letter explaining that the company has run out of money. The letter also suggests that the student find another photography company to make the prints. No refunds have been received. McCov said.
About half of the 150 students who filed complaint with the office, have received their oration.
YOE SAID HE did not know how many seniors had ordered pictures from the company, but anyone who did not receive an order should contact the attorney general's office in Topeka.
Police, city near agreement
"They should send them a letter explaining their situation," he said.
"I don't think the attorney general is overly optimistic about getting anything," he said.
By MARK PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence Police Officers Association and the city of Lawrence are very close to signing a new working agreement according to Gary Sampson, chairman of the LPOA.
Although Sampson would not discuss the terms of the agreement, he said. "In 24 hours, anything happened," he told reporters.
Sampamon had two meetings yesterday to discuss the proposals of both sides. Sampamon and Harun had a meeting on Wednesday.
"Things are happening, we're making some movement," Sampson said.
HOWEWER, KEVIN BURT, chief negotiator
of the treaty for that today was the
end of formal offers for it.
If the issue is not solved today, he said, the matter will be taken to the Lawcourt City Commission.
"I don't think we should beg them to take a voluntary agreement." Burt said.
According to Burt, the city would submit a one-year agreement to the commission containing a 10 percent pay raise and a provision for a bigger payroll tax. The commission this as a "bare bones" benefit "by the city."
Burt said the city's final offer of a 19 percent salary raise over two years was generous enough and that the LPOA had returned to its previous demand of a one-year salary raise of 18 percent.
"One side is going to be unhappy if the situation goes to the commission," Burt said. "There's no sense in making anyone unhappy for more than a year."
SAMPSON SAID THE comprehensive written agreement he had hoped for was still out of reach.
"Sooner or later, a federal or state agency is going to have to step in," Samspson said. "We need a disinterested party to come in, listen to them and come up with a fair and just agreement."
He said Lawrence must eventually adopt a school-based municipal employees involved in emergency work.
Lawrence is one of a few cities in Kansas which has elected not to have arbitration with municipalities.
Chancellor search committee appointed
By DAVID STIPP
Staff Reporter
Wanted: an individual dedicated to higher education, with impressive administrative experience and academic credentials, who can stimulate the flow of ideas from teacher to student and of dollars from state capital to university.
If you meet these requirements and are an
aggressive self-starter, contact the search committee for permanent chancellor at the University of Kansas, whose first meeting will be at KU this week.
THE 12 MEMBERS of the Search Committee, formally appointed Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents, are George Woolf, chairman of the board, and Michael Kleinberg, professor of chemistry; Ross
Mckinney, N.T. Veach professor of civil engineering; David Robinson, professor of surgery at the KU College of Health Sciences; Greg Schnacke, student body president; Matthew Davis, student body vice president; Michele Van Lawrence graduate student; Anita Sauerwen, a senior in nursing at the College of Health Sciences; Frank R. Becker, president of
see SEARCH back page
Agent Orange sickens Vietnam vets, offspring
Staff Reporter
By HURST LAVIANA
Jimmy "Sail" Tucker once watched the greenery around the air base at Bien Hua, Vietnam, shrieval and die but he had no way of knowing that the chemical killing the vegetation, Agent Orange, contained traces of one of the most toxic synthetic substances known to man.
The U.S. Department of Defense sprayed 109 million gallons of Agent Orange, a potent defoliant, over nearly four million acres of Vietnamese forests between 1966 and 1970.
TUCKER, 1613 KENWOOD, a former KU student, said last week, that during his tour in Vietnam, which lasted from July 1968 through July 1969, he often came into contact with areas where he was suspected of being. He said these areas looked as if someone had scoured the land with a silent death ray.
"It strangled the life out of everything," he said. "It was like wintertime. There were some areas that were four, maybe five, miles wide, and it was snowing. It almost seemed like it went on forever."
In 1970, scientists discovered that Agent Orange was contaminated with small amounts of dioxin, and the program was scrapped. By that time, the only source of dioxin by dioxin, a chemical that is toxic even in extremely small quantities. The Food and Drug Administration has estimated that dioxin is 100,000 to one million times as potent as organic pesticides in children whose parents were exposed to it.
IN JUNE 1976, five years after he was discharged from the Air Force, Tucker began to feel numbness and pains in his head, back and left hand. It did not occur to him that these were in any way related to Vietnam, Agent Orange or dioxin.
"I thought it was just a sign of age." Tucker said.
The immediate effect of exposure to dioxin is a rash called chloracne. Although little is known about its long-term effects, some doctors now think that dioxin can be stored in fatty tissues and remain dormant for years. If the doctors are right, thousands of veterans who were exposed to Orange or Mistral toxins will be waiting until Tucker's bomb exploded in July 1976.
"It was like someone had stuck an ice pick in my back," he said. "The pain shot up into my head, and it felt like it had been split open. Then it fell on the skin of lightening bottle, with little fingers coming off it."
P. L. C. M. S. 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.
He said his left hand was completely numb for the next two months.
DURING THE NEXT three years Tucker went through four hospitals and more than a dozen doctors and was still unable to find out what was wrong with him. Last spring he saw a newspaper article about Agent Orange, and the pieces finally began to fall toogether.
Willie Tucker
Another study showed a disproportionate number of miscarriages among women living in Alsea, Ore., near areas where 2,4,5-T had been spraed.
Agent Orange, which is no longer manufactured, was a 50-50 mix of two potent herbicides—2.4-L-T and 2.4-D. Last year the Environmental Protection Agency suspended most uses of 2.4-L-T because of a study that linked the herbicide to miscarriages and cancer in animals.
“It’s weird, but it just never clicked,” he said. I never thought they would be using in vivo cameras.
studies are inconclusive, and points out that the 2,4,5-T it manufactures today contains only one-fifth the concentrations of dioxin that were present in Agent Orange. Nevertheless, the EPA has refused to lift its tight restrictions on the herbicide.
DOW CHEMICAL, the company that manufactured most of Agent Orange and that is most responsible for the contamination 2.4.5 x cm².
Tucker's symptoms are similar to those of hundreds of other Vietnam veterans who served in areas where Agent Orange was sprayed. The symptoms include headaches, fatigue, insomnia,
"I don't want to have it," hew said. "I don't want to admit that I have it, but I know there a
Tucker thinks there is a strong possibility that he is suffering from dioxin poisoning.
dizzy spells, stomach pains, nervousness, concentration disturbances and birth defects in
TUCKER'S FIVE-YEAR-OLD son, who was born with bowed legs, was forced to wear leg braces for six months. Tucker said his inability to concentrate forced him to withdraw from the University of Kansas during his third semester, in November 1979
His most severe attacks came during times when he was losing weight, Tucker said. He said he has lost more than 30 pounds since he was discharged from the Air Force, but that his weight is now back on the pains are less. But, he said the numbness has begun to spread into his feet and legs.
Tucker is currently seeing a neurologist at the Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo, and is being treated with anti-inflammatory drugs. He said doctors at the Veterans Administration hospitals in Topeka and Kansas City were no help at all.
Physicians at those hospitals told him his problem was psychological. Psychologists told him his problem was physical. Finally he was who would just have to learn to live with the man, he knew.
"They don't want to treat Agent Orange vicinity at Tucker said. "The head of the VA demonstrates that."
VETERANS ACROSS THE COUNTRY are having similar problems with the Veterans Administration's disability claims based on exposure to Agent Orange. It has allowed only three—each to servicemen with scars left by chloracne. The VA contends that there is no evidence to link Agent Orange to cancer.
Jimmy Sparrow, a spokesman for Agent Orange Victims International, which provides
counseling and referral services to veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange, estimated there were 55,000 critically ill victims of Agent Orange poisoning in the United States.
"It's shocking," he said. "The more press we get, the more they come out." He said that as many as two million veterans may have been exposed to Agent Orange in Vietnam.
"If you drank the water over there, there's a risk you have it," Sparrow said. He said rain could have washed the herbicide off the leaves and contaminated water supplies.
LAST YEAR CONGRESS ordered the VA to conduct a study to determine whether dioxin exposure is associated with male males. Similar studies conducted in Vietnam have already indicated that defects could be transmitted by females. Preliminary results of the VA's study are expected to be released next
SOME VETERANS WHO have been unable to get help from the VA are taking their case to the VA office, and veterans from suing the government for service-related injuries, so they have filed a class-action suit on behalf of all Vietnam veterans against the five companies that manufactured Agent
The group is seeking a share of the future profits from the companies, and hopes to establish a trust fund to be used to help children with special needs and help to find a cure for dioxin poisoning.
Dow Chemical has, in turn, filed suit against the federal government, asking to be reimbursed for any damages that may be awarded to the veterans. Dow contends that it manufactured weapons, and that it had no control over the herbicide's use.
Weather
WA M
The weather forecast calls for temperatures to climb into the 100s by Wednesday with mostly clear skies and high humidity. The high temperature today will reach 96 with southeastern winds at 10-15 mph. There is a slight chance of thundershowers throughout the day. The overnight low will be about 72 with winds continuing from the south. There will be a chance of fog early tomorrow morning. Tomorrow will be sunny, hot and humid with the temperature expected to reach 98. The low temperature tomorrow night will be in the mid 70s and the skies will remain clear.
Action search up to Shankel
By MARK PITTMAN
Staff Reporter
Del Shankel leaves the executive vice chancellorship tomorrow. One of the last decisions he will make concerns the process for selection of a new permanent director of Affirmative Action.
His decision could affect hiring practices at the University for a long time.
The office of Affirmative Action monitors hiring practices at KU and recommends procedures for attracting minority applicants to fill staff positions.
Shankel said yesterday that he had not decided whether the search for the director would be an accident.
Former director Bonnie Ritter, former acting director Clarence Dillingham and some faculty members have said the office's credibility could be improved if Mr. Ritter or if Edwards were appointed without a search.
campus or an appointment of the current acting director. Mike Edwards, to the permanent job.
The affirmative action office often requires that other departments conduct a nationwide survey.
Shankel said he would discuss the selection process, including the administrators today and would decide before he begins.
"I will talk it with others but ultimately the decision is mine." Shankel said.
Shankel becomes acting chancellor of KU Aug. 15.
He said he would use the six weeks between the end of his term as executive vice chancellor and the start of his new appointment to discuss the future of administrators and to plan for the 1980-81 school year.
"I'll still be around the University," Shankel said. "I'll be in the office a few hours every day, but I'm going to take a week off at the end of July for a short vacation with the family."
Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, will make over as executive vice chancellor on Tuesday.
Page 2 University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980
Capsules
Daily Kansan
From United Press International
Schmidt goes to the Kremlin
BONN, West Germany—Despite irritated warnings from the United States and little apparent chance of defusing tension with the Soviet Union, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt goes to Moscow today to talk about missiles and foreign trade.
"The Russians apparently hope to concentrate on trade in their talks with Schmidt and spend a little time as possible on Afghanistan and related issues."
Schmidt has said he intends to "speak clearly and with meaning and not conduct soft talk" in the Kernstein. A conservative challenge in fall elections is that he would like voters to consider him a candidate.
Schmidt and Foreign Minister Hans-Deitch Genscher—the first Western leaders to visit Mali since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan—will hold a forum in Khartoum on Friday.
The missiles issue has clouded relations with both superpowers since NATO decided in December to deploy 527 U.S. bulk weapons to counter the Islamic State.
Bani-Sadr demands power
Iranian President Abbaslahan Bani-Sadr has demanded more power and
morning he had offered Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini a letter of
resignation.
He also said Iran's economy was staggering because of Western sanctions imposed to force the release of the American hostages.
"Any time I step out of the line of revolutionary and religious principles he may publish the letter," Bani-Sadr said in an interview with the newspaper
He responded to Khomeini's complaints that the government was moving too slowly to solve the country's problems. The Ayatolah also threatened to have bureaucrats shut if they continued using the office stationery left over from the shah's rezime.
"If the president is going to investigate these matters, then he means to do so." Bani-Sadt told the official news agency Pars.
"I don't have any objections, although my load of work is very heavy," he said. "It is not possible that others have the means and I have the愿望." He added that they had to work on a daily basis.
Aked about the state of Iran's economy, Bani-Sadr said he had been rallying audiences around the country to overcome the effects of the partial shutdown. "We are trying to figure out how we can live," he said.
American car sales sputter
DETROIT--The disastrous second quarter of 1980 ends today with four U.S. automakers in the red. It was one of the worst quarterly financial losses of the decade.
Auto industry analysts on Wall Street believe combined second quarter losses could far exceed $1 billion.
Ford Motor Co. Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp. have acknowledged they will lose money in the period. General Motors Corp. has described its profit outlook as questionable and analysts outside the company generally agree it will post a deficit.
GM is considered the only one of the four with a chance to show a profit for the entire year.
When second quarter statements are released over the next several weeks, analyst David Healy of the Wall Street firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert believes they could show losses as high as $450 million for Ford, $300 million for GM and at least $400 million for Chrysler.
The past six months have been marked by massive layoffs, plant closings and other internal cost-cutting measures by which the battered industry has
But they have not offset the impact of extremely weak sales, which fell most heavily on the most profitable car and truck models, profit-eroding rebates and other sales incentives and the need to spend at unprecendented levels to tool up for future generations of more fuel-efficient cars.
TMI gas venting resumes
MIDDLETOWN, Pa.—Scientists are resuming the venting of radioactive krypton gas into the atmosphere from the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear power plant at the originally planned rate after they resolved a snag in radiation monitoring Saturday.
A spokesman for the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Karl Abraham, said Met-Ed planned to release approximately 500 to 1,200 curies of the 57,000 curies of radioactive krypton gas trapped in the facility. A curie contains one erram of radium.
Gov. Dick Thornburgh toured the crippled nuclear power plant and its control room nerve center, and said the venting operation would not harm people who lived nearby. He advised residents of the area to go about their daily business.
Nevertheless, hundreds of people fled their homes for the weekend because they doubted official assurances.
george Hickernell, commissioner of nearby Lower Swatara Township, said as many as 700 had fled his community of 7,000 and that the snug in conditions at the border were a hazard.
Anti-nuclear organizations opposed the venting partly because a state government study showed 20,000 to 40,000 local citizens were still so upset about Three Mile Island that they had recurring headaches, insomnia and other disorders.
The snag Saturday developed when a monitor designed to detect radioactive particles apparently was falsely tripped by the radioactive gas,
Detroit union hints at strike
DETROIT — With July's Republican National Convention ever present on stage, the city municipal workers met yesterday in an effort to strike a during a strike at Glenview.
Contracts for Detroit's 20,000 union-covered workers expire tonight, just two weeks before the convention.
The lack of progress in the talks and the "no contract, no work" policy set by the workers' union prompted fears that city services would结 a halt with the agreement.
Mayer Coleman Young said a strike during the convention "place a negative image on Detroit that would take us many, many years to recover
"I believe that all the employees are just as anxious as a farm for Detroit to make a good impression on the nation and be recognized as a renaissance man."
Both Young and Detroit Labor Relations Director Mark Ulcny were guarded optimistically during the marathon weekend sessions.
"It's not necessarily going all that badly." Uiciny said Saturday. "It's just that we get a lot of ground to cover."
Pope in Brazil for 12 days
VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II left today for a 12-day trip through the primitive Amazon jungles and modern glass cities of Brazil, the world's largest city.
The pope was scheduled to leave Rome at 6 a.m., 11 p.m. Sunday CDT, on an 11-hour flight to Brasilia, the ultra-medium capital of the South American country.
During his trip the pope will travel about 18,650 miles and be away from Italy longer than any other pope in modern times.
An estimated 17 million people will see the pope celebrate 13 masses and listen to him deliver 44 scheduled courses. He will visit 12 cities, two leoparochors, five churches and many others.
In Sao Paulo, residents whose houses or apartments overlook the pope's motorcade routes have rented out some of their window space to those who want to get a glimpse of him. Some are reportedly getting as much as $4,000 for an overnight stay.
In Brasilia alone an estimated 10,000 police and military personnel were on special duty to maintain order and protect the pope.
THE HISTORIC PARK OF MALAYSIA
The Graduate Women's Group will meet at noon in the Cork Room in the Kansas Union.
MONDAY, JUNE 30
GRADUATE WOMEN
On Campus
Daily Kansan
GRADUATE WOMEN
Summer orientation for freshmen entering the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is all day at the Kansas University.
SUMMER ORIENTATION
IS an all day at the Ransom ON TRUMPET WORKSHOP
TRUMPET WORKSHOP
A trumpet workshop by Anthony Plog
will be held at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in
Swarthot Recital Hall
PIANO CLASSES
Piano Master Classes will be held by Leon Fleisher at 9:30 a.m. in Swartwout Hall and at 2 p.m. in murphy Hall.
The SUA movie is "Wages of Fear." at 7 p.m.
MOVIE
LECTURE
A lecture on 'Exoloring Furnishings'
will be given by Douglas Hyland at
1 p.m. in the north balcony of the Spencer
Art Museum.
A lecture on "Traditional Japanese Painting of Today" will be given by
Sumio Kuwabara of the University of Tsukiba, Japan at 2 p.m. in Room 211 of the Spencer Art Museum.
PAINTING
A fishing clinic will be held at 7 p.m. at the Community Building. For more information call Steve Hawks at the Fish and Game Commission office.
FISHING
CONCERT
CAMEL UNION The Campus Christains will meet at 7 p.m. in Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
The KU summer concert series presents Anthony Plog on trumpet at 8 n.m in Swarthout Hall.
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
BLACK STUDENT UNION
The Black Student Union will hold choir practice in 328 Murphy at 5:30 p.m.
TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE
The Tau Sigma Dance Ensemble meets
in 220仁布罗安 at 7 p.m.
RU MAHARAJ JI
GURU MAHARAJ JI
A free introductory program about Guru Maharaj JI and the knowledge he reveals
the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union at 7 p.m. For more information call 842-1741.
The KU Research Institute on Women will have a lecture given by Elaine Showalter at 10:30 a.m. in the Spencer Library Auditorium.
WOMEN
The KU Sailing Club meets at p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlors.
WEDNESDAY,JULY 2
SAILING
MOVIE
The SUA movie will be "Inherit the Wind." Showtime is 7 p.m.
KANU radio presents the 27th annual Newport Jazz Festival at 10 p.m.
SUMMER ORIENTATION
Summer orientation for freshmen entrained in the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Fine Arts is all day in the Kansas Union.
CARILLON CONCERT
CARLETON CONCERT
Albert Gerken, University Carillonneur, will give a concert at 7 p.m. at the Memorial Campanile.
PARK CONCERT
PARK CONCERT.
The Lawrence Union Band will give a free concert at South Park at 8 p.m.
Hangar to be built if funds are raised BY LAURA LUCKERT
Because the current building is structurally unsound, David C. Kraft, dean of the School of Engineering, has been instructed to hangar to replace one of the two hangars that belong to the University of Kansas at the Lawrence Municipal
Staff Reporter
THE NEW HANGAR will house the University's airplane and shop classrooms for aerospace engineering classes.
THE OTHER HANGAR at the air-
port, which belongs to KU and will not
be replaced, will house a propulsion
laboratory, also for aerospace classes.
The 'hangar we hold classes in out there now was built in the '30s and is completely inadequate.' Kraft said. This problem justifying the need for a new one.
Kraft said that if he and the KU Endowment Association raised enough money, they would build construction. They estimated completion time is 11 months.
Martin Henry, Endowment Association spokesman, said before the new hangar could be built, the approval of the city of Lawrence.
Farmers object to KEPCo pact
By NANCY SEARLE
and
and
WALTER THORP
WALTER THORP Staff Reporters
Thousands of Kansas farmers are upset because they may have to pay for a contract they never voted on.
The contract, between the Kansas Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (KEPCo), and its 28 Rural Electric Cooperative (REC) members, gives the super cooperative exclusive electrical power to the cooperatives for the next 40 years.
The contract would also enable KEPCo to buy 17 percent of the campaign troubled Wolf Creek National State could raise farmers' electric bills.
Dale Lyon, president of the Kansas
JOE MULHOLLAND, KEPCo manager of power supply and engineering, said the 40-year exclusive supply contract was necessary in order to qualify for a low-interest government loan from the Rural Electric Administration that would allow KEPCo to buy into the nuclear facility.
Farmers Union, said farmers had not allowed to vote on the contract or on KEPCo's subsequent decision to purchase part of the nuclear plant.
"I am a member of a Rural Electrical Cooperative and I am an in-charge officer. I even know that my cooperative belonged to KECPo until they asked the Kansas Corporation Commission for income to become a generating utility."
"The whole idea behind the cooperative movement is democracy," he said. "But KEPCo's member
Mulhooland said all the cooperatives had been informed well in advance of KEPCo's decision. It was not the KEPCo's responsibility to see that each individual cooperative voted on the decision. That responsibility belonged to the board of directors of each cooperative, he said.
