KANSAN Tuesday, September 2, 1980 Vol. 91, No.7 The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas A lone tree provided the foreground for a lightning display during yesterday's thunderstorm. The view looks north about three miles west of Lawrence on Highway 24. Volunteers strive for campus safety By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Coordinated campus programs and dedicated student volunteers are the key to making the KU campus a safer place after dark, according to the head of Campus Safety Services. Kasey Ward, Norwich junior and president of the student organization, said that Campus Safety would be working this year to expand its focus on providing awareness of the need for effective safety precautions. Campus Safety created an escort service last November to provide escorts for students when they are going to a university. The escort service will continue this semester and the group will also provide safety recom- The lighting committee, for example, tries to insure that dark areas of the campus receive proper illumination and has worked to have blue light installed at several campus locations, she said. LAST SEMESTER, the committee worked closely with Caryl Smith, dean of student life, in taking a survey of students and campus officials that show a need for increased lighting. The university is in greatest need of increased lighting. The Campus Safety education committee prints literature on good safety habits and speaks to living groups about crime prevention and self-defense techniques Ward said. The escort service, which has received the most publicity of all Campus Safety programs, is The escort service is important, but the other contributions of Campus Safety need to be emphasized, Ward said. "User response to the escort service was not "overwhelming last semester," she said. "It's hard to ask volunteers to sit three hours waiting for the phone not to ring. Instead, I'd like to start with the basic skills that all people exactly what the services can provide, other aspects haven't been emphasized before." AS PART OF FALL long-range plans, Ward said she would like to set up a referral service with other health organizations. The Commission on the Status of Women and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center have interested callers to Campus Safety, a prairie district Ward said she would like to continue and expand. The KU Gung Fu Club has offered to work with with 64FETVTV. See SAFETY page 5 SenEx debates plan to refine Judiciary By CINDI CURRIE the proposal, which restructures the grievance procedures of the University Code, Rules and Regulations, which changes the composition of several governing boards and simply re-names others, was written this summer by a SenEx-appointed task force. A proposal designed to streamline and organize the University Judiciary grievance procedure was all but approved by the University Senate Executive Committee Friday. Staff Reporter The proposal was approved as written, subject to the committee's re-examination of the Ombudsman Advisory Committee, which is included in the code. The Ombudsman Advisory Committee nominates the University Ombudsman and serves as an adviser at the ombudsman's request. SEVERAL SENEX members expressed concern about the continuation of a committee that appeared to have no job except to nominate the ambudsman. Felix Moos, SenEx member, said that the purpose of the ombudman was to cut through the paper work involved in grievance cases and that a permanent advisory committee was not necessary and would destroy the purpose of the ombudsman. Gerhard Zuther, former SenEx chairman and ex officio member, said. "The nice of having Gerhard Zuther as a chairman is that he Moos said that if the purpose of the change in the Code was to simplify and streamline procedures, he was not sure that an advisory committee should be included. FRANCIS HELLER, chairman of the task force, said he had placed the ambudsman and advisory committee in the original code because it was the main focus of such a system at Ohio State University. He said the ambassador at Ohio State said he found it useful to have a group of people he could go to to discuss taking up a case. Therefore, no issue had to be decided by one person. "There was always a group of people for him to fall back on," Heller said. After the proposal is passed by SenEx, i. will be sent to the Student Senate, Classified Senate and Student Organizations and Activities for additional comments. THE RESULTING PROPOSAL will be presented to the University Council at its November meeting and, if passed, sent to the chancellor for approval. Heller said the task force had attempted to alleviate the problems that faced the existing system when they developed the changes for the present code. He said the problems revolved around a complex system that was difficult to understand, was not representative of all factions of the U.S., and was guilty of not quickly dealing with cases. "The essential structure has come to be so complex," he said, "much so that, people with little training can see it." J. HAMMOND McNISH, former Judiciary chairman, said the Judiciary required that all other administrative possibilities be exhausted before a problem was presented to the Judiciary. He said a student with a complaint had to go to a faculty member, the department, the dean and finally the professor. According to the proposal, the University Judiciary committee would be renamed the Judicial Board and would have 88 members. The University Judiciary has 89 members. The grievance procedure would be redefined from complaint to completion. A timetable is proposed for action of the Judicial Board. HELLER SAID THE proposal was likely to be changed and amended, and he could not speculate on its success before it went into effect. But the actual doing can't be "harmed." THE PROPOSAL allows up to 55 days for choosing a mediation panel, having that panel report and naming a hearing panel. Within the next 83 days, the hearing must be completed, a request for an appeals panel should be made and the report should be finished. Other changes to the University Code in the proposal include: - The Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals would replace the Board of Parking and Traffic Court. The duties of the board would remain the same. - The Advisory Committee on Campus Grievances would be replaced by the Ombudsman Advisory Committee. The duties of the committee would remain the same. Players tackle ticket publicity - Classified staff members would be placed on the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals, the Judiciary Board and the Ombudsman Advisory Committee. By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter Several campus living groups will have to set an extra place for dinner Saturday, as members of the KU football team leave their traditional training table for dinner with the fans. The promotion is part of a campaign conducted by the athletic department, with the help of Student Senate public relations, to increase student season ticket sales. According to Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, is this the first suchcampaign ever aimed directly at students. "This is to promote the fact that football players are normal people," said Sue Heley, Prairie Village junior, who is working on the promotion. "It is also an opportunity for students to play football or for out at the stadium, and an opportunity for players to meet the people doing the cheering." As part of an effort to increase student interest in the football program, some KU players will visit KU residence halls, scholarship halls, and campus offices on Sept. 6 to eat dinner and meet with students. Z Weather Arrt of the campaign has been to otter See TICKETS page 5 After a year of budget cuts that saw the University drop men's gymnastics, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is hoping a solid football program can put KU athletes back on financially solid ground. Starving days over for commercial artist Today's forecast calls for sunny skies with little or no chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Temperatures are expected to be near 90 and winds easterly about 5 to 15 mph. Tonight should be clear with temperatures in the low to mid 60s. There is little or no rain predicted for Thursday or Friday. Temperatures are expected to range from the upper 60s to the lower 80s. Wednesday's skies should be sunny with temperatures in the mid 60s, again with cooler winds. Mr. Josephine Theatre Presents ДNNД КАРЕНИД Mobil LA KARENINA Mobil CORRIS MAYER KEN COMBS/Kansan stat John Collier, prize-winning illustrator, will teach two design classes this semester at KU. KEN COMBS/Kanan staff By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter John Collier sat in his living room, his paint-spattered shoes resting gingerly on the thick, new carpet. In the past 10 years, Collier's work as a commercial artist has won him nine awards. He is particularly adept of Illustrators and a one-year position on the University of Kansas design faculty. But yesterday, he was painting his basement. "This is called 'White Enamel on Studio Walls', he said, resturing broadly. A little later, he slouched back on his cream-white sofa and talked about the old days, when he lived in New York City with his wife, two children and no job. "When I came to New York, I thought everybody would fall in love with my work and give me jobs immediately," he said with an earnest smile. "he year—that's all, I just sat there and starved." Well, not quite. His wife, Shirley, found a job as a secretary to help pay the bills, and later, he was hired by Time-Life Films as an art director. COLLIER CALLED into the kitchen and asked his wife exactly when those leans years in New York were. He had to raise his voice over the hum of the dishwasher. "Well, Kimmy was two—it was 1972," she called. "Was it that long ago?" he asked, shrugging. "Well, she should know." 1972 seemed a long time ago to Collier, who at 32 years old, is a prize-winning illustrator. He will teach two classes at KU this fall he will a grant from Hallmark Cards, Inc. After the first two years in the big city, assignments from publishers and magazines began to trickle in, Collier said. His smoky pastels appeared in magazines, such as The New Yorker and Redbook, and he was hired by Columbia Records, CBS television and the Shell Oil Co. COLLIER CAN safely say he has made it. He never takes a job that offers less than $1,000, he said. That is not the highest price he heard, he said, but it is high enough for him. When Collier first showed his work, he was a young graduate at McPheron Central University. Collier said there were two rules for success in the crowded commercial art industry. "The first one is simple," he said. "You have to get out there and show your work. But the second rule is not simple at all: You have another work worth showing once you get there." classes and his slim portfolio contained three drawings. "I didn't know anything. I could draw, but I didn't know anything about typesetting or design," he said. "They asked my boss to fire me, so he wouldn't. Maybe he felt sorry for me." MOST PROFESSIONAL artists have at least 10 pieces to show employers, Collier said, but he was hired on the strength of one illustration. Later, Collier left of his own accord for Minneapolis. Then he packed up his family and headed where his friends and employers had told him he belonged—New York. MOST ART directors for magazines and publishing houses are artists themselves, which Collier sees as both good and bad news for young illustrators. Well-informed art directors are more likely to recognize good work—even from an unknown artist, he said. But they also will know bad work when they see it. Most magazines and publishers—and most jobs for illustrators—are in New York. He explains. "I always naively thought I'd be able to earn a living, and sure enough, I did," he said. "In the arts," Collier said, "if you don't know what you're doing, it' s obvious." In his classes, Collier will show students how to look as if they know what they are doing by presenting their work with slides, laminated prints and color photographs. "Getting it together is not really that hard," he said. "The hard part is trying to get enough individual pieces of enough quality to show. It took me years." But once they have broken into the business, illustrators have year-long jobs, Collier said. This year, Collier will draw poster covers and book jackets in his spare time. He adapts many of his paintings, including an album cover for Ella Fitzgerald, from photographs. Sometimes he has two months to perfect an illustration, and sometimes, as with a recent Time magazine cover, he has one night. There is a fine line between commercial and professional business on Monday, he wants to move that line into fine art. Collier looked down at his coffee table and struggled for words. On the table was a book he years' best illustrations, bearing one of his paintings cover. He apologized for sounded conceited. "After awhile, you can outclass the afterward," he said. "That's why I'm moving into fine arts. "I just want to see how good I can be—I don't know yet." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 News Briefs From the Kansan Wire Services Southern Poland strike still unsettled WARSAR, Poland—Jubilant Polish workers on the Baltic coast returned to the shipyards yesterday, but strikers in southern Silesia, the power base of party leader Edward Gierke, stayed off the job and demanded the same rights won by their colleagues. At the Lenin Shipyard in Gdanak 200,000 workers returned to their jobs and ended the 18-day walkout after winning higher wages, improved meat supplies and the unprecedented right to form their own trade union independent of the Communist Party. But coal miners and steelworkers in Silesia remained off their jobs and demanded a government minister come there to sign an agreement with them. In the Soviet Union, the government-controlled press reported that the anti-socialist elements" were behind the war of state. Pravda, the official daily of the Soviet Communist Party, said that the state demands were "far from the economic and social interests of the working class." In Geneva, the International Labor Organization called yesterday's accord "a remarkable and real victory." The organization's director said the agreement was "an important step forward." West German newspapers reacted with relief to the Polish labor agreement, which they said averted what could have been 'a tragedy of incalculable consequences.' Some papers were skeptical that Warsaw would make good on its promises. Muskie asks for release of hostages Secretary of State Edmund Muskie has sent a letter to Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Allah Rajal urging an "early safe release" of the $25 million bond issued in connection with the case. A spokesman for Parliament's foreign relations committee read a reply to the letter signed by more than 100 U.S. congressmen last month. The letter asked Iran to release the Americans, Tehran Radio reported in a broadcast monitored by the BBC in London. Several members of Parliament suggested changes in the reply, and the group voted to return the letter to committee. Tehran Radio said, In Washington, a State Department spokesman said, "On the occasion of the new prime minister's appointment, the secretary sent him a letter calling attention to the hostage issue and urging the hostages' early and safe release." The spokesman would not elaborate. FBI digs up leads in casino bombing The letter was delivered to Rajal lake Sunday, according to Tehran Radio. Rajal introduced his new cabinet to Parliament Sunday but encountered problems with its leaders in the Bani-Sadr, who said the selection represented "conflicting lines" as a time when "understanding" was needed, reports from Tehran said. STATELINE, Nev. — The FBI yesterday reported "lots of new lead" in its stunts, and who bombed her Wagon Wheel, a Lake Tahoe gambling casino, last week The best clue - fingerprints found on the bomb - belonged to a hotel guard the FBI said. Results from the FBI crime laboratory in Washington said the prints belonged to a guard who climbed over the device before bomb experts arrived. The guard apparently thought the envelope containing the three-page extortion note was a letter bomb and mistook the bomb itself for a business The FBI said the bomb had been painstakingly fashioned to look like a copying machine. When it was wheeled into the hotel by two men, it was A special task force of 50 FBI agents fanned out over the forest, scoped Lake Tahoe area in search of unnamed suspects and the white van they had staged for the assault. Spencer insisted there were still "numerous" people wanted for questioning in the $3 million extortion case. FBI agent David Spencer denied an earlier newspaper report that the four suspects had been narrowed to four individuals who fled in different directions. Philadelphia teachers walk picket line PHILADELPHIA -Philadelphia teachers walked a Labor Day picket line yesterday in the first major classroom labor dispute of the school year. of the city's 250,000 students is still four days away, but the 20,000 teachers called the strike because of a failure to reach agreement on a new contract. Four negotiating session Sunday between the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers and the Board of Education failed to reach an agreement by midnight when the older members Half an hour later, union president John Murray called the strike. School board and union