LYON SAID THE Kansas Farmers Union was concerned about the future of the cooperative movement in Kansas.
“KEPCo has been suckerked into a trap because of the special relationship between the state government. It has become a pimp for the big power companies and the farmers will be a captive market for the industry, nowhere else to so for our electricity.”
cooperatives did not vote on whether they wanted anything to do with Wolf Creek.
He said that if KEPCo was allowed to become a generating utility, the company would have a purpose for existence. Eventually, he said, the smaller cooperatives would lose their autonomy and merge into one organization - KEPCo.
When KEPCo applied to the Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) for permission to become a generating utility and to purchase part of Wolf Creek, nine legal, environmental and municipal interventions intervened to stop the purchase.
THE INTERVENING organizations contend the extra power from Wolf
Creek may not be necessary, that it will be more expensive than conventional electricity and that KEPCo may not be as cost-effective alternatives before making their decision.
Wolf Creek's co-owners, Kansas Gas and Electric and Kansas City Power have partnered to sufferning financial troubles with the Wolf Creek project. Intervengers said the nuclear project may not be compliant with the KCC does not approve the purchase.
Mullholland explained that KEPCo needed the generating capability from the Wolf Creek project to qualify for an extra 90 megawatts of inexpensive power. The NRC has led west Power Administration, SPA only sells power for peak load periods.
He added that KEPCo owned no transmission lines and would have to buy them. He said the hydroelectric power, KEPCo could not be sure that KECP&L would allow the use of its lines if the KEPCo bought into another company, he said.
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Presents ANTHONY PLOG, Trumpet
Tuesday, July 1, 1980
8:00 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall
An Orson Welles treat, the
music of *The Lady Warrior*, his doom by a beautiful woman (Rita Heworth). The finale is pure
sense. The film is a hall of miracle, (1948 87 min).
No Admission Charge
Mon. June 30
THE WAGES OF FEAR
SVA FILMS
Mon. July 7
THE LADY
FROM SHANGHAI
Spencer Tracy as Clarence Darrow and Frederic Markas as William Jernings Bryan in this brilliantly acted film about the Scope Monkey Trial, directed by Stanley Kramer. A convenient well-made film (12 min.)
A fierce, taut suspense film about four drivers trying to get nitroglycerine through the Amazon thriller, remade as jungle adventure for Zack Clouzet, with Yees Montan (Franculez/subtitles) (1955 138 min).
Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union; M-W. Films are $1.00 and start at 7:00; FIllms are $1.50 and start at 7:00. Use BW or 84347 Union 5th Level. Information 884-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed.
Wed. July 2 INHERIT THE WIND
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acta 4:25
Often and on all our days we have heard the expression, "Crazy as a bed-bug." Don't know how it came by this reputation as it seems rather smart the way it hides "under cover" and attacks while one is asleep. The flies or the fly don't have sense enough to fear and will attack one ten thousands big in broad daylight and while the birds make = make me think of the power of the sensual sense so that attack God Amignity and His Book, The Bible!
The Word of God, The Bible, is food The Almighty has prepared for mind, soul and spirit of man. "They have rejected The Word of God, what wisdom is in them?" asked the Prophet. "God made man to be formed in his mother's womb, and ordained him a Prophet to the nations: A PROPHEET TO THE NATIONS — don't the nations need one? God has provided one and the other, and he gave us both." He rejected it and the messages of all the other Prophets, including The Son of God Himself, in that they have ruled out The Bible from our public educational institutions! In their words, "There are no more nothing; and they are counted to Him as less than nothing, and vanity." Christ likened those that God rejects to goats placed on the left" to us forwarded by Jesus.
Is your moral and spiritual life the product of the food God prepared for man, or is it the result of crawling anywhere to satisfy the appetite of the goat? The more we read God's Word, the Bible, consider its history, its origins, and its meaning. If you can fought with fire and sword and crosses through the ages the power and blessing and the changes wrought to
pace and good for mankind when honored and obeyed, the more we are persuaded that the opponents of The Bible and those who reject its God-inspired Authority, the more we are persuaded that Birth and the Miraculous, and in many other ways corrupt the Word of God Almighty; all such are "Crazy as the bedbug"; don't care where they can crawl for food, and if not found in the Garden they will have the "goat appetite" and in danger of partaking of the goat nature and fitting themselves for the fires of eternal hell! They have refused "angels food" raised down from the earth and chosen to eat trash with the goats and slops the hogs.
Rightly the effort is being made to head off the publishers and peddlers of obscene and vile literature and the misogyny that they represent. Young and old that gretely devour the filth as if they had a tapeworm? All animals eat their parents and that which they eat becomes a part of them, and is not such an appetite as a child would have. We just eat like jadakiss. When I used to have such an appetite I was more or less strongly conscious of the fact that I was born on the Holy Lord God Almighty.
Turn you, turn ye, why will ye die," God says. "No every one that thirsts, come to the waters, and that he hath no money; come you, buy, and eat; yes, come, wine and bury wine; not only the wines, but the fruits, spend money for that which is not bread? and your labor for that which satisfeitif foet non hafteren diligently unto Me, put forth your arms, and let your soul delight itself in farness." Isaiah 55:1-3.
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University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980
Page 3
Charlton, Amison vie for new 46th district seat
By DAN TORCHIA
Staff Reporter
Betty Jo Charlton would like people to stop referring to her as Msike Glover's campaign manager. Her candidacy in the 46th District House of Representatives should solve the problem. Charlton said last week.
"Most newspapers still refer to me as that, even though I haven't been it since his first campaign," she said. "I would have known for what I've done by myself."
For Charlton, currently the 44th District representative, comparisons with Glover are inevitable. She worked on all his camperms from 1970 to 1978.
When Glover resigned last year, she was elected by the district's precinct chairmen to replace him.
THE 46TH DISTRICT was created by
[Name]
Betty Jo Charlton
the reapportionment bill passed last year. The 44th District, which contained the University of Kansas, was shifted to the west and made smaller. The 46th replaces the eastern part of the 44th, and includes the campus.
Charlton will represent the 44th District until the 1981 session. The new district is almost the same as the old but with a different number, she said.
"For many people, I am the incumbent," Charlton said.
Going to the capitol as a representative was like being a total newcomer, though she did have experience in Topeka, she said. She worked in Glover's office for two sessions and was a legislative aid to Gov. John Carlin.
"I didn't go up there cold," she said.
"Still, it was different. I could relate to
someone who came in with no experience at all."
Charlton's Republican opponent, Willie Amison, also has to tie a Glover. Amison ran against him in 1978.
"The first campaign was a learning experience," said Amison, an elementary school teacher. "I'm not a rookie, but I'm not a veteran either."
AMISON DID NOT make a decision on running until a few days before the firing deadline, though he said he had been thinking about running.
"Before, when I was in insurance, it was pretty easy to take care of," he said. "Now with class, I wanted to make sure I could do it."
"Actually, the kids in school were instrumental in my decision. They said, 'We think you should do it. You would be good.' "
Fredrick A.
Willie Amison
Amison, a former KU football player, said he would enjoy dealing with people in the district if elected. Charlton will be a tough opponent, he said.
"One thing sports taught me is that you don't underestimate your competition," he said. "I'm going to try as hard as I can."
State government could take more control of programs currently handled by the federal government, he said. It would also make it more responsive to the peoples' needs.
Amison said he would work hard in office if elected, and was interested in working with problem areas such as the elderly, education and minorities.
"I don't have the answers but I have a lot of questions," Amison said, "And a lot of energy."
Senate research bill pushed
By ERNIE DAVIS
By ERNIE DAV Staff Reporter
In the past, Student Senate has had to deal with problems as they arose because they lacked the resources to foresee them.
So Mike Gordon, co-chairman of the Finance and Auditing Committee, would introduce a bill this fall that would create a student organization to study problems before the Senate has to deal with them.
The idea for the research organization came from George W. Bush, who was a student body vice president last summer. But the idea was shelved last fall because other Senate candidates, important, Gordon said last week.
HE SAID MOST of the research organization's work would be done by students enrolled in independent study of institutional research courses, volunteers, and work-study students.
A full-time coordinator would be hired to run the organization and offer guidance to researchers, Gordon said.
A student governing board, made up of student senators would make general policy decisions. The faculty would also use the organization, Gordon said.
None of the University's peer institutions have such an organization.
"But why can't we lead the way?" Gordon said.
The University of Massachusetts at Amherst has a Student Center for Educational Research and Advocacy that costs $100,000 annually, according to Kevin George, SCERA student coordinator.
SCERA is divided into nine teams, each studying different areas of student issues. The nine areas are resource, anti-racist, academic, publicity, residential, public policy, females, women and student affairs.
ACTING ON AN ON issue only when something happens to make people aware of it causes additional measure for the Senate, Gordon said.
For example, during last spring's budget hearings the Senate did not foresee the financial needs of student organizations. As a result, some students requested funding from the Senate had to have their budgets cut.
Gordon said the Senate was working on an activity fee increase for fiscal year 1882, which begins next year. "There would take effect in the fall of 1883."
Acting in response to events costs more in the long run than the research organization would, Gordon said, because the University could provide cheaper student service.
He estimated the organization's cost would be 30 cents a student each semester.
Gordon is still working on the details of the bill.
Dole's seat tempts 6 Democrats
By IAN SIMPSON
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Six Kansas Democrats are jostling for advantage in a crowded primary race to select a candidate for governor. In groups, those with political experience working full-time on their campaigns, and those planning to spend little money to campaign, are divided.
The candidates are trying to buck history. There have been only three Democratic senators from Kansas in the 2016 election, Democrat McGraw, Wichita, who left office in 1989.
THE INCUMBENT, Bob Dole, is a tenacious campaigner who has a strong organization. He enjoys support from the public and financial contributions from oil companies.
The Democrates say Dole's bid for the Republican presidential nomination was detrimental to the state, and his championing of oil companies, especially his opposition to the windfall profits tax, make him vulnerable.
"Does Kansas want to elect a senator who does not want to be a senator, but who wants to be something else?" asked Bob Kennedy, former campaign manager for candidate John Simpson, Salina.
"Dole is nothing but a little Nixon," said Ed Phillips, Louisburg, a candidate.
John Simpson is the favorite to win the Aug. 5, primary. A former member of the Republican Party, Simpson resigned his seat in 1979 and changed his affiliation to Democrat.