bargaining School board and union bargainers were waiting to be called back for more tasks under the supervision of a state mediator, who has imposed a news blitz on the school. A dozen of the picketing teachers were among the 2,000 laid off this year to economy move. The relishing of those teachers was reportedly one of the chief steers for the group. Other issues were salaries, class size and teacher preparation time. The demanded immediate salary increases equal to the increase in cost of living. School Superintendent Michael Marcase said schools would open on schedule despite the strike, but with no food service, extra-curricular activities or evening classes. Chinese Congress adopts new budget PEKING-Citing official mistakes as the reason for the worst deficit in recent history, the National People's Congress yesterday adopted an "austerity budget" and China's Communist Party called for a new collective leadership that would further trim the power of Chairman Hua Guofeng. The plans called for a collective leadership, in which even the chairman could not overrule a majority decision. This would prevent any one person from amassing the kind of absolute power wielded by the late chairman Mao Tse-tung. The article announcing the changes was published in the latest issue of Hongqi, Red Flag, an authoritative, theoretical publication whose articles include a party's future policies. It said such a concentration of power would have been "inexplicable," which is still recovering from the excess of Mao's cultural revolution. The journal, in two articles touching on the topic, said the overhaul of the party system was a continuation of the changes in top level government pursuant to the 2015 budget. At the Congress, China's national legislature, Hua will reinstate his job as premier, but retain his post as party chairman. Zhao Yilian is expected to perform well. The leadership reform calls into question Hua's hold on a third job, head of the party military commission. But an analyst said no other changes are expected in the party leadership until a later party meeting, possibly next year. The Congress adopted the "austerity budget," and admitted official mistakes helped create the worst deficit in years. Chris cansvert last year by $1.3 billion, the worst in its recent history. Derrick funds cuts for this year, another deficit of at least $5.3 billion is predicted. Candidates defy heat in campaign openers Relentless end-of-summer heat and high humidity blistered the 1980 campaign openers yesterday but failed to dim the fervor with which President Carter and Ronald Reagan sought the nomination, the next four years in the White House. By United Press International Independent John Anderson spoke in Chicago's ethnic suburbs where the temperature was in the 90s, and it rained lightly on his parade. the working men and women of Poland, they have shown the world the hunger for human rights is everywhere. They did it by themselves. We're pleased with what happened in Poland and we wish them Godspeed for a future of property, peace and freedom," Carter said. In Tuscumbia, Ala., Carter told a crowd estimated at 30,000 that he would work for a secure peace and a strong voice to make America's dreams come true. CARTER BROKE his silence on the Polish workers' strike, saying he admired the way in which the workers achieved their goals. EARLIER IN the day, a group of 25 Klu Klus Klansmen wearing white robes peacefully marched through the city to illustrate for the president what a spokesman termed "the plight of white America." "Through the tenacity and courage of The crowd cheered when Carter chastized the KKK for practicing cowardice and counseling fear and hatred. Reagan, in Manhattan under the shadow of the Statue of Liberty, addressed a crowd of several hundred Polish, Lilianian-, Hungarian- and other american Americans who danced for him and cheered him heartily. HIS SLEEVE's turned back and his shirt unbuttoned at the neck, the Republican nominee scorned Carter's record of broken promises, and said the program "won't work . . . it is cynical, it is political, and it is too late." Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EUR LIFE TAXES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS. KANSAAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 Anderson, with his wife, Keke, and his running mate, Patrick Luciey, got a polite reception in the heavily Polish suburb of Calumet, III. He criticized Carter for saying the United States is "only" in a recession when many aspects of the economy are in depression. "A recession is when your neighbor loses his job," Reagan explained. "A depression is when you lose yours. A recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his." HE THEN WENT to Park Forest, Ill., a more middle-class bedroom community, where the Illinois congressman—whose labor voting rights have been denied tenure has made some liberals wary—addressed a Labor Day rally. Only occasionally was the crowd lining the streets more than one person down, and Anderson receive warm but not very enthusiastic applauds as he passed. Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon One coupon per customer Good Thru 9/7. Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 SAVE ON 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices SAVE UP TO 75% bud JENNING'S CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa Use Your People Book BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hampstead Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm KU Varsity Bowling Tryouts Men AND Women Tuesday & Thursday September 2 & 4 4:00 p.m.Sharp For Information, Call 864-3545 Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION E E XCALIBUR POLICE DEPT. OF INTERIOR SERVICES OX Westminster Hair Cutting For Men And Women Full Service Salon We are glad to welcome Carolyn Pool to our professional staff. REDKEN We use and recommend Redken products 2711 W. 6th, Suite D Lawrence, Ks. For Appointment 841-7867 2½C COPIES... $ 2^{\frac{1}{2}} \mathrm{~ C} $ EACH RUN LENGTHS 30 AND UNDER Originals must be 8½ x 11 sheet stock, able to go through our automatic feed. 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JOPYING QUICK-PRINTING PRINTING VERIFYING LAYOUT THESIS BINDING VELO BINDING INVIEW BINDING GLUE BINDING COLLATING PERFORATING DARKROOM DARKROOM STITCHING COMPUTING ROUND CORNERING CUTTING TRIMMING STAPLING DRILLING BOOK PRODUCTION BUSSLES BROCHURES WREATHS ANNOUNCEMENTS BUSINESS FORMS DADS ENFLOYER MENUS PHOTOSTATS NEWSLETTERS PROGRAMS RESUMES THEUS.CORING NEWLY EXPANDED HOURS 8:00 - 8:00 Monday thru Friday 9:00 - 3:00 Saturday 12:00 - 3:00 Sunday 10 11 12 1 2 9 8 7 6 5 4 SCREENED PRINTS POSTERS HOLDERS ADVERTISMENTS INVOICES DIRECTORIES LABELS BUSINESS CARS PRICE LABELS INVENTORY SHEETS SPEC SHEETS GROSS TENT CARS STATEMENTS REPORTS LETTERS PROMOS STATIONERY HOUSE OF USHER 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE (913) 842-3610 PHONE (915) 842-3610 nt University Dally Kansan, September 2, 1980 Page 3 rs e, and got a Polish t, Ill., com- inois voting tenure ary— crowd person in but as he Room squeeze not new By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter The 75 KU students now in temporary rooms in residence halls are still better off than students who were caught in the post-World War II housing crunch. So many veterans returned to college to collect GI bill benefits that the University housed men in temporary rooms in the basement of Spooner Hall, below the football stadium and in old officers' barracks west of the stadium. The University had only Corbin Hall, built in 1923. Fred McElhene, director of the office of residential programs, said Friday that the converted barracks, called Oread Hall, were used as overflow housing for 50 to 75 men as late as 1962. McEhlene said the wooden structure was so primitive that he would not let students sign contracts for it until they had seen the building. The office received many complaints about the building, McEhlene said, but it was not demolished until the early '60s when a parking lot took its place. McCOLLUM, ELLWORSH, Hashinger, Lewis and Templin halls were built between 1959 and 1965. Oliver Hall, the newest, was built in 1967. In 1973, the halls had 670 cavant room, with an average of 25 students. The term year, McColum had an empire. floor, and Templin had an almost empty one. The housing crunch returned in 1975 as enrollment increases exceeded available rooms, and temporary housing was again needed. Fewer single rooms were offered the next year to provide more spaces. Last year, the housing office began a policy of canceling contracts for late payments to help speed emptying of the temporary rooms. KU HOUSING administrators said in December that they did not plan to add another residence hall because KU's enrollment was expected to drop. McElhenie said the 51 men and 24 women waiting this year in activity rooms for others to break housing contracts could be there awhile. Although there are no guarantees, he said, most students are out of temporary housing by Thanksgiving every year. Students in temporary rooms in McCollum, Hashinger and Oliver have not yet signed housing contracts, Scholars said. Those rooms are being valued by students and staff, amenities and sororities and make other off-campus living arrangements, he said. "Some students are using our roommate list service," McEllenie said. Cards outside the office at 123 openings for off-campus roommates. On Campus GRADUATE STUDENTS The Deadline for graduate student travel fund requests for presentations of papers and research for dissertations is noon today. Requests and applications should be submitted to 226 Strong Hall. WRITING LAR The Communications Resource Center, a writing laboratory, 4056 Wescoe, opened today. The lab is staffed by English teachers during the following hours: 9 a.m.to 12:30 p.m. and 1:30 p.m.to 4:30 p.m. Monday, and 10:30 a.m.to noon and 12:15 a.m.to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. The lab is open to all students who have completed KU English requirements. TODAY COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 p.m. in the Kansas Union Forum Room. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 252 Robinson Gymnasium. In addition, this event will be presented by the ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Computer Center. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlor. TOMORROW Student Union Activities is looking for students to help plan and manage the Kansas Union's entertainment, recreational, and cultural activities. By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter SUA seeks volunteers Interested students should contact the SUA office in the Kansas Union, he said. SUA committees that need help are Special Events, Indoor and Outdoor Recreation and Forums, Steve Hitchcock, SUA president, said. Fall 1980 Leagues The Free University Committee secures volunteers to teach classes, which are open to faculty, students and the community. All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8. 10 Although the SUA board members, committee chairmen and some committee members were chosen last spring, a few spaces were left open for students and other students who did not have a chance to join SUA then, he said. The Indoor and Outdoor Recreation Committee coordinates tournaments, sports activities and the SUA Quadro basketball teams were films of out-of-town football games. The Films Committee provides about 250 films for KU students, Rexroat said. The Special Events Committee plans at least six concerts a year. The Forum Committee is responsible for presenting lectures and debates by nationally known and sometimes controversial speakers. Monday Tuesday Wednesday 6:30 Dormitory ... 6:30 All Star Scratch 1:00 K.U. Ladies 6:15 All Campus George Pitner, Ames, Iowa, sophomore, were walking near Eighth and Iowa streets when they were struck in a car accident on continued north on iowa, the police said. Both were taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital. 8:30 Greek A juvenile thought to be the driver of the car involved in a hit-and-run accident sent two students to the hospital. Friars have been found, according to Lawrence police. Thursday Friday Sunday On the Record Coleman, who suffered critical injuries, was moved to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. Friday. P. M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 Police would not release any more information about the juvenile, who police said they picked up Saturday. Police said another juvenile was formally charged. Amusement Machines 3 games/person $2.00 Friday night, Carolyn M. Coleman, Lawrence sophomore, and Thomas 6:30 Guys & Dolls 4:00 TGIF Cold Beer 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) After a speech Carter is expected to field questions from 20 people, who will be chosen by Carter's staff. In addition to area politicians and news personnel, about 1,000 local residents will attend the meeting. Sat. & Sun. Wed. & Fri. Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM BOWLING Hours The residents picked up their tickets last Thursday. One man camped outside one of two ticketers and one of the guardians himself a ticket. While in Independence, the hometown of former President Harry S. Truman, Carter is to visit Truman's widow, Bess, before his scheduled 10:30 a.m. town hall meeting. 8:30-10:00 PM 8:30-11:00 PM 1:00 PM 11:00 Carter is to leave the town hall meeting at 11:30 a.m. and travel by motorcade to the nearby Truman Library and Museum, where he is expected to visit the grave of the former president. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM Join A Fall League NOW His wife, Rosalyn, and his daughter, Amy, are not expected to accompany him to Missouri. IS FUN! + + + + + President Carter officially begins his reelection campaign this morning in independence, Mo., with the announcement in Truman High School Auditorium. Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION Carter campaign opens with visit to Independence WOLF For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 KANSAS UNION A MEETING FOR JUNIORS AND SENIORS INTERESTED IN APPLYING TO MEDICAL SCHOOL ATTENTION! PRE-MED STUDENTS WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 3 7:00 p.m. in the Forum Room Kansas Union Important information for pre-med students BE SURE TO ATTEND! The Kansas Union Bookstores Present A Rapidograph Pen Special Purchase Sale KUKI NOOR $53.25 3065-SP-4-Pen Set Mfg. List $32.50 SPECIAL SALE PRICE $24.00 $36.20 3065-HRS-9-Pen Set Mfg. List $65.75 SPECIAL SALE PRICE 3065 HRS-6-Pen Set Mfg. List $44.75 SPECIAL SALE PRICE COME IN FOR OUR UNADVERTISED KOH-I-NOOR SPECIAL! Hurry-Prices Good for Existing Stock Only! KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES With two locations to serve you Main Store, Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the ONLY Bookstores to share profits with KU students. Forming a Football Team? One Week Delivery On All Silk Screen Shirts Hot Press Printing While You Wait! Let us print your Fall Sportswear! Best Prices In Town! T-Shirts, Football Jerseys, Coaches Shirts—Everything For Your Fall wear! Located On Campus Raq Tag 44 842-1059 44 Hours Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 Opinion Bye, blue paydays A new payroll system, which is expected to be adopted at the University of Kansas by May 1982, should reap big dividends for University employees. The weaknesses of the University payroll system have become particularly apparent during the last several years, especially at the beginning of each semester. It is then paychecks for many employees arrive and it is then that everyone complains. Some faculty members find themselves with no paychecks and, consequently, nothing with which to pay their bills. Often faculty members have to secure temporary loans from the KU Endowment Association. Because of a number of complications with the state payroll office in Topeka, a number of faculty members have been shortchanged in their retirement benefits. Retirement benefits are deducted monthly from faculty members' paychecks and interest on the deductions is used for a retirement fund. But if the deductions aren't made before a certain deadline, faculty members aren't credited with any interest. The University's payroll system is 25 years old and needs modernization. Most of the kU payroll office's work has to be done by hand, whereas the system will use computers to do much of the tedious work that often has made deadlines impossible Much of the late paycheck problem is caused by strict paper-work requirements mandated by the Topea office. The computerized system should alleviate this Undoubtedly, the KU payroll office won't have heard the last of the late paycheck blues until the new system is implemented. Perhaps the most agonizing problem of the University's payroll system is that it is next to impossible to find the culprit when a problem arises. The University blames the state and the state blames the employer. The employer blames the payroll office for being inefficient and the payroll office blames the employees for not filling out the necessary forms. Under the current system, if one single error is committed, no matter how small, an employee is in great danger of losing his job or worse, there's nowhere to point the finger. At least under the new payroll system, everyone can blame the same thing—the company. Carter starts 'roots' campaign in 'small-town' Independence There's nothing like a slice of Americana—broadcast coast-to-coast on the network news network. President Carter, in a blatant attempt to overcome