SIMPSON HAS WORKED for nearly a year to build a sound organization. Last week, Simpson said he had visited every county in the state and had campaign organizers in 50 or 60 of several labor unions have endorsed him.
Last week Kennedy resigned as Simpson's campaign director because he thought Simpson was not putting enough of his own money into the race.
Simpson has extensive holdings in oil and land. According to a financial statement filed when he began his campaign, Simpson is worth $3.6 million. Simpson has spent $100,000 on research in the area of financial reports. He said he was prepared to spend $900,000 to beat Dole in the general election.
SIMPSON SAYS he supports energy conservation, the use of coal, increased expenditures for mass transit and, despite his oil interests, the windfall profits tax. He is against nuclear power.
"We've got to get on top of this economic situation," Simpson said, "or face greater problems than we already have."
Another candidate, Ken North, Mission, has concentrated his efforts on eastern Kansas, especially Wyandotte and Johnson counties.
North calls the proposed balanced federal budget "a myth." He favors increased military spending. North says market pressures will act to conserve energy and "strategic planning," including increased domestic production of conventional fuels, can solve America's energy crisis.
NORTH, A MANAGEMENT CONSULTANT, was an administrator in the Johnson County District Attorney's office and a campaign aid for former Gov. Robert Docking. North is running a "grassroots campaign" that relies on
volunteers. He said he would spend more than $50,000 in the primary.
James Mahar, Overland Park, is running a campaign designed for media attention. Mahar dramatized his concern with the energy shortage and the need "to get the country going again" by carrying a gas can and walking from Kansas City, Kan. to Topeka.
MAHER HAS CALLED for the establishment of a Western Hemisphere Baseball League to unite the oil-producing nations of the Americas. He sent a telegram, in English, to the organization of Exporting Countries meeting of oil ministers in Algeria and asked that the price of oil be lowered.
Maher says the use of synthetic fuels and conservation can lower gasoline prices to 70 cents a gallon.
One candidate, John Barnes, an engineer from Cherryville, said, "I don't intend to spend a lot of money. We work two weeks are what makes it or breaks it."
Barnes ran for secretary of state in 1976 and spent $260 while finishing second. His latest campaign will be a volunteer effort.
"I don't accept contributions from nobody," he said.
BARNES SAYS he opposes the windfall profits tax. He wants equal tax exemptions for salaried workers and a revamping of land use value appraisals for property taxes. He supports them as an alternate form of energy.
"I'll pull the primary by 10,000 votes," Barnes said. "How can they argue with the things I am asking?"
Phillips, a railroad conductor, supports legislation that will benefit blue-collar workers, farmers, and small businesses. He said he had no political organization.
Phillips is against the Equal Rights Amendment and gun control legislation.
He favors the development of synthetic fuels, and wants legislation that would forbid citizens from holding a political office in a lifetime.
"We've got to get rid of these political leeches." Phillips said.
The elder Lee could not be reached for comment.
He said, "The last two months my father has been under the care of a doctor in Ottawa. He was hospitalized for a short time at Ransom Memorial Hospital for treatment of a condition described as manic-depression."
THE SIXTH CANDIDATE, Howard Lee, Ottawa, a former postal worker, has little support and no campaign organization, according to his son, John Lee, the publisher of the Hays Daily News.
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Page 4
University Daliv Kansan. June 30, 1980
Opinion
Action essential
The University of Kansas should conduct a nationwide search to fill the position of director of the Office of Affirmative Action.
For an organization that demands broad and ethnically varied applicants, to settle on an in-house appointment is hypcritical and inconsistent.
The issue at hand is not the competence or quality of the present acting director, but rather the University's commitment to affirmative action principles.
The big goal of affirmative action is to attract as many qualified applicants as possible from all ethnic spheres and to ensure that applicants equal opportunity to get the job.
Sometimes this can be achieved by promoting qualified applicants from within the University. Sometimes searches limited to the Lawrence area can satisfy affirmative action goals and the employer's needs. Sometimes, though, an active attempt must be made to canvass the nation in search of quality candidates.
In other words the job determines what kind of search is needed. One would not go looking for a Mercedes Benz at a Chevrolet dealership. It also would be difficult to expect to find the next KU chancellor in the Topeka-Lawrence area.
Either way the Office of Affirmative Action has been designated by both the federal government and campus administrators to police the searches. And a policing agency cannot lose its credibility living to the letter the laws it enforces.
It would be easy and convenient for the administration to appoint the present acting director to the permanent job. But the current director who resigned before the Chancellor did now would like her job back.
And there's the greater problem of a change in the executive vice chancellor position which supervises the affirmative action office. Does the outgoing vice
chancellor Del Shankel, who will also reappear in August to become acting chancellor, decide what kind of search to make or does his successor Robert Cobb?
The irony of the situation is that KU's affirmative action office would not be in such a bind today if it had had the muscle and might of the administration at its back.
It's probably the only office on campus to be created because of a political sit-in. A group of women named the February Sisters seized a KU building in 1972 and demanded, among other things, an affirmative action plan.
From that beginning affirmative action
will begin to gain status within the
Archeid Dykes community.
The number of minority faculty members has failed to increase. KU has not established formal goals and timetables to insure minority hiring even though it was required by the Kansas Commission on Civil Rights and by federal law.
Repeated attempts to inform the Dykes administration about the missing goals and timetables were ignored until this spring when a visit by investigators from the Office of Federal Contract Compliance was all but assured.
If the administration is reluctant to hire a new director because of the transition time needed to acquaint the new person with the department, only itself to blame for not being prepared.
A nationwide search would be time consuming and expensive, but how many dollars in legal battles the affirmative action program saved the University?
If KU is to continue to actively embrace the ideal of equal opportunity in its hiring practices it should conduct a broad search for a new director.
And it should recommit itself to making the affirmative action plan more than a hollow agreement between employer and employee.
MIX A FAIV THE REINHAMNEY LENNER ©PPD BY CINAGA TREME
THE GREAT SOCIETY
HOME FOR
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Reagan dodges ERA issue
Ronald Reagan's capacity for misjudging the issues of the 1980 presidential campaign is phenomenal. The sure-free Republican nominee has the nonjudgmental rights Amendment on his platform, he said, because it is no longer a major issue when compared with unemployment, inflation and the war.
Other facts suggest that this is not Reagan's real reason for keeping the proposed amendment off the platform. His long-standing opposition to gay marriage in California governor is a very smart politician.
It is surprising that Reagan does not see the ERA for what it is. After all, the ERA is not
Letters to the editor...
SUA misrepresented
Every time somebody gets bad press in the Kansan he calls it the most irresponsible piece of pseudo-journalism he has ever seen. I don't think there are some things I'd like to set straight.
The impression one would get from the article ("SUA Film Chairman's policies criticized," June 19th Kansan) is that I, as the chairperson, am a cinematic Juan Trescaldi and a director of fantasy and blithely ignoring the suggestions of my committee in my zeal for greater profits.
Hardly. The fact is, I was portrayed that way to the Kanan by a member of the committee who was prevented from ordering food in our building and ignored the film program's commitment to the rest of the SUA program. When you are choosing films, you naturally want to pick some of your favorites, and that's perfectly fine. But when someone chooses so many that he (and very few others) want to see, then it becomes even more important to stop that. That is what did; that is what I get.
To start with, the charge was made that I ordered certain films which were to be delayed until fall, since I found out of town this week that a movie was being directed. This will deny to the end that it was ever my policy. I won't deny that I said it, just as I 'won't deny' that I suggested we replace the popular series with Scandinavian travelogues and those of films starring actors with bad hairstyles.
I say a lot of things I obviously don't mean. Actually I have several films this summer that are very important.
Let me continue. Mark Klobassa, one of the summer film persons and the apparent source of much of the information, of "The Gillen" Kane and "2001" A Space Odyssey; as films I delayed until fall for my own selfish ends. He wanted them for the summer, when 5,000 people would have the chance to see them. I suggested (yes, suggest) that they be the regular year, when 25,000 people (Mark Mehr) would have the chance to see them.
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That was my reasoning, whether I kept it to myself or had it notarized by the Archbishop of Genoa and four Supreme Court justices. That was hard work. And so 2011. We have been prohibitively expensive for the summer. In the fall, with more showings as well as more people, we can do better.
Which brings us to the money question. Klobasa displays his ignorance of anything beyond the film program when he asserts that she's always been one of the four eight series, four always lose money. Two are expected to break even. The Friday and Saturday night runs including the midnight show are the only ones to make any profit. What hope to end the year with a profit of $4,000.
That money doesn't go to some fat cat or to a Swiss bank account. It certainly doesn't go to me. It does help to go some other part of the SUA program. The whole SUA program actually loses $2,000 a year. If films can make it easier to support non-revenue streams, that helps. And anyone who calls us profit-minded for that suffers from severe tunnel vision.
Then there is the suggestion that we don't present enough different kinds of film; that one is instantly rebuted by the most cursory film critics, who are always checking everything. Or there's the idea that past financial performance is the main criteria for choosing films. I can only recall checking past performance on two of the more than 100 films we will show this fall. The accusation
There are a dozen other erroneous statements and misunderstandings in the article that I won't go into. All I can say is that the persons who made such statements don't know what they're talking about. I am sorry that certain people found themselves to be under their grievances. I suppose there is as dead as chivalry, but there is still such a thing as propriety?
I don't have figures, but I could compile them. I would wager they would show that less than 50 percent have played at the University of Kansas before, and less than 10 percent have played here in the last four years. (I would point out, though, that both "2001" and "Citizen Kane" have played at KU many times . . . )
And to me, that people went to the Kansan to injure the SUA program, hurts me. I wish they would have come to me first. I resent them for their actions that they think on the front page of the paper.
Michael Gebert Wichita sophomore
Private event different
The error in his reasoning is that he draws an analogy between a wedding, which is a private event, and Commencement, which is a public event. People's behavior can be repeated at a private event, but at a public event, people are free to do whatever they want.
To the editor:
I see that Bill Meneses wrote a letter to the editor in which he criticized Katy Kase's "failure" at the U.S. Capitol.
Funding change wrong
Mark Cline Lawrence
I am addressing this letter to Khyse Kase ("Gay Services deserves funds." June 23 Kansan), but it is readily directed to every Kuman student regardless of sex, race, religion, preference for soft drinks, bathing frequency and even sexual proxicity.
To the editor:
Kase's column suggests we should celebrate the fact that we now "have the chance" to fund Gay Services of Kansas with our activity fees.
Did I miss part of her argument or did we jump from establishing a person's right to have and privately carry out his personal proclivities to suggesting that I should have the opportunity (newspeak for be required to) to fund those activities?
A friend reminded me today that we have somehow reached the point where we think freedom equals cash. I am beginning to get that uneasy feeling that one more cause, one more group, more philosophic is about to come and into my pocket for a handful of my freedom.
When it comes to asking for my money or my time, (that's what I have to give up to get the money) I react to the request in exactly the same way as I react to similar requests from the Young Democrats and Republicans, the Independents, the Socialists, the Tea Party and the Tai Chi Club. Registration Services, numerous charities and the Channel 11 club.
I have had the opportunity (actual) to contribute to all of these groups all along. Do you think for a second that if I had volunteered to answer the telephone or to underwrite a newsletter for GSK that they would have turned me down? Now Kase is working on an important opportunity (newspaper) to pay for something that I would never save voluntarily.
Gather up the funding requests from every organization that wants money, divide each request by the number of students enrolled, give them a specific amount to contribute to each group, if in fact, we wish to support that group. I envision a computerized list with a hundred or more organizations to which we could respond by filling in circles and by filling in blanks with dollar amounts.
Perhaps a reasonable solution is one that may be simple for complex political issues.
We could fill it out and hand it in at registration with our other enrollment materials, pay our educational fees, then receive a statement from the Student Senate telling us which groups we support, how much they contribute to us and the total amount they expect from us.
Yes! I am certain of one thing. Our
Yes! I will be just as good as the decisions
of a handful of student politicians who were
by a slightly larger handful of their peers.
But wait a minute. Can we depend on 20,000
students to do what is called 'right'?
Yes.
J. R. Merrill
Lawrence Graduate Student
merely an addition to our already large body of legislation. It concerns the amending of the U.S. Constitution, a document that is the basis for our government. And The Constitution is not amended every day. In fact, the last time it was amended was 1971, when 18y-year-olds were given the right to vote.
Columnist Kathy Kase
The ERA is an issue because the discrimination it was created to deter still exists. Men and women do not enjoy equal treatment in law, but many do not enjoy inheritance laws, laws of law and job opportunity.
Further testimony that supported the ERA's importance occurred when the ratification deadline of March, 1979 was imminent. Loathe to let the deadline run out three states short of ratification, Congress extended the deadline to June, 1982.
The ratification deadline extension affirmed that Congress thought the ERA was indeed an issue. The recent attempt for the amendment's ratification could be due to the ERA's continued status as an important issue.
Of course, there is the possibility that Reagan is smart enough to realize just how much the ERA means to Americans. If so, he's smart enough to understand the type of issue that the economy or world peace is.
When Reagan compares the ERA with other issues he has to realize that he's comparing apples to oranges. How can you compare sexual equality at home to unrest in Iran?
The ERA is also a concrete issue that polarizes people. No matter how a candidate feels about the ERA, he is going to alienate many voters. Then, like Reagan, the candidate will avoid situations where he must take a stand on the issue. It is a way to save votes.
This strategy is important in this age of the special-interest group. If such groups experience long periods of failure with their special interest, they indulge in one-issue voting. In one issue voters tend to select the most important or oppose candidates depending only upon the candidate's feelings about the special interest.
A continuing issue that both sides are eager to resolve, the ERA has become one of those special interests that result in one-issue voting. Therefore, Reagan may want to avoid the one-issue voting trap by adopting an ERA that is Republican National Convention or during the canvass that will follow.
Bill Brock, Crisp's co-chairman, told her not to discuss her opinions with reporters because her opinions differed from Reagan's. Because Brock had said he would not be vice president, probably came through Brock from Reagan.
Crisp quit her position last week after she suspected her GOP office had been bugged by the Reagan contingent of the party. The bugging was never confirmed, but the gag-order illustrates the lengths Reagan will go to quash the ERA and its supporters.
It is uncertain why Reagan refuses to recognize the ERA for the issue it is. Does he have any other reason? Or does it one? The ERA is too important to fade away; and it won't die because a major candidate refuses to recognize it. One way or another, the ERA doesn't allow him to crusade for or against the amendment.
Furthermore, there is no way that Reagan will be able to keep the ERA or his anti-ERA stance out of the campaign. Both Carter and Anderson are pro-ERA and probably will emphasize that during the campaign. No, Reagan will not be able to sneak his stance past the voters.
The senario seemi wild and dependent upon many ifs but let us not forget the tactics Reagan recently used to oust pre-ERA Mary Crisp from office as Republican National Committee co-chairman.
It is time for Reagan to recognize the ERA for the major concern that it is. By attempting to ignore it, Reagan gives the voters all the more reason to vote for someone else.
What this country needs is a calendar with a bit more flexibility in it. One leap day every four years is not enough. We need some option days, and four days. Imagine what you could do with a flex-day.
You can keep it as a spare Friday the 13th,
for instance. Then, if you awakened and knew it
was going to be a bad day, you could slap your
flex-day on the calendar and go back to sleep.
Extra Friday the 13th could help on bad days
And how could you know if it was going to be a bad day?
I've devised a list of signposts similar to the government's economic indicators. Perhaps, they will help you sort the bad days from the good.
Columnist
As adamantly opposed to the ERA as he is, Reagan also may be saying that the amendment is not an issue to his chances of ratification. If he can keep it off the national platform, he may be able to keep it out of the public mind. And if it fails, he may have months of the campaign, pro-ERA forces may not be able to muster the support and votes needed to ratify it.
J.V. Smith Jr.
Your dog is the only organism that will kiss you.
You know—you just know—it's going to be a bad day when:
You hear on the radio that the government is sponsoring another steak dinner for visiting diplomats while you're eating Soyburger Helper for the fifth meal in a row.
The only paper in the bathroom is wallpaper.
The only paper in the course is a wallpaper.
The only cover in the course is a wallpaper.
The carrier of the dreaded disease, psoriasis of the
You think you understand the opposite sex.
You think you understand the mysteries of God.
You discover that your first medical research course at the University, is "The Science of Biobiosystems."
The bargain real estate you've invested in
to out to be on an island three miles long in
Pembe.
You hear God talking to him. He says He wants to give you a short quiz about His mysteries.
Geraldo Rivera will interview you about the Nebraska diamond mine you just sank your life in.
You hand in your answers to God
God has a reason and a purpose.
You think you understand why God doesn't return your calls.
You discover that the bargain Pinto you just bought was once a stunt car used in filming; "The Dirty Dozen" is one.
You finally get a government job—as an enumerator in the 1990 census.
You think you understand the government's foreign policy.
Your Pinto has an automatic transmission that ships into reverse when the door is slammed and an accelerator that runs out of control when the transmission is in reverse. :
You think you understand the Iranian government's foreign policy.
You park the Pinto with the engine running and slam the door.
Your spouse accuses you of adultery and hires a lawyer named Khomeini who tries to get the judge to order him to repay the debt.
The police call and ask you to claim your Pinto and to bring an overnight bag packed with food.
God calls but you're at the Bruce Jenner movie. :
0
Your parents call to say they've patented you as a laboratory creation, a sort of microbe gond
You shoot a hole-in-one during a solo round of golf.
Some heavenly body offers to take you home for the night, but that lousy psoriasis has spread
You think you understand anything
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University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980
Joy and immortality in professor's science fiction
By SHAWN McKAY Staff Reporter
"He thought of him, trying to adjust to immortality in the midst of death, and he thought that immortality—the greatest gift, surety, that a man could receive—demanded payment in kind. He said he was grateful; you must surrender the right to live."
The man lives, pursued for his life-giving blood in James Gunn's book, "The Immortals."
Gunn, professor of English, gained popularity as a science fiction writer when his best-selling novel, "The Joy Makers" was published in 1961. "The Immortals" was used as the basis for an hour-long television series on ABC. Gunn, 57, published his first book in 1955.
WALKING POINT
James Gunn, professor of English, displays his own science fiction books in his office. DREW TORRESKANSA
"Of course the cynical answer to why I write," Gunn said, "is for the money and fame. Samuel Johnson once said 'No one but a blockhead ever wrote for anything but money.' What I write ought to be what somebody wants to buy and I have a great reluctance to give anything away."
GUNN SAID MONEY was not the only reason he continued to write.
"When I'm writing I feel more like myself. When I'm not writing, I feel like I'm not justifying my existence," he said.
Gunn's career in science fiction began "partly by accident."
"It was the first field I was successful in as a writer," he said. "It's a natural tendency to continue doing those things
that are rewarded. I've enjoyed reading science fiction since the age of 7 or 8. B. There was a period during which all of my reading was science fiction."
Gunn said he did not worry about the statements his books made because those types of worries were reserved for critics.
"I think most of the things in my work emerge out of my own background," he said. "Life is difficult, but if we use our abilities we can find solutions.
"THEE ARE ALSO side issues that people can perceive in my work. There are no real villains that are evil just for evil's sake. The characters turn out to be villains because they want something that everybody else wants, but they want it enough to be willing to do anything to get it."
Gunn defended the genre of science fiction. He said most people tended to judge it by its worst examples instead of its best.
"Science fiction has become a kind of ghetto literature," he said. "Written by people in the ghetto, read by people in the ghetto, spoken by people in the ghetto. As the walls have started crumbling, the world outside the ghetto has started to look inside the restricted areas and to perceive the vitality that can persist in other areas of literature."
GUNN CREDITED the rise in the popularity of science fiction to questions of life that the literature dealt with.
"Science fiction writers of the '30s
were dealing with what has become a real world of today," he said. "They were the only ones dealing with the climate change in population, pollution, energy shortages
What once seemed escapist such as space flight and the atomic bomb, are now facts, he said.
and future crises that haven't even been explored."
"Young people find it in not only narrative excitement which is found in most other literature, but also additional reasons that seem to be important," he said.
Gunn's total book sales have passed two million, but he said he had never taken the time to add up the exact number of copies his 20 books had sold.
Gunn said writing was an arduous task.
GUNN SAID HIS ideas came from a variety of sources, usually from reading something that set off a chain of events. I read about the came out of an Encyclopaedia Britania article which said that 'a true science of happiness is not yet born. I started thinking what kind of world it might be if we had a science of happiness.'
"Sitting down and turning ideas into words is more difficult than anything I have ever done," he said. "You can figure that you are going to be sitting there in front of the typewriter for over 2,000 hours just working on one book. It's a long time to be working on anything."