his poor showings in the polls, scheduled his 20th "town meeting" appearance in the all-American city of Independence, Mo. Independence, of course, was the home of Harry S. Truman, not to mention the origin of the BLAKE GUMPRECHT California, Santa Fe and Oregon trails that pioneers used to settle the west. And how about that name? Independence. It would be difficult to find a city that sounds more pulsary. To most of America, a recent Michelin tire television commercial probably represents Independence just fine. The short clip shows a bunch of down-home folks舞ing in a big oak barn, complete with hay. Supposedly, they're from Independence. No doubt that image came to mind when Carter's campaign crew was racking its brains trying to determine the best way to kick off the fall campaign. The president's staff will tell you that the purpose of the "town meeting" format is to give people who live outside the nation's media access to tale to the president what is on their minds. But it's the perfect ploy, particularly with the election only two months away. Just take a thousand or so fresh-faced folks—a few wearing overalls or cowboy boots would do nicely—and pack them into some old-fashioned auditorium in the company of twenty of Victorian houses and red brick factories. The name of the city chosen for the "town meeting" is important, too. Take some of the past sites of Carter "town meetings." Yazoo City, Miss.; Aliquippa, Penn.; Eikil City, Okla.; Clinton; Bardstown, Ky.; Beuvenille, Ohio; and Merced, Calif. Independence and Truman High School fit the bill perfectly, the Carter staff must have thought. And the hometown folks weren't about to let them down. Residents have been preparing for the visit since it was announced a week ago. Truman High's cheerleaders have been busy preparing banners and posters—using plenty of red, white and blue paint—to welcome Carter. A dozen or so that Patri cheerleaders will greet the President personally, dressed in their traditional red, white and blue cheerleader outfits. Truman's 100-piece marching band has been brushing up its renditions of 'Ruffles and Flourshies' and 'Hail to the Chief.' The band wore their red, white, blue and concert uniforms. A huge garrison flag has been raised behind the presidential podium. "will be will," said Truman principal LeRoy Brown, "a lot of red, white and blue." Carter's itinerary calls for him to arrive at Kansas City Municipal Airport at 9:30 this morning. He was expected to visit Bess Truman before arriving at Truman High. There he will answer questions from 20 pre-selected spectators. About a thousand free tickets for the appearance, given away Thursday afternoon, went on sale. At dinnertime tonight, a few million people across the nation will see footage of the president answering questions from some regular-looking officials and blue and white auditorium in Independence. Mo Never mind that Independence is, in fact, the fourth largest city in Missouri, with 110,000 residents. Only St. Louis, Kansas City and Springfield are larger. The reporters won't mention that Truman High School isn't surrounded by large oak trees and neighborhood filled with Victorian homes. Actually, it's immersed in the middle of Inverness's version of 23rd Street in Lawrence. The school is in the middle of the town's fast-food alley. TV will never let that get out. But the whole affair will come across as perfectly quaint on the tube. "It's ridiculous," said one city resident. "There aren't even any bars in Independence." Letters must be signed 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. Letters Policy KANSAN (USPS) 650-6400: Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday in June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60415. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $7 per month in Douglas County and $15 for six months or $3 a semester. Mail to a senator at a senator during the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the U.S. Postal Service. The University Daily editor Business Manager Carol Bear Ehlan Shrader Marketing Editor Cynid Hughes Editorial Editor Ivan Lare Campus Editor Jody Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Sjerven Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Whitome Sports Editor Gene Myers Entertainment Editor Patti Arnold Entertainment Editor Kevin Mills Makeup Editor Ellen Iwanoto, Bob Schaud, Jennifer Holder Wire Editors Lois Winkelmant, Tom Todeschi Copy Creatives Chris Dodd Chief Photographer Benn Bigger, Ken Combs, Scott Hooker, Dave Kraus, Drew Towers Staff Photographers Amy Holwell, Ted Lacking, Bill Meneses, Scott Foley, Frank Fountain Susan Schoenmaker, Blake Gumpehr Cartier当代摄影员 Joe Bartos Staff Artists John Jones, Michael Wunch, Bert Bollon Staff Writers Chick Howland, Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay National Sales Manager Kevin Koster National Sales Manager Nary Guasou Campus Sales Manager Charles Manger Barb Light Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wendell Staff Artist Judy Seller Staff Photographer Mary Malik Teachsheet Manager Barb Spohr Sales Representatives Rick Binkley, Annette Conrad, Terrif Fry, Bill Groom, Larry Leibnauer, Paul O'Connor, Paul Schwinger, Julius Baldener Thaine Sheltter, Anthony Tilton, Kevin Swapon, Susan Brinneman Rick Musker WE'VE BEEN GOING OUT FOR MORE THAN 3 WEEKS NOW, MIRIAM, DO YOU THINK ...ER...WE SHOULD GET MARRIED? SURE, DUANE... IT SOUNDS OKAY TO ME! THE MIRACULOUS CURE : MARRIAGE! BEFORE AFTER Singles are breed so misunderstood Marriage today is a gilded initiation into adulthood, still sacramental in a society practiced but the pristine reputation of marriage nevertheless has been marred by a runaway divorce rate that is the tell-tale sign of deeper trouble. From 1970 to 1979, the number of American divorces increased by a startling 96 percent. The statistics are more clear-cut than the solutions. But if the causes of divorce are debated, it is likely that contestants and their practice should seem to be a curb on headlong marriages. Yet society continues to reward matrimony with money and apparently hasn't learned its lesson. The single 'side of America still is underglaring as economics or as subtle as a sentence.' Consider the case of a college student. The economic edge goes to those students who, out of passion or purpose, marry immediately after graduation. After declaring themselves mutually ardent, newlyweds are swamped with an array of pots, dishes and waffle irons. Meanwhile, graduating singles presumably are able to confront life without the benefit of a toaster, sheets or silverware. Their best hope is for some hand-me-down hardware from home. Their greatest rewards for four years of study are the opportunity and an outstanding student loan payment. After a simple "I do," couples are privy to societal support that a single person, adjusting to SUSAN SCHOENMAKER the stress of independent living, needs just as urgently. The marital knot is tied not only with materialism, but also with the values of a society that values tradition. The value may be a tradition, such as a bouquet thrown to the less fortunate at a wedding. It may be lowered car insurance for marrieds or the word "old maid." It may be language. For instance, the wording of the 1980 U.S. census offered citizens a choice between "married" or "unmarried" status. The word "not come in" single" or "unsingle" categories. Our marriage-minded values may perpetuate myths that paper over the problems of divorce, treating the right questions about marriage with the wrong answers. Marriage is often touted as a declaration of independence from parental control, when in reality it is the ultimate dependence—a com-parison with lifelong compromise and to a lifelong companion. Marriage is considered a prerequisite to a satisfying adulthood, a happily ever-after ending to adolescence that by definition excludes singles. That myth, steeped in traditional marriage patterns, is not easily dispelled. But if society fails to acknowledge, both economically and culturally, that marriage will continue to be the greatest losers. Jamaican refugees may invade America Given the loathsome choice of Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter and John Anderson for president, the most interesting election this fall may be in Jamaica. There, incumbent Prime Minister Michael Manley's social programs have backfired, resulting in 30 percent unemployment and a mountain of foreign debt. If Manley is not outset by his challenger, Eward Seaga, Jamaicans may decide to swarm their opponents. TED LICKTEIG MARIA MAYORA percent of the middle class of the Caribbean island has fled in recent years. Only two million of a total of four million Jamaicans still live on the island. Manley has set the election for October, although an election is not required by the constitution until 1981. Unfortunately for Manley, the economy would not hold on that year and a recession later make it available to Jamaica because of its poor credit standing with world financial institutions. Instead, Manley has gone the route of Billy Carter and has a $50 million loan on hold from Libya. U. S. government confidence in Jamaica also has sunk. Foreign aid to Jamaica has been chopped from $30 million in 1977 to $3 million this year. Jamaica's problems started after Manley was first elected prime minister in 1972. In what then appeared as noble deeds, he instituted a minimum wage, initiated a works projects administration, attempted to spread electricity to rural areas and signed a tenant protection law. However, Manley's programs were poorly managed. The minimum wage has been reduced to one-half its 1972 value, partly because the cost of living has doubled since 1975. Many rural residents could not afford the $20 hookup fee for electricity, after much of the government's money had been wasted on wiring and installation. The tenant protection law is so one-sided that renters can stay rent-free for months after being evicted. Manley, now 10 to 15 points behind Seaga in public opinion polls, further increased many low- Seaga's chances depend on his ability to catch the Rastafarian vote. The Rastas are descendants of African slaves who worked for British colonialists. The British ran the island until independence was granted in 1962. Manley and Sesola were elected before his election victories in 1973 and 1976. income Jamaicans by stocking resort hotels with steaks and whiskey while allowing shortages of ice. Manley's strategy in the 1980 election apparently had been to incite pc violence—an average of one policeman was murdered a week recently and 20 of Seaga's supporters were killed last April. In the 1978 elections, violence was capped by a martial law edict imposed before the invasion; Seaga forces say Manley would not dare repeat the handcuffing ceremony before this year's election. Seaga, the Labor Party candidate, would appear to be the obvious favorite in the election. However, the Rastas will not be an easy way to sway because of Manley's attempts to lift them. The Rastas, who comprise about 85 percent of the population, are low on the socio-economic ladder behind their Chinese, Jewish, East Indian and Arab countrymen. But they are moving up by default. Ninety percent of the Chinese, who owned most of the retail stores in the Connecticut-sized nation, have departed since Manley's policies have been adopted. Therefore, Manley's policies perhaps lost their luster in the euses of the Rastas. If Manley manages to overcome his deficit in the polls, either by voting lever or by machine gun, the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Bureau must move more than Vietnamese, Cubans and Haitians to count. VOTE HERE Gee Bantos '86 KANSAN 900 βίλιος 186 KANSAN University Dally Kansan, September 2, 1980 Page 5 Page 5 From page 1 Safety Campus Safety to provide free self-defense lessons, Ward said. In addition, Campus Safety officers are preparing to meet with proponents of Whistle Stop, a new campus program that encourages students to use whistles to help escape attackers. "When you have all of these programs doing the work kind of thing, it really helps if they can work with each other." THE BOARD OF directors of Campus Safety services will meet tonight to discuss the group's plans for a future campus safety strategy. The ascort service is scheduled to resume September 28 if the details can be worked out, Written notice. Margaree Greenfield, resident director or Gertrude Sellars梨 Pearson Hall, said the escort service would be able to re-open its base office at the hotel and generate from a room behind the hall's front desk. Volunteers are still needed for the escort services, which will begin this Wednesday. Wardens will Last year, the service had between 68 and 70 volunteers at its peak. By the end of the spring semester, however, that number had dwindled to 25 or 36, Greenin, vice president of recruiting and training. THIS SEMESTER, Campus Safety hopes to expand its programs and would like to have 125 to 150 volunteers for the escort service, Schenken said. Volunteers would work a three-hour shift sometime between 5 p.m. and 1 a.m. and then would be on call at their homes. students coupons for a dollar off, which lowers season ticket prices to $18. The elimination of a surcharge for student seating added to Memorial from last year's $23. Tickets From page 1 Heley said she was not sure how successful the coupon promotion has been but was encouraged by the number of people using them. Mass sales for student season football tickets ended Friday. It remains to be seen, however, if "I think the sales have gone pretty well," said Nancy Welah, a ticket manager. We still had a lot of new customers. the football program has generated enough interest to significantly increase ticket sales. Welsh said tickets would be available up until the first home football game. September 20 Student tickets are still on sale at Allen Field House, the SUA ticket window at the Kansas Union and at the Satellite Union. Beginning Wednesday, students will receive residence halls on different nights, Welsh said. Hearing set for KU Iranian A Sept. 11 hearing date has been set on the immigration status of an Iranian Lawrence resident, Vahid Razavi, 19, 3238 Murhpv. The hearing will determine whether Razavi is violated, its status and whether he will be jailed. Razavi, originally from Tehran, has lived in Lawrence the past five years, spending one year as a senior at Lawrence High School and two years as a student at the University of Kansas. He was not enrolled Aug. 27 when immigration officials interviewed him about his visa status, he said, because he had not *received tuition money from Iran*. President Carter has frozen Iranian assets in this country, making it difficult for Iranian students to enter the country. He said his problems with immigration officials began with a bad check he wrote on the back of a passport. He said that on Aug. 26, he went down to the Douglas County district attorney's office to pay off a $25 bad check written in October 1979. While there, he was told he was wanted by immigration authorities and was detained for a few weeks. He then died. Razavi said he was turned over to immigration authorities the next morning and taken to the U.S. Immigration and Burial Service office in Kansas City, Mo. Razavi is also scheduled to appear at a county Court on charges of violating county District Court on charges of firearms. Drop plan on College agenda By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter The College Assembly will consider a motion to lengthen withdrawal periods for students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences from four to five weeks when it meets at 4 p.m. Room Forum of the Kansas Union. "It's just a formality actually." Teri Carswell, secretary of the Assembly, said yesterday. "You have to accept University policy. It's already printed in the timetables." Last spring, the University decided to begin a more uniform add-drop policy for all schools. AS A RESULT, starting Aug. 25, undergraduate students have five weeks to simply drop classes and another five weeks to drop classes to automatically receive 'W'*s for withdrawal on their transcripts. After that, they may be given permission to drop. Any undergraduate who drops a class after Oct. 10 will receive either a 'W' or an 'F' on his transcript. According to the new schedule, graduate students will have to petition to drop classes after Sept. 19; social welfare students will have to petition Aug. 4, and law students must petition after Nov. 25. DETAILED WITHDRAWAL instructions can be found in the Fall 1980 Timetable, Carswell said. Before the withdrawal policies were changed last May, Carswell said, students who had classes in several different schools were faced with confusing array of withdrawals schedules to follow. Carswell said she expected a good turnout at tomorrow's meeting when the policy will be discussed, but past Assembly attendance records have been low. Last week, along with tomorrow's agenda, members were sent lists of their names and attendance records. "It was kind of embarrassing," Gall Boaz, Kansas City, Kan.,Jun., junior, said.Because of a schedule conflict, she said, she missed most Assembly meetings last spring. "But the freshmen were really bad," she said as she looked at the list. "About six out of 25 went to at least one meeting. The rest didn't make it to any." At next month's Assembly meeting, members will decide whether to move Assembly elections ahead from early February to Nov. 19 and 20, Carwell said. CARSWELI, SAID the monthly Assembly meetings were well-attended when controversial issues, such as changing degree requirements, were discussed. If the change is approved, Assembly elections will coincide with the new date for Student Services. --francis T Valuable Coupon 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd Buy Two Sanchos Get One Sancho Free with this coupon offer not good Wednesday 5-11 P.M. Good Until Sept. 15 "The Proof is in the Taco" --francis Use Kansan Classified f Pack it...in your sporting goods 843-4191 781 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 60444 N W EAST-PAK "DAY PAK'R III" S - waterproof polyurethane coated nylon * one-piece body (no major seams to tear) * double slider, nylon zipper * wide padded shoulder straps * front pocket, quick release waistrap * 9az, royal blue, $12^{\prime}$ to $8^{\prime \times} 17^{\prime \times} 5^{^{\prime}}$ others from 5.95 F sporty things for sporty people* 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Make your own hours and write your own paycheck. Everything's up to you when you become a Proventual Mutual campus insurance agent. You can work 2 hours a day. Or 5. Work before class or after. Usually, the more time you have to put in, the more money you make. Call our campus office and let's discuss how we can help you get the most out of life. Terry Westlund Campus Supervisor The Arkansas State University Kansas City 711 Commune Bank Bldg. Mason City, Md. 64108 --- PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Get the most out of life with Home Office: 4601 Market St., Phila., Pa. 19101 : we're moving! after Sept. 1st our address will be Crewel Cupboard 1029 Massachusetts • needlepoint • quilting • latch hook rugs • crewel • knitting • frames • cross-stitch • crochet • classes Buy now and get FREE Solid State Software Libraries. TI Programmable 59 — $300* $40 or more value 1 FREE module† with purchase of a TI-58C $98 or more value 2 FREE modules† & PPX Membership with purchase of a TI-59 TI Programmable 58C — $130* Choose from these. 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Here are my module choices and an alternate TX 79408 Return this coupon (1) with customer information card and return it to the copyedited copy of proof of payment between Aug 15 and Oct 31, 1989 — items must be postal marked on Nov 7 or 18. Calculate Serial Number (from back of unit) Please allow 30 days for delivery. Offer void when prohibited. Offer good in U.S. only The rights to the signature subsumes: Fifty Years I.U.S. suggested retail for all Lii- riums are $40, except Farming, Water Analysis. $45. *1*S suggested retail for all Lii- riums are $45. **For use with Tl-59 only Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED Fifty Years of Innovation Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 Jubal Crowe drives a truck, and in his spare time plays a game called "guts." But not in his 18-wheeler. Guts is played with a frisbee, and Crowse squared off with about 100 others at the Kansas State Frisebee Championships in guts, golf, double-disc and freestyle competition last weekend in Lawrence. Finesse, guts Frisbee basics "I came up from Oklahoma to be in this tournament," Crowe said. "I play in the golf, guts and double-disc competitions. Kansas people are nice and there's always a lot of good-looking women around." THE KU FRISEEBEE Club, in conjunction with the Flying Disc Family, a five-state regional organization, sponsored the Frisee festival which was held at Potter Lake on Saturday, and at South Park on Sunday. Teams from Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska and Colorado competed in the four events. Free from golf bags and clubs, the Frisbee golfers fed off Saturday morning and worked around the course trying to hit lappets and a 3-foot area on trees. Lou Satterfield of Tulsa, Okaa., won the men's competition by scoring 78 points in seven holes. He led the women’s golf event with a score of 104 after 27 "holes." A total of 44 people played in the golf tournament. THE FREESTYLE EVENT is a four-minute routine in which each player exhibits his skill with the Frisbee by spinning it, rolling it across the body, and doing unusual throws and catches. Some players put silicone on the Frisbee to make it spin easier. Teams can play together or score on innovation, smoothness and high and low moves. "We have all the prettiest Frisbee golf courses in the Big Eight," said J. C. Alonzo, co-chairman of the KU Frisbee Club. "It's set up around Potter Lake, the Cam-panile and the stadium." "Some people play guts with gloves on," Alonzo said. Less dramatic than the guts event is the double-disc, in which two players stand in a small square boundary. Two others are 15 yards away in another square area. The two players form a triangle. Frisbees at the other side. If the Frisbee lands within the ground before being caught, they can pick up one point. "Guts" is no game for those who are easily intimidated. Four people stand side-by-side, an arm's length away. An identical line of people faces them 15 yards away. One person tries to slam a Bribee as hard as possible through the other line for a point. If it is caught or drops short, the other team gets to throw it. THE HEART OF America Frisbee Club, from Topeka, won $20 for its first place victory in the guts event and a plaque for its first place win in the double-disc. Other teams receive ribbons and Frisbees, as well as an aplause from spectators. The KU Frisbee Club sends teams to area tournaments and sells Frisbees at discount prices. There is no membership fee and members meet at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays and then meet in the gym for new weeks, the club hopes to meet in Robinson gymnasium. Alonzo said that Frisbee flying is gaining popularity quickly because it is easy and fun. "The sport of Frisbee is popular world wide," he said. "It's hot on both coasts in America and in Europe. And it's Frisbie started in the 1950s when students at Yale University took 10-inch metal pie pans from the Frisbie Pie Company and sailed them all over campus, shouting "Frisbee" whenever necessary. The Wham-O toy company began producing Frisbees in 1957 and called them Wham-O Flying Saucers. They became popular after the hula-hope faded, when the company changed the name to Frisbee and promoted them. JACKSON CITY Peggy Wessels, Springfield, Mo., goes through her routine during the freestyle Frisbee competition. D. Jubal Crowe, Tulsa, Okla., prepares to throw a Frisbee through the opposing team's line during a game of Guts. Story by STEVE BASKA Photos by BEN BIGLER International Frisbee Association IFA CHIPS Robert Morton, Tulsa, Okla., practices a double chest roll. [Image of a man lying on his back, arms raised up in a triumphant pose, with a disc in each hand. He is wearing a short-sleeved shirt and shorts.] 7 Tony Pacini, Frank Neef and Nell Adams, all of Springfield. No, dive for a disc during a Guts game. University Daily Kansan, September 2. 1980 Page 7 BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff BEN BIOLEMKANSKA stall Pete Oster, Topeka senior, glides down one of the hills near Potter Lake on a pair of grass skis. The skis have a movi- ball around them so they can move over the grass. --starts at Desk Valuable Coupon TACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd Buy Two Tacos Get One Taco Free with this coupon Good Until Sept. 15. "The Proof is in the Taco" --starts at Desk What's Your Racquet? Enter the Racquet and Paddle Championship The deadline for entering is Wednesday, Sept. 3 at 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services 864-3456 THE BEST ROOM NO.1000 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES 99 Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7.30 & 9.30 P Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7.20 & 9.20 R Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3. Raise the Titanic 7:15 & 9:15 1. Xanadu 2. The Fiendish Plot of Dr Fumanchu Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 7:30 & 9:40 Sunset 12:47 Waxth 8th 31 043-6172 7. 30 & 9.30 Urban Cowboy Grease Paper Special ZERCHER PHOTO (Save on film, By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter tripods, and "We Handle Everything Photographic" bags, too) This Coupon Good For Catalog update disrupts library WEE SELL Kodak CINEMAS FILM $3.00 --system for circulation like the one in Watson," she said, and they buried the cable for it in cement. They're taking soundings to try to find it." Toward the purchase of a 100 sheet box of Kodak paper, 100 foot roll of black & white film, or any tripod or gadget bag. She said the new Engineering Library in the basement of the Satellite Union and the Science Library in the building of Malott both would be open today. NOW CALL Kodak CAMPERS PEN Good at both Lawrence Zercher Photo Stores $3 TWO LOCATIONS NEAR CAMPUS Finding a KU library book this week could prove to be a fruitless quest—at least until curved catalog in Watson University makes names of location for three branch libraries. Expansion 9-3-80 The engineering books have been moved out of Marvin because of the Marvin renovation project. The geology, meteorology and paleontology books in Marvin went to the Science Library, and Watson now houses books on architecture, urban planning and geography. Staff Reporter Melton said Friday that he did not know how long it would take to change a house. Hillcrest Center 919 Iowa Melton said that about 40,000 books had been in Marvin. CHANGING THE card catalog is not the only problem caused by moving the branch libraries. The reference librarians also have to handle requests for books that are in libraries that haven't opened yet. Downtown The Art Library is being moved from Watson to the Spencer Museum of Art. The Old Green reading room is being moved to the Science Library in Malott and Marvin Library is being divided among them, based on the subject matter of the books, said Rob Melton, reference librarian at Watson. "That means a lot of the art history students are having difficulty finding it." EVERY CARD IN THE card catalog names a place where the book can be found. The locations must be changed to match the books that have been moved, he said. to stock on hand Mellon shot the opening date of the new Art Library had been changed from Sept. 4 to Sept. 10 because some of it was the library had not arrived, and the computer system for checking out books had not been installed. $3 Hillcrest Center FLEXIBLE WIRELESS ADAPTIVE NETWORK 8G TECHNOLOGY He said a system of 'paging' art books until the Art Library opened was being considered. People could make written requests for art books at Watson, and someone would go to the Art Library and bring back the books requested. 1107 Massachusetts Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 CLARK SAID problems with the system for checking out books were the main cause of the delay in opening the Art Library. 919 Iowa Sat 10-6 librarian at Watson, said that until the card catalog was changed, signs would be put up in the library to inform people of new library locations. "In some cases, the books have been moved but the cards haven't been changed," he said. "That takes a lot of time, and we we're understaffed. These moves are about as difficult a situation to deal with as Watson renovation." Use Kodak Paper for quality enlargements. "All those cards say they're in Marvin," Clark said. "People will go over there and find out there's no library in Marvin." Kodak film Mon-Fri 10-8 Marilyn Clark, head reference Use Kodak film for quality you can depend on. "They're putting in a computer CHANGING THE cards for the books in the reading room in Lippincott Hall would not be as difficult as changing the book from a hardcover to a paperback, the reading room had only a few books. Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 25. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Call center by phone: M-Thurs. 8:8 14th and Massachusetts. h and Massachusetts ATTENTION!!! KU CONCERT SERIES PATRONS If you wish to retain the same seat you have held in previous seasons, please pick up your season tickets prior to MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 Tickets not picked up, or reserved, by this date will be released for sale ... Season ticket patrons who do not pick up season tickets prior to TUES DAY, SEPTEMBER 2, may not be assured of their regular seats for the Kansas City Lyric Opera concert. Ducks JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6th & Michigan ★ Free Delivery We fill KU student prescriptions and offer Individual patient records ★ Discount Prices Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book The Lippincott reading room contains the Lippincott psychology books and is only staffed part time. FREE LOCK with bike purchase! Bicycle Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH·PUCH·ALUSTRO·DAIMLER CENTURION RICK'S BIKE SHOP bicycle We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont 1059 vermont Lawrence KS HOUSE OF USHE: 801 MASSACHUSETTS & LAWRENCE & AJDAMS 6054 & 9315102 3010 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:30-9:00 SAT 2½¢ EACH 2 1/2 c EACH SUA FILMS (1939) Tuesday, Sept. 2 Destry Rides Again The classic sport, with Jimmy Stewart as the sheerfifo who doesn't carry a gun ("someone might get hurt if they do," and he can probably hall girl who says "See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have." Directed by George Marshall. Plus "Blaze Glory" (44). Wednesday, Sept. 3 The Man in the White Suit Tight Little Island (Whiskey Galore) Two great comedies from Eating Stages. The first stars Alec Guinness as a mild-mannered scientist who invents an invention the last thing the world wants. With Joan Greenwood and Ernest Theiser. The second is the story of a sunken ship full of people to die. It takes all of the nearby islands to get it before the government does. With Basil Radford and the irresponsible Miss Greenwood. With Mackenndrick (85/62 m) BW: 7.30. (1954) (The Magnificent Seven) Thursday, Sept. 4 Seven Samurai Shown uncut for the first time in the United States. Akina Kurosawa's exciting, colorful, ironic saga of seven warriors led to Toshiro Mifune is a great movie in the 1953 Best Foreign Film Academy Award Winners (208 min). BW: 7:30. Friday, Sept. 5 Comes a Horseman in 1945 Wyoming, small farmers Jane Fonda and James Gaas light off cattle farmed by the late Ted Davis, photographed Western, directed by Alan Garcia. "What's a Dog, Doc." (119 min.) Color film. Coming Home Jane Fonda and Jon Voitwon Jane Academy for their portraits of a radicalized soldier's wife and a paran- theologist, who was the effectors of the Vietnam War on those at home. Bruce Dumce and Robert Carl- son. **Curtis Buck Amuck** (1:27) jn color) 3:30-8.30 The Beatles at Shea Stadium Magical Mystery Tour Roll up for the magical extravaganza with the Beatles. The first is the record of their debut album, *See You Later* (see if you can guess what George is on) as they sing their greatest early hits. Then climb aboard for "1" Am the Moleman and watch the others in this surreal adventure. (6552 min.) Plus: "Braverman's Condensed Collection of Beatles." Color. 1200; Midnight. Saturday, Sept. 6 Comes a Horseman 3-30, 9-30 Coming Home 7-90 The Beatles at Shea Stadium 12:00 Midnight. Magical Mystery Tour 12:00 Midnight Jnless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodford Auditorium for $30.00, Friday for $15.00, Friday for $15.00, Saturday, Populer and Sunday films are $15.00, Midnight film is $25.00, UA Office, Kansas Union 4th, level. Information 864-659 No smoking or refresheral treatments. Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 @ I NEED YOU for the FIGHT AGAINST MUSCLE DISEASES Muscular Dystrophy Association ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff Steve Soloman, Cleveland, Kan., is doing his part in Louisburg to help to raise money for Jerry Lewis' annual Labor Day telethon to fight muscular dystrophy. Local telethon shows own flair In Las Vegas, it was glamour and glitter that brought in contributions to Jerry Lewis' Labor Day Muscular Encephalitis. Once, because it was fire engines and pony rides. Lawrence pledges totaled $7,800, according to Tom Bedell, Lawrence pledge center coordinator, down about $4,000 from last year. Vernmont served as the pledge center for the local campaign. Bedell said he did not know what caused the decrease in pledges, but attributed it partially to a malfunction in the phone lines. "We were down to about three phones for about four hours this morning," he said yesterday. Bedell said that local cash totals were not available but that several children had brought in contributions of $70 to $80. "One kid turned in $188 today," he said. "He gets to go to the statehouse, get a tour and meet the governor." Bedell said about 45 persons had contributed their time by answering phones, driving fire engines and walking ponies at the firehouse. He said contributions from the activities at the firehouse and a beer party at the Entertainer, 201 W. Eighth St., had not been counted. Revenue from special events sponsored by companies such as Coca-Cola would be collected and added to the Lawrence total within the next few days. The national telethon raised $31,103,787 for Muscular Dystrophy clinics and research. Anything worth doing takes time. And one KU student is working for the KU police in an effort to keep from doing time. Prank offset by police work Armand Jones, Burdett senior, has been ordered to do 500 hours of community service work with the KU police and has received a explosion that damaged a KU police car. Jones said yesterday that he thought the experience would be a valuable one. Jones, 20, was assigned the work in the Douglas County District Court through a deferred prosecution agreement. Under the agreement, the judge allowed him to keep the charges against Jones if he co-operated with the service work program. "I've gained a better understanding and developed a genuine appreciation for the team." Jones said the officers and other soldiers held him well and were not hostile to him. "The people there have been real it" he said. "I'm learning a lot and its fun." He said the work included cleaning up offices, painting and helping to inventory equipment. Jones said the community service job is KU officers to do more on their jobs. "I punch in just like everyone else," he said, "but I don't get paid. Instead, the time is subtracted from the 500 hours." Jones said he was scheduled to work 10 hours a week while school is in session and 40 hours a week during vacation periods. Tavern, fire house construction on commission agenda tonight Revision of a site plan for a tavern at 900 Pennsylvania St., and authorization to issue temporary notes for construction of the city's fourth fire station are on the agenda for tonight's Lawrence City Commission meeting. The commission will meet at 7 p.m. in the commission chambers of City Hall, the The tavern issue centers on approval of a redwood deck to be built on the south side of the tavern. The deck was not included in the original site plan approved this summer and must be approved before it can be used. finance construction of a new fire station at Clinton Parkway and Lawrence Avenue in the remodeled Grover Barn. On Aug. 5, voters approved a general obligation bond to pay for the station. The temporary notes will allow the client to start work before the bonds are sold. The commission is also expecte to authorize $260,000 in temporary notes to The agenda also includes a review of bids for a wheelchair ramp for the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets, and the rezoning of 34 acres near Clinton Parkway and the Alvamar Golf Course from single-family dwellings to duplex and multi-family, dwellings. Let HEWLETT.hd PACKARD help calculate your needs. 1]} = $ \phi 1, K (n-1) ]$ $ \frac{K (n-1)}{K (n-1)} $ M Streat M Serro = (1+n) SCIENTIFIC PROBLEMS ? SEE US FOR THE HP SOLUTION HP31E $45.00 HP32E $63.00 HP33C $99.00 HP33E $78.00 HP34C $130.00 CALCULATE THE HP DIFFERENCE Real Estate Navigation Physics Chemistry Math Games Business Statistics Engineering Geometry SOLUTIONS NPV = F $ \frac {F V}{(1+i)^{n}} $ $ # 120, C $ 1234567890 CFn $(1+i)^n$ HP41C $263.00 HP41C modules $45.00 HP41C printer $350.00 HP41C card reader $189.00 Cash Flow PV,FV,N 7000 YEAR +NPV,I NPV=F CFn FV (1+i)ⁿ $120,0 FINANCIAL PROBLEMS ? SEE US FOR THE HP SOLUTION HP37E $75.00 HP38E $108.00 HP38C $130.00 HP67 $325.00 KU Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Croscent Rd. 843-3826 HOURS M-F 8-5 Sat. 8-4 KU Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. 25% OFF STUDENT DISCOUNT THE COMPREHENSIVE DRUG INFORMATION BOOK FACTS AND COMPARISONS Pharmacy, medical, nursing students...you need FACTS, the most current, complete, objective reference for prescription and OTC drugs available. Contains comprehensive information, comparisons on over 10,000 drugs, each grouped according to its therapeutic category. Used by healthcare professionals everywhere. SAVE 25% for your very own FACTS now...in Bound or Monthly Unloaded Loose-leaf. Contains the drug information you need to know... over 10,000 products listed... a handy complete reference... Use this coupon to order your Facts and Comparisons NEW 25% STUDENT DISCOUNT (Not a subscription renewal notice) YES! Please send me: The Lose Leather Edition the updates (no updates) $72.00 REG. STUDENT DISCOUNT @ $51.75 The 1981 Annual Bound Edition (no updates) $51.00 REG. STUDENT DISCOUNT @ $36.00 Method of Payment check enclosed for $ check residents add 4.625% sales tax The Loose-leaf Edition Charge my purchase to credit card number on right. City Phone Credit card expiration date charge my purchase Comparisons, Inc. 111 West Port Plaza, Dept. 71, St. Louis, Missouri 63141, (314) 878-2515 VISA Master Charge number STUDENTS NOTE: 25% discount on student orders. MUST be prepaid and enclose nonreturnable photocopy of your student id. or other proof of student status with remittance or credit card number. footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (cross from Greenbrier's office) Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More K. U. SCIENCE FICTION FANTASY ASSOCIATION Thursday, Sept. 4, 7:30 p.m. International Room, Kansas Union ALL SAPIENT AUTOCHTHONS INVITED BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves. & Sun Braids by Paul Travis A Travis' Own Design Paul specializes in vogue braiding, sculptured nails, and make-up. This month only get a side disco twist FREE with a shampoo & blow-dry. Ad must be presented. Call for an appointment. Hairport Hillcrest Shopping Center 842. 1076 Mary Webb-owner Join The Crowd! Black Student Union General Meeting September 3, 7:00 p.m. Lewis Hall Agenda: Seminar Symposium Fashion Show BSU Gospel Choir Choir Committee Big 8 Conference in Colo. Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 Sports Calendar Page 9 2 1:30 p.m. - Women's tennis at Allison Field House, Allison Field House courts 2:30 p.m. - Women's tennis basketball meeting in the locker room at Allen Field House 3:00 p.m. - Women's basketball and field and women's cross country meeting in the office, Allen Field House 3 1:30 p.m. — Women's tennis tryouts, Allen Field House courts 3:30 p.m.—Men's tennis tryouts, Allen Field House courts **Allen Field House** 7:00 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Milwaukee KBZM-A, KKK-FM) KBZM-A, KKK-FM) 4 5 p.m. — Baseball team massage press, meeting area, second floor of Athens 7:30 p.m. — Kansas City Wrisky vs. Miyamoto KRBZM, KRKK-FM (KRBZM, KRKK-FM) Q 5 Sports Quiz 7:30 p.m. — Kansas City Royale at Cleveland Indians. (Ch. 4, KMBZ-AM, KKKX- FM). Today's question— In 1968, two KU football players were selected All-Americans. Who were they? C Weekend Results his answer. The only opponent was Baker University on Nov. 22, KU's. Baker's full team, woon, 22.9. Baker's home team, teamw, 22.9. KU Rugby Club *A*11 AU KU Rugby Club *B* 10 BN KU Rugby Club *B* 20 Nebraba KU Rugby Club *4* bers 31, 38 Kansas City State Clubs 21 Omaha Rugby Club *A*10 Omaha Rugby Club *A*10 KU Rugby Club *B* 21 BN KU Rugby Club *B* 20 Nebraba W 7 W L Pct. GB New York 79 51 608 - Ballimore 71 52 597 - Boston 71 56 559 % Detroit 71 61 327 % Cleveland 60 64 321 % Indiana 60 64 321 % Toronto 74 68 515 % AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST Kansas City W 83 L 47 Pct. GB Oklahoma 85 47 544 Texas 65 67 492 Chicago 65 73 492 20 Chicago 58 73 492 20 Minnesota 57 78 439 28 Minnesota 57 78 439 28 Seattle 54 78 362 18 Seattle 54 78 362 18 NATIONAL LEAGUE New York 5. Oakland 4 Baltimore 5. Seattle 4 Chicago 4 Detroit 1. Chicago 3 Milwaukee 2. Kansas City 1 Milwaukee 2. Kansas City 1 Yesterday's Games Major-league Baseball Philadelphia 95 L W Pet. GB Montreal 50 61 61 St. Louis 71 71 61 New York 59 72 64 St. Louis 57 72 64 St. Louis 59 72 64 Dallas 52 83 442 11 Minnesota 57 72 442 WEST WEST WEEK W 7 L 57 Pct. QB Houston 74 78 59 .568 % Los Angeles 74 77 59 .565 % 2% Cincinnati 73 60 59 .550 % 1% San Francisco 66 65 77 .504 % 2% San Diego 65 77 347 % 2% Houston 10-5, Pittsburgh 12-7 Cincinnati 8, St. Louis 1 Chicago 7, Houston 6 Philadelphia 6, San Francisco 4 Los Angeles 8, New York 3 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Yesterday's Games Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer Each additional word one team two team three team four five team six seven team eight nine team ten team十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十二十四五十六七十八十九十十一十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十二十三十四五十六七十八十九十十一十二十三十四十五六 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 20 p.m. Tuesday Friday 20 p.m. Wednesday Monday 20 p.m. Thursday Friday 20 p.m. Friday Wednesday 20 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the Kaiser Business office at 841348 The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE J11 Flint Hall M4415E ANNOUNCEMENTS CONSUMER AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION— The Consumer Affairs Association is now accepting consumer affairs association (CAs) positions on its Board national directors. Two (2) positions on its Board are filled by students and three positions are allowed to be filled by professionals. We would appreciate your suggestions of which CAs may be obtained by interested parties at the Association's annual meeting in 1980. For further information call 843-4608. DIABETES SEMINAR Monday, 8.7.30 in Bedroom and Room Conference Room, Watkina Memorial monitoring as an aid in better control" A student ENTERTAINMENT Looking for something on Sundays! THE CLUB LOUISE, $50 LOUSE, 842-761-9300, Open from 5 p.m. till 3 a.m. Member benefits. "Partying is our business." 9-30 FOR RENT 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 833-9579 or 824-4185. 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting, now. 1/2 bath, attached appliances, all appliances, you'll like ourooks to Southern Parkway Township, 26th and Kaidol, 842-880-7900. JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS Welcomes K.U. Students & Faculty ONE BEDROOM, ONE BEDROOM WITH STUDY and TWO BEDROOM APTS. From $205.00 available JAYHAWK OFFERS: *A) Free Shuttle Bus to Campus B) 24 Hour Security a) 24 Hour Security C) 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service D) Indoor & Outdoor Pools b) Indoor & Outdoor Pools E) Laundry Facilities on Site *G) Furnished or Unfurnished Models Available FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 1 of Mails 2 bdr. furnished apt., excellent location. on bus route. Call 841-2645 after 5 p.m. 9-4 *F) 10 Month Lease Available *G) Furnished or Unfurnished Unfunded home for rent 4 bdr. large. Fully furnished home. Utilities Utilized $400 per month, do not include individuals. Not to exceed $500 per month. Shown by B & S, Call 643-8595 or B&S for sale: #511. CALL 842-4444 For Rent Now, large studio, completely furnished Has desk. Room for conference table. Monthly payment $100. deposit $375. Could used for: face. call 843-843-7777. 843-777-7777. 524 Frontier Rd. #2 Nowly remodeled rooms, fire alarm system, fire extinguisher, security alarm 811-2328 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 11 p.m. For rent now at the area I building. 104 room, 350 square space, 1300 square feet. Outer and inner rooms. ceiptionist room and 3 inner rooms with parking lot. Ideal for ophthalmology patient, or medical doctor. Can be made up to 27 patients. Resilient restroom. Call 843-2104 or 843-0777. tf Villia Cardi Capit APtarment. Uninfriated 1 & 2 Buffalo cardiapatients. Central air child with saliva, diet location, $2 bucks society salt water information. $30 schultz unwelling on weekdays. Enjoy West Medwesdo Condo. A brand new apartment in the quiet general air, microwave, trash cans, laundry, swimming pool, golf course. Unbelievable! 841-702-9536; more information call 841-700-9536 9-9 3 bdr. apt. rent $350, $100 deposit. All utilities paid. No pets. 800 Ohio. Call 843- 2440 8-5 ask for Julie. 9-3 3 bdr. apt. in N. Lawnere. $275 per mon. $275 deposit. Bills paid. 841-9698. 9-3 For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. tf 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace 616 carsave. Will take 3 students. 2500 ¢ if you buy. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. New and immaculated by lrm study, kitchen, dining room, living rm. garage, garage air. No pet. For more information call 824-4955 a.8-m. p. 9-30 Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrence, with walking distance. Perfect for perfect family. Dining, lounge, rm library, utility rm and 2 full bedrooms. Call 842-4455-8 ams 9:30 p.m. 电话 842-4455-8 ams 9:30 p.m. Need female to share new 4 bdrm. Very nice. %1/4 ushries. %4/utilities. 842-753-9 3-03 Available now large older four bedroom 400 Manhattan streets $350 mon. Call 815-275- 8000 or visit www.marriott.com Call 815-275- 8000 or visit www.marriott.com For fall or spring, Naimshim Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private school. It, weekday maid service to clean your room and bath, fun schedule or social activities at Naimshim Hall, where you can home or if an apartment isn't what you want, go to HALL, 1800 Naimshim Drive, 843-8559, tlf 843-8559. FOR SALE WATERBED MATTRESSES. $2.08, 3 year WATERBED MATTRESSES. $2.08, 3 year WATERBED MATTRESSES. $2.08, 3 year WATERBED MATTRESSES. $2.08, 3 year New excellent quality laundry -orthopedic bedroom furniture. 1800 New York St. 844. Ladoni's Furniture. 1800 New York St. 844. 71. Toyota Corona, 28 m.p.g. Recent value clutch, clutch, nire treads, *4-speed*, 5-6 5288 eavers 74 Hornet, 4 door, very economical, well fitted. 80 Hornet, muffler, shocks. 2 bucks $1400. 81-0039. Aquarium 13'/l sal, tank, glass top, under- ground, and background. $25 each. Price break for quantity buying. Also available, birch wood cabinets made to hold 9 set. 9-3 452-2580 1979 MUSTANG. 4 wedge. 4 cyl. A.C. 2,700 m. silver w/ red. 841-1999. 9-10 Contemporary couch and matching chair/ frame with black cushions. 9-2 843-0758 Panaanone system with 8-track, camera- turnable, am-fm, stereo, $250. Inkless, technical technical set, 4 pens with ink, 15, $79.- 0663. 1970 Triumph funfel Mark III, 25 mpg funf! funf! funf! 749-0855. 9-3 FORD TORINO SW 73 needs some repair. $100. Call 841-6233 between 5-7 p.m. ask for Thomas. 9-3 1977 Pontiac V6, V-6. Power steering. tion. 2900 or best offer. 841-4619. 9-4 tion. 2900 or best offer. 841-4619. 9-4 818 Citation Coupe, FS, PB, A/C A/T/Radials, 2 Tone, Warranty, 842-507-506 1800 Honda CD425 Twinport motorcycle 1970 Honda CD425 Twinport 167 miles Best q-8 over $1000.842-705 0000-842-705 Scrap silver for casting. $10 an oz. Call even- sons 843-7417. 9-3 - ask Matchup Chair, chair and tie. - offer. After 8 call 841-2833. 9-3 YW Karmann Gluba. Exec. Cond. New transportation. 2320/Best offer. (913) 785-8340. n transportation. 2320/Best offer. (913) 785-8340. Gliano Racing Bike. 25" Reynolds frame, light tubular, tubulars. Absolute like new. B45-3091. 1974 F-100 Pickup. Automatic, Air. Condition. $210 or best offer. -85 % New Size mattress and box springs. Excel- ten new size mattresses to receive another. 50 watt per. 841-1490 Bunk Beds with mattress, stained, var. good condition, $85. 841-3472. 9-2 1975 Honda 400-4 cylinder. Like new, great mpg, many extras. Call 814-7814. 9-2 mpg, many extras. Call 841-0784. 9-2 1975 Pontiac Ventura. Auto, air, and power Tired of Laundromats? Kenmore Portable clothes washer, like new, for only $100. 842-1731 after 5:00. 9-4 1975 Pontiac Ventura, Air and power steering. 1750. Call 841-7788. 9-5 1976 Corvette, PS. PB, AT. T-top, AT. 1976 Honda 750 super sport. Both in good condition. 841-2367. 9-5 Used pine group furniture set. Rocker, love seat, couch, chair. Separate or together. 843-0471. 9-5 Air Conditioner, BTU 5000, like new. Used two months only. Call 842-6394-2 after 6 p.m. Gas stove $30. G.E.fr. $45. Twin Beds $20. Call 842-2583 at 6 p.m. 9-5 BOKONON IMPORTS LTD. Sale 20% off all paraphernalia E. 12, Bkth. 84/48-910 9-5 Brennert Acoustic guitar. Excellent condition Fender Aceo for easy playing. 9-8 Allyn at 842-1663. 9-8 DOCTORS HOSPITALS GREENES, SIZES SNM MED, SHIRTS 19.5; PANTS 10.9 BOWTIES, SHIRTS 19.5; PANTS 10.9 TO PACHI, BOX 4545; FT, LAUD 5 33338. Lowest prices in town on Houseplantss 440 Florida. 842-009-357. 5-Mon-Sat. www.houseplants.com Custom made shirts, sports shoes, and beads. University Sports Shop. 942 MARSHALL ST. FOUND 1976 Kawasaki KZ 400, good condition. 841- 4764 9-8 Kevs found in Learned Hall on August 26th. 9-3 Call 842-7881. A. white puppy in the area of 130 and 5:30 p.m. 842-8913. Eyelevels, watches, wallets, identify and Student Senate office班 B-105 K-4a union. HELP WANTED Immediate opening for talented singers Included. ASTA Singing School 841-616-095 5-9 Buckey's Drive-In now takes applications for part of their employment. In apply in person. Bucky's Drive-In 2120 W. 9th Student help needed. Part-time for fall学期. May be used with afternoon 1-5 General and child care. Please email me 3003 W 10th St or gs@maintenance.shop at 3003 W 10th St or gs@maintenance.shop for a regular schedule. An equal opportunity affirmation is required. Wanted student that has had experience education to work 2 or 3 hours per day, w/ a computer lab and computer science course. WANTED IMMEDIATELY babysitter in St. Louis, ages 3 to 12 Monday, Wednesday Friday, 8:15 Apprx. 6 more hours per week at flexible apprx. $4. Four blocks west of campus 842-986-096 Help Wanted HENRY'S Part-time-live- kings - Weekends. About 20 hours. Experience not necessary. Inapplicable in Person 8 a.m. 6 p.m. 6th & No. 843-1219. 9-3 Research Assistant (half to full time) to provide research assistance in the manufacture of laboratory instruments. Prepare chemistry or biological sciences experiments. Analyze chemical chemistry experience. Travel to analyt Assistant Project Director-Youth Coordination and coordinate alternative youth programs as part of their response to prevention project. Secondary responsibility is for the basic educational-informational programs, with some graduate work or relevant experience required.Equal opportunity accommodations to Douglas County Drug Abuse Center. Room 027 (842-8886). 