Although Gunn said he didn't have a favorite book he had written, he did have a favorite passage from the conclusion of "The Jov Makers":
"How could they be sure that this was reality, not another wishful-fulfillment dream from the council-mech? How could they be sure that they had really conquered it and were not just living an illusion in a watery cell?"
"The answer was: They could never be sure.
"D'glass looked up into the night sky and shrugged. What did it matter? One god or another?"
"The rest was lies."
"All a man had was himself and his faith in himself and such illusions as he chose to believe.
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University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980
Union seeks financial security
By CHICK HOWLAND
and RANDY MARTIN Staff Reporters
As the economy continues to decline, it will be important for the Kansas Union to maintain close ties with the University of Kansas, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
"It would probably increase financial problems if it was completely separate from the University," he said.
The Union is a self-supporting, nonprofit corporation. But is closely related to the University in its programs and services.
The organization that operates the Union is chartered by the state of Kansas as the University of Kansas and has two separate directors of the corporation is made up of six administrators, three faculty, eight alumni Association members and seven officers.
IN ADDITION, the board has twelve students representing the Student Senate, Student Union Activities and at-large representatives.
The board sets budgets, plans services, hires employees and pays for the upkeep of the Union building. The bookstore, bowling alley and food services departments are all divisions of the Union Memorial Board.
One common way has been to increase student fees, as was done last year.
Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said that there were several alternatives to keeping the Union self-supporting.
The student fee increase is usually taken before the Student Senate, Ferguson said. Last year the increase was not officially passed by the Senate, but Ferguson said that the Senate favored the move.
Another way to save money would be to reduce the hours that the building is open, he said. This would save labor costs. The answer would be to build it if it were open.
DECREASING BOOKSTORE profits may soon require the cancellation of the dividends refund program the bookstore now offers, Ferguson said.
The bookstore is still making enough money to support the program, but the percentage of profits continues to decline.
Under the budget for fiscal year 1981, office rental has increased. The rent is paid by the organizations that use the Union. The increased office rental accompanies an increase in renting rooms for functions.
The selling of concessions at KU athletic events is a contractual agreement between the Corporation and the University of Kansas Corporation. The Union retains 30 percent of all profits from these sales and the rest is returned to KUAC. It might be possible to renegotiate this deal, but KUAC is having problems of its own.
DESPITE TRYING to be financially independent, the Union receives some support from the University.
A
The University pays the salary of Frank Burge, director of the Union, Shankel said. He is the only Union employee paid by the University.
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A survey of other universities done Friday found that the organization and operation of student unions differ.
TROY HELSINKI
State support helps the Iowa Union cover administration, business, and maintenance costs. Losses are covered by bookstore profits, Richard Fox, administrative accountant for the Iowa Union, said.
At the University of Iowa, the union is part of the university. Unlike the Kansas Union, it receives services from the University.
FOX SAID that students paid no fee directly to the union at enrollment. He said the only time they had paid was for a new addition to the building in the 1960s.
The Iowa Union will break even this year, Fox said.
The University of Colorado Union is similar to the Kansas Union. It is self supporting, but receives support from student fees.
The Colorado Union receives money from the university for faculty and staff use of the building.
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Of the schools surveyed, Colorado had the greatest student input into union operations.
Eight students and four non-students dictate union policy, Jim Schaefer, director of the Colorado Union. said.
THE KANSAST State University Union will receive $38,000 this year from the university budget, Walt Smith, director of the Kansas State University said.
"it's pretty hard for them (the Union) not to go along with what these students want," he said. "I guess you could call them a board of directors."
Smith said that this money was cut out of the university budget two years ago, but will be included again this year.
The money received from the university was based on union use by faculty and staff.
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Mariners drop KC on Abbott's pitching
SEATLE (UP1)-Glenn Abbott scattered eight hits and Bob Stinson hit his first home run of the season yesterday to lead the Seattle Mariners to a 7-2 victory over the Kansas City Rovals.
Abbott pitched his fifth complete game of the season in raising his record to 7.3. Abbott, to the best start of his eight-year major-league career, struck out four and walked one.
Stinson, hitting 143 entering the game, hit his home run off loser Dennis Leonard, 7, with Tom Brady. He also boarded tokey a four-run second-inning outburst. Paciorek led off the fourth with his seventh homer of the season for the Mariners and Bruce Sutherland. Simpson singled in runs in the fifth.
The Royals, who took two out of three games from Seattle, scored
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a b r h rh i
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Otf cf 3 2 1 0 Crab 2b.
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one run in the fourth on Jamie Quirk's sacrifice fly and another in the ninth on Darrell Porter's RBI single.
Students attending the KU summer session have a chance to exercise and relax, as well as study, through a KU Education offered by KU Recreation Services.
"There are many students attending summer school who want something to do, and that's exactly our purpose, to provide recreational services for them." Ron Richardson, director of intramurals, said last week.
"We have more facilities available in the summer, and with fewer students it makes for a more relaxed setting, not too crowded," Richardson said. "The school year," Richardson said.
RECREATION SERVICES fulfills that purpose, offering a variety of competitions and tournaments to students including ping pong, softball, tennis, golf, basketball, horseshoes and badminton.
Interest in the softball leagues has been good. Six fast pitch teams, about
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Richardson said he was surprised with the interest in basketball.
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"We have 15 teams entered in our three-person basketball competition," he said. "Students really enjoy playing basketball here, even in the summer."
50 slow pitch teams and 20 coed teams have entered, he said.
ALL LEAGUES and tournaments are free to students except the tennis tournaments. A $2 entry fee is charged for doubles competition and mixed doubles competition. Singles and doubles competition has already begun. The deadline for mixed doubles
"This is a traditional trip that's a lot of fun," Richardson said. "The trip in June has been canceled, but we're going in July for sure." Students can drop by 208 Robinson for additional information.
In conjunction with the Lawrence Parks and Recreation department, Recreation Services is sponsoring a canopy trip down the White River.
"We only have two courts left and that's just not enough to hold a tournament." Richardson said.
The only competition missing from the normal summer schedule is raquetball. This is because of the construction in Robinson. :
In addition to competitive sports, the University pool in Robinson Gymnasium will be open for swimming. Weight rooms and saunas will also be available to students throughout the summer. :
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University Daily Kansan, June 30, 1980
Page 7
MILFORD, N.J. - A boy plays disc golf on a field at the Milford Country Club in Milford, New Jersey, in 1974.
CHUCK ISAACSON/Karen Sladek Doug Stephens, Lawrence senior, practices his markmanship at Lake Perry during a disc golf game at Wet Willy's.
Golf the latest Frisbee game
By MONICA MARKIEWICZ
Staff Reporter
The Frisbee craze has been refined and specialized since it began in the 1960s, and new Frisbee games have been invented.
Frisbee fans can now play "Ulimate Frisbee" a form of soccer, played with two teams of seven people each. The team that scores the most in golf, appropriately named disc golf.
THE KU 'FRIISBEE Club has a makeshift shift course golf course near Potterport and offers a tournament on Memorial Day that accommodates from the Midwest and occasionally from as far away as Canada, Wayne Gaul, a member of the Frisbee Club.
"Disc golf requires a great deal of skill and concentration," Gaul said. "You have to pay attention to."
direction the wind is blowing, the way the grass is cut, and the size and number of trees."
He said that playing disc golf was comparable to ordinary golf. But the player uses a Frisbee instead of a golf ball. The player must be at the equivent of a cue in a golf game.
The pole hole is a pole about six feet tall that has a chain basket at the top to hold the Frisbee that has been tossed into it.
THE ONLY professionally approved disc golf course in Kansas is next to Wet Wily's Waterslide north of Perry Lake. It has a professional disc golfer, Bill Gordon and a Pro shop so golfers can get the appropriate equipment.
The Frisbee Club had some trouble getting the KU disc golf course sanctioned.
"They wanted us to go over to West Campus," Gaul said, "The grass is waist high over there."
Parts of West Campus might be turned into a recreation area, Gaul said, and space would be allotted for an informal disc golf course.
Disco golf has become an integral part of the frisbee contests that take place across the country, Gaul said.
FRISBEE ENTHUSIASSTS participate in many tournaments to get points that will apply toward eligibility for the World Frisbee Championships, held every year at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena.
"Kansas isn't bad for Frisbee," Gaul said. "There are a lot of tournaments within driving distance."
"We carpool and have a lot of fun," he said. "That's the main idea anyway."
Underground comic books found in students' living rooms and under rebellious adolescents' pillows during which are now becoming collectors' items.
But three local artists who plan to publish an underground comic book in July, think that comic books can still reflect society and its problems.
By VANCE HINER
Staff Reporter
Comic book to mirror real life
"I admit that it's not the sort of book that will be sold on the comic racks at K-Mart." said Scott McClure, 514 Tam O'Shanter, of the untitled comic book. "But I think it would be a good vehicle for headshops or record stores."
McCLURE SAID that while the comic book referred to sex and drugs, there was no intent to glorify those subjects.
"Sex and drugs are a part of every day life in America and we wouldn't be honest if we were to censor those things out of our book just because people have delicate sensibilities," he said. "I don't think the book is offensive."
The strip, called "The Humourouss," is about two robots who escape from a laboratory and begin working for a pizzaria. The robots look strange and unpredictable, but none of their co-workers or people in the community seem to notice.
STEVE BALLEW, Baldwin junior, said that the comic book was a realization of a long-time dream.
"I've always wanted to do comic book art," Ballew said. "I loved Superman as a kid and I also read a lot of unruly people by people like Robert Crumb.
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Steve Harold, 1316 Kentucky, the only published artist of the group, said that his art was influenced by the old "Little Nemo" comic strip.
"This is my first attempt at getting published but I've been drawing and painting for a long time."
"I got some of my stuff put in an art magazine called, 'Montage,' but the magazine never turned a profit," he said. "This comic book will do better."
McClure said the financial success of the comic book depended on how many local businesses were willing to buy advertising space.
Because the comic book will be independently published, contributors can retain their artistic freedom, McClure said.
BALLEW SAID THAT any local artists or writers who wanted to contribute to the comic book were welcome to do so.
"We would always be open to innovation and new direction for the future issues," he said. "I hope people will contact us if they are interested."
SALE 30% to 60%
On groups of
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COMMONWALTH THEATRES
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The Empire Strikes Back Eve 7.00 and 9.45 Daily Matness 2.00
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Starting Friday
The Blues Brothers
Stirring John Beahsh and Dan Ackeyrd
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from the novel by Peter Banchey, author
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Bernhard McKay, author
Eve 7.30 and 9.30
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The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kerns business office at 843-488.
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
KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR RENT
The man that has protected decent Kanana from the tide of scyff radicals now extends his coverage to auto, home, and life. "A man you know, a face you trust." 36
Villa Capri Apartments - Unfurnished & 2 bedroom apartments available. Central air, ceiling fan, kitchen, pool, backsocks south of Fraser Hall. Couples and older students preferred. 843-795-9030 after 5:30.
HANOVER PLACE
APARTMENTS
NOW LEASING
These all new and contemporary apartments are completely furnished and located downtown. Hanover offers 1 br. starting at $299/month with study area starting at $325 per month. Place is located between 4th and 15th floor. Please contact us. Reserve your unit today. Water Paid
MAISMITH HALL has openings for summer.
Both male and female. If interested contact
business office at 843-859 any time of the day.
tf
841-1212
Must sacrifice. Apartment to sublease. Phone
611-0084. 7-3
These contemporary studios and
1-bedrooms are completely furnished
and rental starts from only
$195 per month Sundance is available in Florida and Florida, just west of the Sanctuary. On NU bus route water paid
SUNDANCE APARTMENTS AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY
841-5255 842-4455
841-5255
Mark I, II & I-ii. NOW RENTING FOR
Mark I & II - 180, 180-180, 180-180,
180-180, 180-180, 180-180, 180-
COOPERATIVE LIVING—established student housing. Tenants pay direct distances of the K.U. campus and downtown Lawrence. Private room rent $85-$120 includes utilities and support. Call 866-793-4343.
Apartment, fully furnished. Utilities paid.
$115 monthly one bedroom, bathroom. Ivory
furniture. One bath. August 20th. Call 841-6288 or 834-2104.
Beautiful 4-bedroom house on 63-214a
Court. 2 years old. 2 bath fireplace, cue-
late, washer and route. #44, reference 7-
842-0621.
Large 1 bedroom efficiency apt. 2 biks from
union. $200 + utilities. 841-125. 7-4
3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now and in August 1, half attached, attached garage, all appliances. pool. You'll like our looks Southern Townhouse, 25th and Kaolin, #800. 880.
For lease one to two years in Letchworth
for a three-month, semi-detached
furnished, three bedroom, semi-detached
house with large garden in quiet residential
area. 3-bedroom suite miles from Cambridge, on main railway
line. 2-bedroom suite miles from school,
scholar search. Married couple with one or
two children. No siblings. No pets. Reference
phone number available. Available J1 Phone 842-316-7-10
Luxurious 6-bedroom house in Pioneer
River. Three bathrooms. Wheelchair w/weathar, gargelli C.A. carpeted, top height.
3-bedroom suite. Lease required, referen-
tions 842-315-922
THE CHRISTIAN CAMPUS HOUSE has a few openings for the upcoming school year. Become an active part in this growing campus ministry. Call 842-2583 at 6 p.m. 7-31
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale
Women's Bookstore. Makes sense to use *Ibem-1*). As study guide
makes sense, it's useful. New on sale.
anitation. "New Analysis of Western Civil-
ity," in Bookshelf. New on sale.
Bookstore and Oread Bookstore. M
1969 MGB convertible AM-FM cassette,
good condition, at 1007 West 27th-$1900.
SINEMELMA - Herbal seeded smoking mix and perfume essence. Mix contains muleen, tinctorie, vanilla extract, grapefruit ingredient of Navajo smoking mixes Perfume ounce. Lightning Ligatures, L.P.O. C.B. Box 6823.
Complete set of Arica books from the 40-
Day Training. Call Ruth, 843-5272. Keep
trying.
WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-1386.
BOOK BARN. Why not come to Oksalaos
some Saturday? Thousands of books available-
cheap. Oksalaos library. 915-863-2651.
Alternator, starter and generator specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL
AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC 435-800-3900 900,
600-700-2121
Bicycle—Nishikii custom sport腕 29*32 - 7-38
Excellent condition. B00 - 843 - 843-32 - 7-38
1977 Pontiac V6-4, 6-door, auto,
excellent condition. B00 - 843 - 843-32 - 7-38
V1974 Pontiac V6-4, 6-door, auto,
excellent condition. B00 - 843 - 843-32 - 7-38
Ouation acoustical electric guitar with case.
$250. 841-0024. 7-3
Oldsmobile Omega 1976, ac, at pb, ps, V-8, 2
snow tires. Very nice, reasonably priced.
843-1735. 7-3
TENNIS RACKET. Donny graphite wood.
Beautiful responsive frame string with
Bleacue graphite gut (30 day guarantee).
Contact C. Gui 842-5854 841-3353 6-30
1964 12X55 mobile home. All major appliances with AC, $4,500. 843-1889 afternoons & evenings 7-10
FOUND
set of keys, including Volkswagen key,
Found in Chancellor's office. Call 841-1212
to identify.
6-30
Found envelope belonging to Joaquin Guerero in the Kansas Union Deli. Call Allen at 864-4710. 7-3
Young Puppy found by Lawrence High. 15" tall, male, brown & white with black around eyes and ears b41-5832. 6-30
Male, grey kitten Vicinity of 13th and Ohio.
842a9654
7.7
Open July 1: *Student Senate Executive Secretary* $150-$200 per month, 20 hours per week; medical and administrative capabilities. Apply 105 B Kansan 864-3710 864-3710
**Lecturer in Art History. Temporary, part-time position. Requires Ph.D. in art history, specializing in American/Modern art with a focus on the graphic arts. Prior university teaching exerted. Must have completed a course ferried. To teach one course survey of American art in fall 1990, and one course in area美术 from spring 1990 to fall 1980 for 9 months. Begin August 18 Letter of recommendation must be submitted. Apply to Dr. Stephen Addison, Search Committee, Kress Foundation Department of Education, Kansas. Apply to Dr. Stephen Addison, Search Committee, Kress Foundation Department of Education, Kansas. $6450. An equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer. 6-30 Coordination/Training Employer. Life/Research Education. Continuing Education. June 30 - June 18. Salary $272.50 per month. MA in guidance and counseling or related field. Prior college graduate or adult career development. Sensitivity to the public's concerns. Communication skills required. Work shop training.
CourierCoordinator-Coordinator Life Resource Du.USEs to fill half-time position Aug. 1, DU uses to fill full-time position Aug. 1. MA in guidance and counseling or related adult career development. Sensitivity to co-ordination of this required. Work shop co-ordination of this required. ALRC. Division of Continuing Education 6044 or call 812-654-6944 for application 6044 or call 812-654-6944 for application Action Employer.
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Lawrence
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Lawrence
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Wanted: Female bartenders, Time Out and The Huddle Apply in person. Ask for Terry, 2406 Iowa. 6-30
Assistant Director, Office of Student Organizational Management. The University of Kansas, one of the largest university institutions. Temporary August 1, 1968-July 31, 1972. Lead the Masters degree required organization, development of institutional organizations, development of Balary rank required by the Masters degree required. Salary range required on request in Office of Student Organizational Management. Available on request in Office of Student Organizational Management. Strong Hall. Eligible persons are invited to apply by July 11, 2010 to Mr. Ann Anville, Receiver 220 Strong Hall. The University of Kansas is affirmative a affirmative action employment -11
The University of Kansas Budget Office has appointed a new manager for the position will assist available July 1898. The position will assist transfers for the Universities $1,5 million in budget for 1898 and 1899 will also help with the technical preparation assumed this position will gain a goodexposure to work within the university an opportunity to work within the university. A K.U. graduate program seven hours per week for education in communications skills required, $370-$470 per week for information call Business Affairs, 363 applicants available in 219班 Halk.
NOTICE
WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATE CAMPUS. Coordinator is responsible for direct aspects to the Kimmel Taylor Center, including: support of services; to coordinate the functioning of staff; to assess interests, needs, and concerns of students; to assist the Dean of Student Life, as appoach required and terminal degree preferred; a minimum of three years of experience in job experiences; experience in work with individual presidents; Sainty negotiation skills; further information申请;Dr. Carlyy L. 218 Strong Hall U. of Ks. Lawrence, IL; 218 Strong Hall U. of Ks. Lawrence, IL; 5:00 p.m., Tuesday, 8/19, 8:00 p.m., Thursday, 7-7
Assistant Director, Office of Student Organizational Affairs. One half-time unclaimed staff position. Temporary August 18, 1989- July 31, 1990. One half-time unclaimed staff position. General office responsibilities. Masters in Administration. Full job description on request in application by July 18, 1989. Strong Haiti Reliable persons are required for resume and offer of application by July 18, 1989. Everele, Director. Student Organizations of Kansas. Everele, Director. Student Organizations of Kansas. Everele, Kansas 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative action position.
MUSIC LESSONS-Gutar, bando, manolio
from beginners to advanced. Blues, rock,
grassworks, and folk styles. Experiences.
teacher. Bk at Sive Mave Music.
841-0817 6-30
Homeless junior looking for fall accom-
dations. Prefer house, high ceiling, Oreda
Neighborhood. Jeanie, 841-9253. 6-30
Register for Drawing. Royals game July 10th. 6 winners. Appropriate Technology Resource. 1101% Mass. 842-648-7-7
PERSONAL
Car pool to KC/Regents Center Monday and Wednesday evenings. Call Bob Hills 864-4911 before 5, 113-126 meals. 6-30
FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 15 p.m.
Counseling. Dual Tailal. For appointment: call 9 AM to 5 PM (913) 652-4401 91 W. 10th St., Overland Park, PA 48137
PROGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT 843-4821. 6-31
SERVICES OFFERED
Try the summer meals at the cool Harbour. We have a large buffet slightly during summer school $ pitchers from withch from Dubs Sub—now at The Harbour and get a discount on your new tee.
Women—are you bored? Is your daily routine boring? If so, have the solution! Two college life? We have the solution! Two college life? We have the solution! An unexcuseable summer into one you can't afford. An excuseable summer into one you can't afford. If interested call Alex or Bob at (800) 742-9156.
Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna. 842-2744. tf
Printing While You Walt is available with Alice at the House of Ubers/Quick Copy from 8 a.m. to p.m. Monday to Friday from 8 a.m. to Saturday at 838 Maa. to
Permanent male grad student, 28, interested in meeting a woman who enjoys running, tennis, quiet walks and good conversation. Call Mike 842-1100. 6-30
These dissertation workshop can save hours and dollars. Any phase from early planning to final defense. Sunday afternoons, all summer. 842-4476 for reservations. tt
Mercury Skates Outdoor Roller Skating new hours - 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Monday through Friday at a Mass. Saturday and Sunday at a Mass. On Tuesday and Wednesday, please bring picture ID and seals. 7-10 pm.