9-5 month, depending on qualifications and per- sonal background. In addition, the Pharm. Chem. Dept., The University Kansas Lawrence, 18044. Applications from qualified students to the uni- tity/Affirmative Action Employer. 5-9 Research Assistant (Associate) full time to Research Assistant (Associate) full time to Sequoia cephalophorin prodrugs. Minimum requirements of bachelor's degree in chemistry or a given degree or FRS's with prior re-merit, month, depending on qualifications. Submit month, depending on qualifications. Dept. The University of Kansas Lawrence, KS 65041. Applications close September 5; Opportunity/Affirmative Employer. 9-5 Loving, reliable fun person to care for two boys, one and eight, in my home. 8:45 to 4:45 Monday through Friday. $60 per week, hats and S.S. 148-6411-4118 for 5 p.m.-9:30. Immediate positions open for part-time and full time work. Employees who work with workers must work every morning, or off-duty in the office or on the door physical work. Apply in person at the HR office of Mass. Inc. (800) 545-8326; blocks east of Mass. on 13th Avenue, 8th Street. Photographers Wanted: Experienced photographer own education or equiv supplement item. Reliable people should mail name, phone number, and ex-photo(s). *Note* Photography, Box 350, Lawrence, KS, 9-5 have a team now taking applicant rows to a campus, now taking applicant rows from the campus to a campus. The HIYDE is desirable. Please apply in person at [email] or [phone]. HIYDE is desirable. Please apply in person at [email] or [phone]. LOST Lost. Hewlett-Packard (HP-31-E) calculator in the new addition to Robinson Gym, 8-26 between 10:30 to 11:00 a.m. 843-7070, 9-28 Lost: Set of dorm room keys between Strong and Wescoe. Turn in to Oliver desk. Lost: A set of keys with a Brown and yellow key chain, with cats and mice on them. *14 found contact 864-8273.* 9-5 Lost keys around Wescop Thurs. 8-28. 3 keys on silver ring. Call 749-2134. 9-8 NOTICE PULLIAM'S MUSIC DOWNTOWN -LARGE- AND MOST COMPLETE music store in Lawrence area. Open daily 9:30-5:30. Thur- day until 8:30. 926 Mass. 843-8355. 9-9 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE ACADEMY membership card gets you $1.00, highballs all night long. Only at your place, THE AACADEMY where "Partying is our 9-30" ness. MISCELLANEOUS --h. ITS ACA Singing Telegraph, 841-639-8000 I'ITS COME TO THE MOUNTAINS NIGHT at the Ravenwood Theater in New York, nacks are only 60c from 7-10am. the nacks are OOZ! OOZ! 003 Massachusetts. First-Class Dive COUPON GOOD FOR FREE DRINK WITH ANY SANDWICH YELLO SUB 530 West 23rd --h. ITS ACA Singing Telegraph, 841-639-8000 I'ITS COME TO THE MOUNTAINS NIGHT at the Ravenwood Theater in New York, nacks are only 60c from 7-10am. the nacks are OOZ! OOZ! 003 Massachusetts. First-Class Dive COUPON GOOD FOR FREE GAME WITH ANY SANDWICH THE CROSSING THE CROSSING 615 West 12th PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-10 TENNIS PLAYERS: Has the hot summer start of the season? Grip it! Caid David at 841-804-3 for great grits, good strings and grips. Member Professional Asian, Asian and K-U Varity Tennis grits. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - abortions For a pregnancy treatment. Birth Control. Course of care. appt call 9 am to 5 p.m. (913) 624-3100 Will the woman be OK? Kansas, Kanea. Will the woman be OK? Kansas, Kanea. Will the woman at the surf & turf party for Mr. Right please contact W-934-813-166 Headquarters is a community of people who can listen. If you have a problem, please tell them so. Questions are best answered by we can help with sexual concerns, relationship problems, other personal problems anything you might need to talk about. We know someone else who might be able to with some people also might be able to with anyone we never close. Headquarters is a community of people who can donate. Dg Co. and private donations 9-8 KU DOG LOVERS CLUB. Organizational Room. Inquiry Information cell Bryant Frys Room. Information cell Bryant Frys HOT SANDWICHES--COLD BEER at THE CROSSING one block north of campus. HAPE HAPPY 4-6 daily. Draws 40, pitchers $1.25. Not serving Sunday dinner. 9-3 YELLO SUB- now open 'til 2 a.m. Mon- Tuesday Twelve kinds of hot, whole wheat desserts ordered online anytime. 3268. Drunk people welcome. Next to Yamaha on 2andr. Is coping driving you battty? Don't eat too much. Take the pills out of your cop- tion bag. ATTENTION: PRE-MED STUDENTS. A mature student in applying to medical school, WEDNES- DAY, 10:30 a.m., to the Forum Room, Kansas Union to attend 9-3 for pre-med students—be sure to attend 9-3 HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUIS. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 highlands (75e agmement) the attalme of the Club The. $50. Louie. 842-942. "Partying is our business." Singing messages for all occasions Deliv- ing Lawrence, ASTA Singing Telegrams 841-610-9 Telegrams 841-610-9 LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are only $10 for ladies every Wednesday. Kids are $8 for club ladies. Club Lounge, 500 Locust, 845-942-9. 9-30 Let ASTA tuck you in tonight. We'll arrange your tickets at 8:00 a.m. ATSA STING Telegrams, 841-619-6, 9-5-8 OPERATION FRIENDSHIP welcomes Inter- mentionals for children 18 to 59. 1892 W. 19th, September 8, 841-8001. SUPER TOGIF at THE CLUB LOUSE, 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every day. PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities avail- able to explore in our large eastern based company, our part-time large eastern based company, our part-time information can be: Westford 812-543- 8179 Westford 812-543- 8179 Zen practice daily 6 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. 923 Tennessee. Public lecture by Zen master. Seung Sahn, Monday, Sept. 14, p. jay 4-5. University of Tennessee, p. jay 6-8. For contact call 842-7011. 9-5 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821 9-30 Head Start Needs You to volunteer to work with teachers for one day each week, a 10-week teacher aid, or for one day each week, a 12-week teacher aid. In keeping with her tradition of bringing cousins to the club, Louse announces TUESDAY NIGHT's DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All girls-only $1.50 unless only $3. Drink and drive only $4. Club CLUB LOUSE 508 Locust, 84-9249 Memberships available. "Partying is our business." SERVICES OFFERED Classical Guitar Lessons—Patient, reason- able. Call Tom Russell 841-6464. 9-2 THE BIKE GARAGE—specializing in "Tune-Ups" and "Total Overhauls." All work fully guaranteed: 841-2781. tf Einstein's tutors it worked for Albert. For his assistance in mathematics or com- paredity, he gave 841-7858. English grammar, composition theory, typ- ing Randy 835-7040. Quality repair work performed on most PCC licensed technician-available TV's, FCC licensed technician-available TV's, electronics also most types of audio- visual equipment. A 5-year Estimates given. Call 843-1572 at $300. Estimates given. Call 843-1572 at $300. Have you had trouble losing weight or making habits? Possibly you are unmotivated to work out. You can job. You can change this and hyphens can call. Call 843-195 for more information. 9-5 Asthura provides a frame of reference for these trials. If you are confused about where your coach is, Asthura strongly more clearly identified this could be for you. Call 843-1955 or more information. TYPING Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 and weeks ended. tf experienced typist-term papers, thesis spelling corrected 840-934-8544 spelling corrected 840-934-8544 experienced K.U. typist, IBM Correcting spelling corrected 840-934-8544 able Sandy, evening and weekend times 840-934-8544 ORAL 842-2001 FOR YOUR NUMBER TIME ENCORE COPY CORPS Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, edits, self-correct Selective. Call Ellen or Jeannan. 841-2172. 12-8 Typist: IBM Pricia/Erica Quality newbie; welcome; editing layout Call Joan, 842- 761-3908 Call Joan, 842- 761-3908 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt Experienced typist - thesis, dissertations, term papers, mice, IBM correcting selective, Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-2310. tf IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. IBM pice/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tf Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selective. Call Donna 842-2744. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra 841-4980 Lowest rate. Experienced typist does clean, quality work. 749-2036. Danette. 9-5 DRUMMER looking for Rock or Funk Band to play with. Call Ken at 749-0852. WANTED GOLD, SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Colla, Sterling etc. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 10-2868 2 nice, non-smoking roommates. 3 bdr. house, W W D carpet, laundry, partially furnished $150 + 1 3 utilities Call 741-108 or 842-7451 (site gas station) Ask for Syk Female roommate for new 2 bdr. apt. 1% rent and 2 utilities 509 Minnesota Apt. B Call 749-0170 ask for Julie. CAR POO-LE from Overland Park-Parklarie CARE POOL—this daily Call Tom Records www.carepool.org **WANTED:** Male Roommate to share fully furnished room with 2 students. Contact Jim Lewis at 749-613-8056. Buying gold, Paying $50-$100 for men's classics, lings for less; Ladies RAP Gift Shop. 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza. 842-9628. We have room for quiet upperclass person who likes to spend time with children in house within walking distance of down- stairs and upstairs laundry room. Disposit. Off-street, parking possible. Call for more information between 5:00 and 3:00 p.m. +842-791-3911 more info. 2 females roommates in large house. Located on Oread Hill. $110 a month. of utilities. Call 841-8467, evenings. Dana. 9-4 Female roommate to share nice 2 bdrm. apt., own room 120/month + $ _{1/2} $ utilities 749-1835. One roommate to share 4-bdr. house, 174 Vermont, $100 Monthly + 1/4 utilities, 841 800, 9-1 Female roommate to share 2 bdrm, unfurn- ished apt. on bus route. Pool, near shopping center. $85/month + 1/3 gas and electricity. 749-3438. 9-5 WANTED: Experienced working rock band reforming New auditioning bass/vocal and guitar/ vocal. Call: 841-1676, 841-2999 or 749-1349 Professional couple w/ 4 children seek non-smoking home transportation to their own residence and a 5-yr-old child or 3 or 4 months a week or T & Th after discharge at Bedford University at 868 3114 for interview appt. Roommate need to share 3-bed dorm ant (Odle English Malis) with balcony, bus bench, bus service and ambulance rent. Call 422-3780 for more info. Roommates wanted Seeking several Christian men interested in pooling resources and renting large house/apt. Call Steve 9-418-5232 Housemate wanted at 508 Indiana. $50 + utilities. Grad. student preferred. Call 843- 1163. 9-5 Part-time custodian to work from 5 in 9am Experience handling staff information Experience handling but not the supervision Of a computer-based system The University Daily clean, clear person to share two 2-bed, pts., lbs. 22nd and Kasdon. Energy efficient apt. dishwasher, dishwash and more. 150 + 15 uillions. Call 843-9984 evenings. Gain valuable experience while being a caregiver. Become a volunteer and start needs volunteers to work with 3 and 4 older people, take time or love to share, call Bobbie, or send a message to 407 Main Street. Any schedule can be arranged. Roommate for 2 bdr. apt. Jayhawk West. **99** *U. Utilities* Call Bret 748-9536-836. ORDER FORM KANSAN SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T 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! Selling Power! CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write Ad Here: RATES: additional words 1 2 3 4 5 time times times times times $9.25 $9.25 $9.25 $30.00 $30.00 .02 .03 .04 .08 .08 AD DEADLINE CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 NAME: TO RUN: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 2, 1980 0 KU's 'Paper Jayhawk' hits the turf Jim Small, sportswriter-turned-football player, grimaced under his helmet during yesterday's football practice. Small worked out with the Jayhawks for one day, earning the title "Paper Jayhawk." By JIM SMALI Sports Writer By JIM SMALL RAPTURE Sports Writer I read George Plimpton's "Paper Lion" five times. I spent hours upon hours learning and re-learning the intricacies of my assignment. I went to church and prayed. For one day, I, Jim Small, University Daily writer, wrote, became Jim Small, "Paper Jayhawk." THERE WAS one difference, however. All but one of the practitioners practiced wore street shoes and had shoulder pads. Thanks to Don Fambrough, his football coaching staff and 103 extremely large football players, I was allowed to spend Labor Day with the KU football team. The saga of the "Paper Jayhawk" began early last week. Faced with another week of boring preseason stories, the Kansan's sports editors asked me to come up with a different story, a story that had originality and style. Most of it, they wanted a故事 that wouldn't be so boring that it made the readers feel as if they were being held hostage. LO and behold, after hours of soul-searching, it hit me like a ton of bricks. "Football," I whispered to myself. "A Paper Jawhawk." The next day I contacted Fambrough and Athletic Director Bob Marcum and told them my advice. "Just remember," Marcum said, "that these boys have been at this for a long time and for them to run 15 sprints is the same as you running five." SO THE STAGE was set. I was to meet Fambrough in his office at Parrott Athletic Center at 8 a.m. yesterday—Labor Day—to pick up my equipment. Labor Day—how approprite? Surprisingly enough, I slept well the night before my gregorian bed, the next morning, the beginning of my nursing begins. "Why can't I be a normal KU student?" I thought as the water pelted my face in the shower. "The kind that goes to class, studies a little at night and drinks some beer on the weekends. Why can't I keep my big mouth shut?" My confidence didn't runneth over, but when I entered Fambrough's office I was met with good "It a little muddy on the practice field today," he said in his hispy, father-like voice, "so we are going to work out in shoulder pads and helmets only. There will be no hitting." MY PRAYERS had been answered. "So why don't you come back at about 2 or 1:5 to check out your gear?" he asked. I went back to my room feeling somewhat better about the situation. My confidence kept building until 2 p.m. rolled around. I was the epitome of self-confidence. The Sylvester Stallone raced through my head as I leaned to the theme from "Rocky." I was ready. I ran to the field house feeling my confidence grow with each step. Nothing could stop me now. Nothing, that is, until I reached the field house, opened the locker room door and discovered three of the biggest men I had ever seen in my life staring down at me. "Hi guys, I'm in a aby, but semi-formalice voice," Wanna play some football? IDIDN'T WAIT for an answer. I found a secluded spot in the corner of the dressing room and donned my gear. Things were looking pretty good until I introduced myself to Dane Anderson, a freshman fullback. "You should have come on a day when we were laughing. You're missing the fun part," he said, laughing. I found it hard to muster a smile. Finally the time I had waited for so $10^{14}$ had come. I got on a bus that would take me from Allen Field House to Memorial Stadium. During the ride I had a chance to talk with the players. John Lesakil, junior wide receiver, said, "I was very nervous." "IT GETS discouraging being a walk-on," he said. "Sometimes you want to quit. And a lot of guys do. But you gotta stay with it and wait your turn." "And when your turn comes," interrupted Rilee, "rewood, good light and right. You damn well know what you're going to spill! vampires!" The buses pulled into the parking lot in front of the stadium and we filled out. "Well, here goes nothing," I said to Greenwood. We took the field, and after a few minutes of speciality drills, we lined up for calisthenics. I had forgotten out of shape a man could be. The jumping jacks were a breeze and the leg uncomfortable but it too bad, but things got a little uncomfortable when the coach screamed. Hit it for push-ups!" After the callisthenics, my was turn to hit the big time. I was assigned to work out with the receivers, so I hoped in line behind the likes of All-Big Eight split end David Verser and Lester Lightening. 