Math Tutoring - Competete, experienced tutor can help you through courses 002, 102, 158, 258. Greattime preparation or regular sessions. 7-28 Call: 841-2476.
*pour hour!* 12 off all coffee drinks. Small 25.
medium 35 and large 41. Bigucky's 11/29- 6/30
TENNIS LESSONS. From an experienced instructor. Beginner, intermediate sessions begin Monday. June 30th. Details: C. Gels, 842-585, 841-335, 6-30
TYPING
Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Ellite. Quality work, reasonable rates. Themes, dissertations welcome; editing layout. Call Joan B412-917-8.
Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc.
Betty, 842-6697 after 5 weeksends. tf
Experienced typist, IBM Correcting Selector,
Sandy, evening and weekend. 849-918-818.
ti. Experienced Ttypist—term papers, thesis,
music, electric IBM Correcting Proofreading,
spelling corrected. 843-954-854, Mrs.Wright.t
IRON FENCE TtypING SERVICE. Fast. re-
sults. for new jobs. 842-954-824
evenings to 11:50 and weekends. 842-
PROFESSIONAL Ttyping SERVICE. 841-
Encore is Tip Top at Typing Too! 842-
2001. **tt**
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842
4476. tf
Your originals deserve an Encore! Encore
Copy. 842-2001. tt
Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective. Call Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 7-31
Experienced typist—thesis, dissertations,
term papers, misc. IBM correcting selecrite.
Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-310. if
Experienced typist wants to do summer typing. Call 842-4863 for July 1st, after that call 812-2303 and ask for Gayle. 7-17
Experienced typetist, with carbon ribbon elite typewriter. Prefers thesis, manuscripts or dissertations. Call 812-1546 Mary. 6-30
Liberal female needs to share nice 3 bedrooms. Bachelor's degree. two females. Bali 641-8072. 6-30 Female roommate for summer. Large 5 bedrooms or July 1. Come see! 1309 Vermont 842-8265.
WANTED
Mature, non-smoking female roommate
from Tennessee, room wri. Roommate on Graduation
Tennessee, room wri. Roommate on Graduation
128 Stanton, Ames, Iowa 50040
Roommate to share furnished 3 bdm. house for summer. A/C, dilhawner, waher/dryer/
freezer. TV, $120 monthly. Utilize -7
814-1434.
K. U. victory, Professor, single male, wants to rent furnished apartment, Aug. 15-Dec 20 approx. Write with information: Kissam, rm. 202, New Green Hall. 7-7
Housemate needed. $85/mo. + share of utilities.
$42-1306 after 5.
Non-smoking room to share an ant. Your
Female roommate for furnished 2 bedroom
apt, with storage. AC Within 5 minutes of
KU and shops. $130 + 1% utilities. Call 811-648-
842 or 812-777.
Non-smoking roommate to share apt. Your half is $110 utilities included. 864-3545. 7-7
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Page 8 University Dailv Kansan. June 30. 1980
Search ...
from page one
the KU Alumni Association; Robert W. Wagstaff, executive vice president of the Alumni Club; Crow KU alumnus and Wichita physician; and Georgiana Morrill, KU alumna from Topeka.
One of the committee's first tasks will be the formulation of desired qualifications for permanent chancellor, Worth said. In interviews Friday, most of the search committee members would seek candidates who were well-qualified both as educators and as administrators.
"There has to be a balance between academic and administrative skills in the permanent cancellor—it won't help us if we choose someone who is super academically but who can't administer himself out of a paper bag." Worth said.
McKINNEY AGREED with Worth's characterization of a good chancellor
"Like most people I would like to have a good administrator for chancellor who understands the problems of faculty and students, and can sell himself." McKinney said.
"But I wouldn't want someone who was a good administrator at the expense of the academic and research."
But not every committee member said that equal stress should be placed on the administrative and educational criteria for permanent chancellor.
Davis stressed the need for a chancellor with academic strengths.
"I'll be looking for someone with a great deal of administrative skill, but also someone who is more academically oriented than Chancellor Dykes has been," Davis said.
IN CONTRAST TO Davis, Becker said he would stress the administrative rather than the educational qualifications for permanent chancellor.
"I will bring to the committee my business experience," said Becker. Becker graduated from KU in 1958 and founded the Becker Corp, one of the largest trucking companies in Kansas. He is now president of the First National Bank of El Dorado.
"I want more of an administrator for chancellor," he said. "I know some people on the committee associated with the University may want more of an educator, but I have to look at the position of chancellor on the basis of my business experience."
The search committee will probably take from six to 10 months to complete its nationwide
search for a permanent successor to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, John Conard, Regents
At the end of that time it will submit names of the five best-qualified applicants to the Regents, and the one who passes will be given an award.
Morrill, who graduated from KU in 1949 and characterized herself as a housewife, said 'I was very shy. I don't want to get attention.'
McKinney said, "I was surprised. I don't think normally put engineers on these kinds of courses."
"I will be looking for a whale of lot of input from other faculty members on what they want in the department."
Davis said, "I'm pleased to see that students make up a third of the committee. Students usually are represented only one in five on University governance committees. It took the Board of Regents to give students fair representation."
Some Lawrence children have made new friends for the summer but they don't ride bicycles, play baseball, or go swimming together. Their new friends are elderly residents of the Samaritan Lodge Adult Care Home, 205 N. Michigan.
Kids, aged, reap friendship
Dan Ward, Samaritan Lodge administrator, said last week that activities between the children and the elderly were part of the home's estate and set residents back into the Lawrence community.
Rv CHICK HOWLAND
Staff Reporter
Children from the New York Elementary School Summer Recreation Program work twice a week with the residents on a vegetable garden the two groups planted next to the home.
"They just light up when they see the kids," Ward said about the residents.
two meet three times a week for various social activities. Children from the school range in age
Ward also encourages staff employees to bring their children with them to establish a family center.
Ward said some elderly people were better off outside nursing homes, even though most need so-called home care.
David Campbell, professor of psychology, said some nursing homes were moving away from the hospital.
Nursing homes though, can be restrictive.
Campbell said the problem with nursing homes was that good one cost more money.
"Nursing homes eliminate a lot of decisions"
"They isolate you from contacts you
used to have. We need them."
Ward, however, said the extra $30,000 to Ward that count supported home received was not needed. The $40,000 received was needed.
"The money is simply not needed to
dramatically improve current nursing home care. "Ward said."
Ward said one non-profit, county-supported in lawrence, placed too much emphasis on masonry in lawrence.
"The damm emphasis has always been on processes," Ward said. "It should be on out-
It may be helpful, but it is not necessary.
An example of Ward's simplistic approach can be seen in the case of a female resident who recently suffered a stroke but was given greater care than an average person. The patient did not lift the walker abeauty using after her stroke.
Ward, who has been administrator at Samaritan Lodge for a year and a half, thinks the problems with nursing home care have simple causes. She also the complicated processes some other homes use.
But, Ward added the wheels and she is now able to walk, rather than be confined to a wheel.
Shelter for women faces funding crisis
By SUSANA NAMNUM
Staff Reporter
After a grim episode last March, which some protagonists called smear tactics, the Women's Transitional Care Services, a Lawrence shelter and women's faces a financial future that is somewhat in limbo.
THE SHELTER, which also houses the children of battered women, was the target of the Eudora-based Kansas chapter of the Pro-Family Forum, which thwarted a WTCS request for community development funds. The money would have gone toward moving the crowded North Side of Bent Nash Mental Health Clinic building, 4th and Missouri, which will be vacated next week.
The uproar last March was sparked by a move that Barkley Clark, Lawrence City Commissioner, and WTCS supporters called politically unwise—a newspaper ad in which
Although the shelter is not in financial jeopardy, it faces a June 1891 cutback of its Law Enforcement Assistance Administration grant. Its new coordinator, Patricia Doria, painted an uncertain but optimistic picture of its financial future.
shelter used its phone number as a referral for a lesbian group.
THE PRO-FAMILY group, headed by Jan Hoover, Lawrence, hurled accusations at the shelter, called it a "den of lesbianism" and threatened to produce testimony that the staff had been gearing residents toward a lesbian lifestyle.
BEFORE THE UPROAR, the city commission probably would have approved the WTCS request, he said. But now the shelter's chances of having the old clinic building were rather slim, he added.
"The timing of the whole thing was most un-fulfilled to the deal." "It threw a monkey hunter into the deal."
Pam Johnston, WTCS coordinator at the time, called the episode terrifying and said the service withdrew its community development request for fear the enrolment would turn slanderous. She said she was certain that the accusations were unfounded.
Clark, who stressed the importance and excellence of the care WTCS provides, said he encouraged Johnston's move less the situation than the reality of scaling to the staff and volunteers at the shelter.
Clark emphasized the importance of community funds to offset the LEAA cut, but said that to quality, the shelter would have to prove to commission that certain changes had been made.
The appointment last month of Doria as new WTCS coordinator is one change that Clark said might help clear the air and pave the way for future funding.
The Governor's Commission on Criminal Administration, the federal Comprehensive Employment and Training Act and local church groups all currently contribute to the shelter.
DORIA SAID she hoped the state and the Lawrence community would pay for a service that was needed.
"We intend to apply for foundation grants and revenue sharing funds and to reapply for community development money," she said. "My hope is that a red herring like the fear of water will not cloud the issue and jeopardize the need for a safe place for battered women."
ALTHOUGH THE SHELTER staff said the pro-family group's accusations had not stalled funding, Clark said the affair had made several community groups that contributed to the
shelter wary and could have threatened its funding.
Barbara Hanna, Kansas Pro-Family Forum coordinator, said that her group recognized the need for a sanctuary for battered women and girls. In part, she saw as the shelter's affiliation with lesbian groups.
Hanna's group, which also opposed increased federal funding of community services, wanted to not only thwart the WTCS request, but also to place the shelter house under the auspices of local church or community organizations, according to Clark.
THE SHELTER HOUSE receives referrals from the police, hospitals, social agencies and church groups. Its three staff members and 40 volunteers provide care and counseling and act as advocates at social agencies where residents seek welfare and food stamp benefits.
The residents are Douglas County women who usually are penniless, unemployed, have several children.
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