'Mickens. Much to my delight and to spurriose of everyone else, I didn't drop the first pass. "Nothing to it." I thought. BUT AFTER 10 minutes of pattern drills I found myself out of breath and looked for relief. I hobbled over to Dean Nesmith's training table for a long, cold gold bit of water. "You're hardly sweating," an assistant trainer told me. "You wait until it gets really hard." The rest of practice I spent talking to coaches, players, trainers or anybody that happened to be walking by the stadium at the time. I would do anything to stay off that field. After what seemed like three days of Chinese water torture instead of two hours on a football field, it was over. I boarded the bus, confident and proud, but mostly thankful. THANKFUL TO COACH Fambrough and the rest of his staff for allowing me to become the "Paper Jayhawk." Now that my football career is over, I can burn my copy of "Paper Lion" and start worrying about my next assignment. Maybe a midget mud-wrestling tournament in Wichita. Thankful to Mike Hill for being so cooperative in helping me find a uniform that fit. I'm leaning more toward a non-contact sport like tennis. I hear Jimmy Connors makes pretty good money. But mostly thankful to the players who had the kindness, the thoughtfulness and the charity not to break every bone in my body. Brewers nip Kansas City By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. --It took three years and more than 200 relief appearances, but the chance of a starting role was worth the wait for Bob McClure. McClure, making his major-league starting debut, went the distance and scattered six hits to pace the Milwaukee Brewers past the Chicago Cubs—not-most-turning Kansas City Royals 6-1 last night. Called upon to replace Paul Mitchell after Mitchell pulled a leg muscle, McClure made the most of his debut in upping his season's record to 2-6. McCLURE ALLOWED only one extra-base hit, a second-inning triple to U.L. Washington, in quieting the bats of the major league's top-hitting team. The Brewers, second to the Royals in team hitting, got all the runs they needed in the first inning off Kansas City starter and loser Rich Gale, 13-8. With one out, Robin Yount doubled down the left-field line and scored on Cecil Cooper's single. Cooper stole second and went to third on Kansas City catcher Jamie Quirk's errant throw. Ben Ogilvie then singled Cooper home for the second run of the inning. Kansas City, which missed an opportunity to score in the second after Washington's triple with one out, picked up its lone run in the third. After Wille Wilson reached first on three and then on four straight pitches. Wilson then stole third and came home on George Brutel's single. AFTER THAT, the Royals shouldn't have bothered to bring bats with them to the plate. The Royals handcuffed them the next five innings, underwriting only a pair of walks and a bloop single. Criswell axed The grim reaper of football appeared yesterday in the 28 NFL training camps. One KU athlete was a member. The player, linebacker Kirby Criswell, was cut on the final day for teams to meet their 48-player limit. Criswell was a second-round draft choice of the Cincinnati Bengals. Three KU rookies, however, survived final cuts. Safety Leroy Irwin is still with the Los Angeles Rams, punter Mike Hibach is with the New England Patriots and running back Mike Higgins is on the injured reserve with the Atlanta Falcons. Two players were cut earlier. They were tight Lloyd, Sobert, or the Buffalo Bills and lumbermen. It was too risky to do that. Bobbie Deen TOMORROW NIGHT the legendary MUDDY WATERS And Opening The Show Claude Paul Gray's "Fiddler" and Gaslite Williams Gang Save a dollar. Get $7.50 advanced tickets Now available at the 7th Spirit Club, Keff's, and Better Days Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Coming Events This Fri. and Sat. The Janet Jameson Band • September 10 • WESTWORLD • September 20 • Riverrock Lawrence Opera House Sun-Thurs 6AM-1AM Fri & Sat 6AM-2AM JB's BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANTS 740 IOWA September Special Buy a Big Boy Combo $2.50 includes fries and salad from kitchen or a Big Boy $3.10 includes fries and salad bar with either purchase you get a slice of apple pie for only a penny! Call in - Walk in - Drive - Jog - Any way at all the legendary MUDDY WATERS And Opening The Show Claude Paul Gray's "Fiddler" Williams Gaslite Gang Save a dollar. Get $7.50 advanced tickets Now available at the 7th Spirit Club, Keif's, and Better Days Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House 7spirit CITY Sun-Thurs 6AM-1AM Fri & Sat 6AM-2AM JB's BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANTS 740 IOWA September Special Buy a Big Boy Combo $2.50 Includes fries and salad from kitchen or a Big Boy $3.10 Includes fries and salad bar with either purchase you get a slice of apple pie for only a penny! Call in - Walk in - Drive - Jog - Any way at a SR SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts MOTOBECANE FRANCE K Schlitz Campus Reps For your party needs call: David O'Hara 749-2294 or Jay Donahue 749-5444 For your pc. ERLANGER ERLANGER Casa 1903 Thursday Night At ICHIABOD'S OLYMPIA BEER OLY BEER NIGHT Bottles 50¢ Prizes: Schooners, Lights, Posters, Shirts, and a GRAND PRIZE 1 3/4 Miles North Of The Kaw River Bridge check weekday specials each week The Kansan ad number is 864-4358 V The University of Kansas 1980-81 Concert Series Presents The Kansas City Lyric Opera in The Elixir of Love A Comic Opera in English September 6, 1980 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Box Office 864-3981 ansas ries fice The University Daily Lawrence, Kansas University of Kansas KANSAN Wednesday, September 3, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 8 INDEPENDENCE Welcomes PRESIDENT CARTER FOR CWA CAL FOR MON LEOPARD THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES Catherine Baird, Summit, Mo., listens intently as President Carter clarifies a point during his campaign kick-off appearance at Truman High School in Independence, Mo. Photos bv BEN BIGLER Truman memory marks Carter visit From Staff and Wire Reports INDEPENDENCE, Mo. — All the banners were in place and the local dignitaries, stage left, in their seats. The high school band, off camera, was poining out "Hail to the Chief" as President Jimmy Carter, also stage left, approached the podium. The stage was set, and with cameras rolling. Carter held a town meeting in the Trumman High School gymnasium here yesterday. The hourlong meeting, promoted as a free-flowing basketball-and-answer session with average Americans, was as well-orchestrated as the band. The questions, from people picked in advance, ranged from defense spending, SALT II, and the Midwest peace talks to energy programs, the economy and his opponent, Ronald Reagan. THE PRESIDENT'S morning started with a 9:30 trip to the Independence home of former President Harry S. Truman and a visit with Truman's widow, Bess. After the town hall meeting, Carter went on a tour of the Truman Memorial Library and Museum and he laid six roses on the former room and she lay out a flower in Kansas City. Me. shortly after noon. The town hall was smothered by the local media. One newspaper sent over a dozen newspapers and photographers to the meeting, and local television carried the event live in the Kansas City area. Carter took advantage of the exposure and padded up to the crowd of about 1,500 in the gymnasium. Flanked by huge posters of himself and Harry Truman, Carter conquered up the spirit of Thomas Jefferson. "President Truman had to make a lot of hard decisions," Carter said. "Not all of them were proper." He then quoted Truman by saying, "any President who makes decisions that affect the well being of our country on the basis of public opinion polls is not worthy to hold the office." TRUMAN SET A good example, Carter said, one that he had tried to follow. Carter also said he hoped to duplicate Truman's comeback in the election of 1948, when public opinion poll showed the incumbent Truman far behind his opponent, Thomas E. Deewey. "He won the election," Carter said. "and I can't deny that one's one reason I wanted to talk to Mrs. Truman this morning ... to find out some of his secrets." His numerous flashbacks to Truman were rewarded by outbursts of applause. He also used the session to launch attacks on Reagan for his proposed defense spending, and said that they would result in an uncontrolled nuclear arms race with the Soviet Union. Reagan is different from me in almost every basic element of commitment and experience. "I believe in peace, I believe in arms control, I believe in controlling nuclear weapons, I believe in the rights of working people of this country. I believe in looking forward and not backward." DEFENSE HAS been a major issue during Carter's campaign, now officially in its third day. Carter said his goals for a second term, would be a continuance of the peace process in the Mideast and a modernization and re-tooling of the steel and auto industries. He said he would continue oil conservation, increase production and work on welfare system reform. He also said he saw the need for a comprehensive health program and an increase in enrollment. "My goal is for every able-bodied man who wants a job to have a job," he said. "We have increased the number of jobs, yet at the same rate. Our rate has increased in the number of people seeking jobs." Carter proposed the creation of permanent jobs, but not government jobs. His target areas were in the steel and automotive industries, he said. Carter said the slump experienced recently by the auto industry is directly related to the transition to smaller cars, made necessary by the energy crunch and high gasoline prices. "I have no doubt that we'll see a quick rebuilding of the American automobile industry and a quick transfer by the American consumers towards investments toward American produced cars," he said. FOLLOWING THE official question-and-answer period, Carter responded emotionally when asked about Reagan's recent comment on the President and the Ku Klux Klan. Carter was then appointed of resorting to the use of slurs and innocuous against a whole region of the country. Reagan's remark Monday noted that Carter had chosen to open his campaign in Tuscumbia, Ala., "the city that gave birth to, and is the parent body of, the Klu Klux Klan." Carter said Reagan's remark was "based on a false premise, and is not doing the South or our nation." Carter called the remark unnecessary, inaccurate and something that all Southernwomen had. Bus route permit switch arouses anger in Wood Creek residents ONE YOUNG BOY asked the president SEE CARTER page 5 "As an American and a Southerner, I resent it," he said. The questions at the town meeting were directed at Carter by a 16 of the 24 people who were selected by a Carter aide before the meeting. Those selected were taken outside the meeting room and briefed before returning to ask their questions. Staff Reporter By DIANE SWANSON KU buses do not stop at the Wood Creek Apartments, 255 N. Michigan St., this fall and some Wood Creek residents are unset. Robin Kahn, Prairie Village graduate student and Wood Creek resident, said yesterday that she had contracted to live there because it was on a bus route. But she did not know the route had been discontinued until she went to buy a bus pass at enrollment. The Student Senate Transportation Board cut service to Wood Creek this fall after the Senate Parking and Traffic Board renewed a permit for Jayhawk West Apartments, 524 Frontier Road, to supply its residents with bus service. The initial permit for private service was given to Jayhawk West last spring. THE TRANSPORTATION board renamed the Frontier Ridge route the Trailridge route, extending service only to Trailridge Apartments and cut off service to Wood Creek. The board owns the Trailridge route to Ninth and Massachusetts streets and Pine Tree Townhouses, 149 Pinene Dr. Because of the nine-block north and three-block west walk to catch the Trailridge route bus, Kahn said that several Wood Creek resi-ness homes are in car pool but confronted class schedule conflicts. Kahn said she was planning to draw up a petition to be signed by local residents within two or three weeks to present to the Student Senate that there were enough students to support a bus service. She said she resorted to buying a campus parking permit that cost $30, the same as a bus pass. "It's really annoying to be without a bus especially when Jayhawk West is willing to provide the service," Kahn said. RITA KNOLLMAN, Jayhawk West assistant manager, said yesterday that 30 people had canceled their job at the company. "We just have to tell them we're sorry but we can't," she said. An agreement was made with the transportation board and the parking and traffic place when the permit was granted, she said, that it allowed the bus on the car to Jayhawk West residents only. Knollman said she had talked with a lawyer to discuss ways to serve Wood Creek. Knollman's lawyer, Winton Winter Jr., said that although they had informally discussed solutions, "no definite formal action can be taken," he added, however, that informal talks would continue. Steve McMurry, transportation board chairman, said he saw no reason why Jayhawk West could not include area residents on its route. He said he would like Jayhawk West to work out a way to provide additional service in the area because they already were operating the bus. See BUSES page 8 Simpson stumps at KU By DAN TORCHIA Staff Writer Struggling to defeat an incumbent opponent who has more financial and public support, Democratic U.S. Senate candidate John Simpson is among the first candidates to gather student support for his campaign. Simpson, who beat five candidates in the Democratic primary for the right to challenge Sen. Bob Dole in the general election, toured Flint and Green halls. Marvin Rau, Simpson's press secretary, said that Kurtman would visit at college campuses in Kansas. "We hope to get good support from the campuses," Rau said. "The people there want to change things. They are tired of the way things have been handled." SIMPSON SAID he was confident of his chances, despite Dole's momentum in the race. "I have to make people know why I am running," he said. "I have to show that I am an athlete." Simpson, a former state senator from Salina, won the Aug. 5 primary by three percentage points, gathering 35 percent of the vote. Although none of his challengers were considered serious challengers for the nomination, his closest rival, Madhurak Overland Park, gathered 33 percent of the vote. Simpson said the close margin of victory did not surprise him. "With six people in the race, I knew it would be tough. And I was vigorous campaigning, and a couple did." Simpson is concentrating on Dole's record as a senator, saying that Dole's interests lie beyond the Senate. HOWEVER, a poll published Monday showed that most voters preferred Dole. The poll, conducted by the Central Research Corp. of Topeka, indicated that 61 percent of the voters sampled preferred Dole, compared with 39 percent for Simpson. Simpson denied statements made by Dole, who said that Simpson could not criticize Dole's support by oil and gas companies because Simpson also had ties to them. Simpson, however, said that his ties to the oil and gas companies were not as strong as Dole's. "People are suspicious of Senator Dole," he many. "Many people have said they were embarrassed." "I expected a wide difference," he said. "That is the way it is when a person challenges an inference." "My record shows I gave very little support to oil and gas companies, even though I have an interest in the oil," he said. "I am not a champion of the oil companies as he is." He also disputed Dole's statement that Simpson did not have much credibility with voters. Dole referred to Simpson's switch of parties when he was a state senator. SIMPSON SERVED from 1971-79 as the Republican state stateman from the 24th District. In May 1979 he resigned his seat and joined the Democratic Party. "My victory in the primary shows the Democratic Party has accepted me," he said. "I think it is well understood that I left the Republican Party because its philosophy is John Simpson PETER WOLFFMAN contrary to my views. It was a creditable position to take." He said he especially disagreed with the 1980 Republican platform. He said he supported a responsible energy policy and a defense policy that would be adequate, but would not start another arms race. HE IS ALSO opposed to draft registration, he said, because it doesn't enhance military defense. "The money would be better spent on pay increases for personnel," Simpson said. Simpson said he planned to spend $400,000 $500,000 in the general election. In the 1974 election, Mr. Simpson asked for "It is a difficult campaign but a winnable one," Simpson said. "I believe that people want someone to win." Board of Regents chairman wants banner policy changed By RAY FORMANEK Staff Reporter The Kansas Board of Regents' banner policy, which has been challenged at KU twice in the past three months, was criticized yesterday by Bernard Franklin, board chairman. Franklin, from Kansas City, Kan., said the policy, which prohibits "political advertisements" from being displayed at enclosed events, was "unclear" and in need of revision. Ultimately, the Regents will decide the fate of the banner policy. The board will examine the policy. Franklin said any change in the banner policy would reflect the views of Acting Chancellor Del Rosso. The policy has been criticized as being vague and its enforcement has led to many disputes. KU police arrested 12 protesters during Commencement May 19 after they had displayed banners, in violation of the policy, advocating first amendment rights and the divestiture of the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in South Africa. THE TWELVE WERE charged with criminal trespassing or disorderly conduct or both. The charges were dropped Friday by Lawrence City Prosecutor Ck Knutson when university officials allowed four members of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition to display a replica of the Commencement banner without taking any action against them. Franklin said the possible revision of the policy was a result of a recommendation by KU's Weather It will be partly cloudy tonight with lows in the upper 60s, according to the National Weather Service. There is a 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms teaks. Tomorrow should be partly cloudy with chances of precipitation ending by mid-morning. High tomorrow will be in the south at 10 to 15 mph. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 3, 1980 0 News Briefs From the Kansan Wire Services Gunmen assassinate general in Spain BARCELONA, Spain—In the most serious attack on the Spanish military this year, gunmen yesterday assassinated an army general and wounded 29 civilians. Doctors said one of the teen-age soldiers wounded in the bloody submachine gun ambush was in critical condition and was not expected to be. The violence in the northern province of Catalonia came as police in the part-Basque town of Pamplona braced for possible clashes during rival demonstrations. Gen. Enrique Briz Armengal, supply chief of the fourth military region and the first general killed in Spain since September 1979, was the 80th victim of political violence this year and the military's 21st victim in the last four years. He also was Spain's fourth terrorist victim in six days. Police said auspicion for the attack fell on the urban terrorists of GRAPO Anti-Packet Resistance Groups, the only gunmen known to use the army. Police said they were on the loose. They speculated that the assassination was motivated by Friday's killing of Abelardo Collazo, one of GRAPO's ton leaders. Witnesses to the morning rush-hour attack said two gunmen toting submachine gun jumped out of a stolen taxi on a busy Barbara street as Briz Poles grant miners fewer work days WARSAW, Poland—Government officials, confronted with a spreading coal miners strike in Southern Poland's vital coal-mining district, yesterday yielded on a number of the strikers' key demands, including a reduced work week. An estimated 100,000 striking miners, angered by the deaths of eight workers in an underground accident this week, had expanded the strike throughout coal-rich Silesia, the heart of Poland's economy, and issued a 12-week strike for increased safety measures and other improvements in work conditions. Dissident sources reported the miners also said they were fed up with Communist Party chief Edward Gierke's leadership and wanted him to resign with the party leader from the Katowice region, Politburo member Dzikslaw Grudzien. G里克let his power base in the southern coal belt and was known as the "king of Silenia" before assuming the party leadership after the 1970 election. Government officials agreed to a demand that every coal miner would work five days a week, with more Sundays off. At present, miners work six out of every eight days, rotating to a different shift each week and working three out of every four Sundays. The miners strike began last week in support of walkouts along the Baltic coast. The strike spread rapidly yesterday after miners learned of the deaths of their fellow workers in an underground accident that they said had been prevented by more stringent safety rules and better maintenance. Afghan rebels falling to Soviet action NEW DELHI, India—A shift in Soviet military strategy encouraging tribal hostility and rifts between rebel groups has met with initial success in weakening Afghan rebel resistance, reliable sources said yesterday. At the same time, U.S. Embassy officials expressed concern that disasters of the past would good copious in India now that the Unattendance has its deemed. It has been signed off. The officials said word is out among the more than 1 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan and Ireland on Oct. 1, the United States would admit them from all countries. Of the 12,000 to 15,000 Afghan refugees in India, up to 80 percent are expected to apply to go to America, an official said. Rebel sources who left Afghanistan last week said a high-ranking Soviet defense delegation sanctioned the switch in strategy, which involves recruiting volunteer forces of teenage tribesmen for peacekeeping duty in the home regions of their traditional tribal enemies. Ostensibly, the volunteer forces are peacekeeping units, but they also infiltrate rebel strongholds and tribal bases, where they encourage feuds in relationships already riddled with political, religious and ethnic hatred, the sources said. "So far, they have created chaos," said one Afghan source, who told of massive briberies paid to local tribesmen to turn in the leaders of Moslem state militias. "They have taken hostages." Svria welcomes merger with Libva BEHURT, Lebanon - Syrian President Hafez Assad has welcomed a call from the United Nations to help address hardline Arab states in the struggle against Israel, reports yesterday. Khadifa appealed for the merger in a speech Monday, marking the anniversary of the coup that put him in power in Tripoli 11 years ago. He said if the Libyan people did not agree to the merger, he would go to Israel to fight as a guerrilla. Assad immediately cabled Khadafy, saying, "We extend to you our arm to meet yours in unity. Let's work together to achieve the common goal." The exact implications of the call for unity and the question of whether a request for mediation was immediately clear. No date for the possible Libyan-Syrian merger was mentioned. Since Egypt's withdrawal from the Arab confrontation with Israel, beginning with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's trip to Jerusalem in 1977, Syria has sought what it termed the "restoration of the strategic balance of power" against Israel. Syria had since attempted an abortive merge with bordering Iraq in his speech in Tripoli, Khadifa hailed Syria as the "only Arab trench because of its remoteness" and said he in defending the Arab nation from imperialism, Zionism and reaction, Syria, with its people and leadership, deserves praise and commendation. Factory orders reverse 5-month skid The improvement in factory orders was the latest in a series of recent changes; the country might be on its way to recovering from the eight-month recession. WASHINGTON- In an indication the recession may be bottoming out, the government yesterday reported that new orders to U.S. factories in July reversed five months of decline and made their largest gain in more than a decade. Last week, the government's index of future economic trends registered its largest increase ever. Other figures in recent weeks have shown improving auto sales, rising housing construction and increased consumer spending. It was the first increase in factory orders since January and represented the largest increase since December, 1970, when orders rose 6.8 percent. AUGUSTA. Maine-Testing of clams for paralytic shellfish poison began yesterday as clam diggers and dealers agreed to the closing of the 3,500-mile Maine coast to shellfishing because of a "red tide" invasion of coastal waters. Poisoned clams suspend shellfishing The state's coastline was closed Monday to harvesting of shellfish after 18 people in Maine and Massachusetts were hospitalized for paralytic shellfish poisoning. The poisoning is caused by the "red tide," a form of seaweed that contaminates marine mollusks, giving sea water a reddish tinge. The contaminated clams eaten by the victims were thought to have come from Maine. The Marine Resources Department said the ban included shellfish such as clams, mussels and quabs. Scallops, tobsisters, crabs and finishes are unregulated. John W. Hurst Jr., resource services director at the state fisheries管理局 (Boathway Harbor), said he might be unable to pinpoint the origin of the entanglement. Reagan wants imports slowed DETROIT (UPI)-Ronald Reagan yesterday said the Carter administration had not done enough to help the economically depressed auto industry and the government for failing to slow the "deluge" of Japanese car imports. Reagan said President Carter had been only "tinkering" with the mass of government regulations that have caused the auto industry's problems. "There is something government has a responsibility to do it has shirkered so." "It has to convince the Japanese one way or another, and for their own best interests, that the deluge of their cars into the United States must be slowed while our industry gets back on its feet." The Republican presidential nominee got a mixed reception on a tour of the plant where Chrysler Corp. is producing the new K car it hopes will solve its financial woes. Although he was cheered by many along the assembly line, some booed Reagan loudly as he passed them. The United Auto Workers Union has endorsed Carter for re-election. The independent presidential candidate also defended President Carter as the target of what he said were unfair attacks by Reagan. Meanwhile, John Anderson campaigned in a crowd of friendly students yesterday and told them what they wanted to hear—that he opposes draft registration and supports a ban on new nuclear plant construction. Anderson said Reagan had been unfair to try to link Carter to the Ku Klux Klan because its headquarters opened his campaign Monday. "Carter disapproves of the Klan so it's not a fair comment to make about the president," Anderson said. "I think it was a very unfortunate comment. I don't think it speaks well of Governor Reagan." Anderson addressed an enthusiastic con- versation with Dr. William E. Mc University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor. Reagan's apparently off-hand remark that started the controversy came when he chastised the Monaco Menorah and the Tusculum, Ala.-"the city that gave Tusculum, Ala.-" the city that gave It it brought prompt demands for an apology from Alabama Gov. Fob James and a half-dozen southern candidates and from other politicians including Carter. birth to, and is the parent body of, the Ku Klux Klan." Reagan yesterday apologized to the people of the South for any negative reactions to his comments. Carter kept talking about the South as a nation, basing him of trying to divide the nation. Gov. James later accepted Reagan's statement. "What was asked for was an apology and that what was received," said Rachel. In his talk with the students, Anderson stressed his opposition to draft registration and criticized Carter's foreign policy, which he said could create a situation where American youth might be forced to fight. On nuclear power, an issue raised by a student who asked how he stood on the matter, Anderson said: "There ought to be a moratorium on new construction permits. That's what we can do and should do as a nation." ORIENTEER KANSAS MEETING Orienteer Kansas will meet at 8 ttonight in the Kansas Union Council Room. Member Karan Kehill will show slides of the World Championship meet this summer in Switzerland. On Campus INDEXHIBITION LECTURE The Benton Exhibition at the Spencer Museum of Art continues as Karal Ann Marling, professor of art history at the University of Minnesota, presents a lecture titled "Thomas Hart Benton and Hollywood" at 8 tonight in the museum auditorium. ORIENTEER KANSAS MEETING TODAY we're moving! after Sept. 1st our address will be Crewel Cupboard 1029 Massachusetts • mounted cabinet • lamp • lighting • cabinet • lighting cabinet • lamp • lighting • lighting cabinet • lamp • lighting STUDENT SENATE RIGHTS COMMUNITY WORK at 7 p.m. in the UCP UPNEW Union Pine Grove ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES CENTER will present a lecture titled "The Cosmic Search: Current Attempts to Find Extraterrestrial Planets and Life," given by Associate Physics and Astronomy Professor Stephen Shawl, at 11:45 at the center. DON'S AUTOMOTIVE CENTER 400 BIKES in stock ph.841-664 FROM MINOR TUNE UPS TO MAJOR OVERHAULS. FAST DEPENDABLE SERVICE ON MOSI IMPORTS. 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Free Delivery 1445 W. 23rd St. Phone: 841-7900 610 Florida Phone: 841-8002 DOMINO'S PIZZA C415 | 6301-2 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 3, 1980 Opinion Banner policy weakens The Kansas Board of Regents banner policy, at least in its vague form, is beginning to show signs of extinction. The University and the city of Lawrence have begun to hedge when it comes to enforcement. For those who are opposed to the Regents ban on political banners at University-sponsored events, last week proved to be momentous. In five days, the University and city loosened their tight enforcement of the policy, which has fueled a continuing controversy for more than a year. At KU's opening Convocation last Monday, protesters displayed several banners advocating free speech rights at KU. In addition, a number of protesters sat in the front row of Hoch Auditorium and wore shirts that spelled out FREE SPEECH. In what could prove to be a precedent, the University didn't confiscate any banners. And no one was hauled to police headquarters. Four days later, the city dropped three-month-old charges against 12 protesters who scuffled with police after unfurling banners at last May's Commencement. Last year at about the same time, the city dropped its charges against a 1979 Commencement protester. But the explanations of the dropped charges irastically changed this time around. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Last year, the city dropped charges against Ron Kuby, a student rights activist, because Kubu threatened to make his trial a political circus. The city backed down but still contended it had a solid case against him. The city sang a different tone last Friday. Colt Knutson, city prosecutor, said the prosecution's efforts may have been futile unless the charges against the protesters have stood independent of the policy. Knutson also said that the charges could have resulted from actions taken by police. Such an admission seems to indicate the city's reluctance to waste any more time with the banner policy. And Acting Chancellor Del Shankel's decision not to enforce the policy at Convocation evidently reflects a higher degree of tolerance toward the protesters. in the past, University governance groups have voiced opposition to the banner policy and have urged that the policy be made more specific. The policy has as continued to enforce the vague ban政策 to the letter. That is, until last week. letter. Shankel maintains that the Yet, Shankel maintains that the University will continue to enforce the banner policy and will do so until the Regents say otherwise. For better or worse, the city may not be around to help. Victory for women suffrage only begins sexism battle There really are a few things you can count on these days. You can count on Jimmy Carter smiling. You can count on the Jayhawks losing a football game. You can count on winter, and summer. You're lucky, you can even count on spring. For twenty-some years now, it's seemed possible to count on most everything and it's seemed that most everything has always been in your hands. You tend to call this "taking grants for granted." Maybe that explains my astonishment upon realizing that women gained the right to vote in 1960, when they were not on the ballot. AMY HOLLOWELL D. MAYA AHAN so natural a right have been denied until so natural C'mon, our mothers are SS and they can't be denied. Archaic as it may now seem, the vote is something women have not always been able to count on. In fact, women's suffrage did not become a reality until the last of the necessary 36 states ratified the amendment late in August. The rationing ended a few months earlier, while the devised and determined campaigners had counted and winning from the start. LIKEWISE, ANYONE born after 1920 has always counted on voting, the issue being not who could vote, but for whom to vote. In our first-grade classrooms, what a frivolous thought it would have been to omit the girls from the voting for class president! Those first-grade elections prumed us for the main event. Even in history class, we skimmed past the suffrage movement, as if the victory made study of the battle obsolete. We simply forgot the women and the fight, and took the right for granted. Today, as we count on the vote as we always have, there are some other rights we should be able to count on, also. We should be able to count on, among other things, equal pay for equal work, day-care programs for our children, equality in athletic funding, and the right to control our own bodies. In short, we should be able to count on equal rights. But when you talk women's rights, you count on opposition. Archaic, once again, as it may seem, there are people in this contemporary land of freedom and equality who wish to deny women their very basic natural rights. Sixty years after winning the vote, an amendment was passed for equal rights. Three states short of the 38 necessary for passage, the Equal Rights Amendment is in grave danger and, therefore, so are women's rights. FOREMOST AMONG the opposition ranks is presidential candidate Ronald Reagan and his Republican Party, which, for the first time in 50 years, does not support the ERA. Apparently, if Reagan and his middle-aged white male supporters had their way, women would be second-class citizens forever, and the nation would revert to a nice, white, male America. This is outright denial of freedom and equality for half of the citizens of this country and is most clearly a giant step back centuries in time. Frivolous, indeed, Archaic, indeed. Sexist, indeed. And yes, discriminatory, indeed. The Republican Party's anti-ERA plank is proof that you can't count on progress, on equality and not on discrimination so proof that you can count on discrimination and inequality, for a while anyway. More than half a century after their foremothers won the vote, American women are still fighting for equal rights. These are contemporary women fighting forces of discrimination against women. Determined and devoted, they are counting on their country to insure them their rights. After all, there really are some things you can count on these days, aren't there? PD PD Botton Videotaping policy should be erased When students attend KU football games this fall they should be sure to smile because they will be on the KU Police Department's version of candid camera. KU police will be videotaping KU football games this fall as part of an ongoing policy to videotape public events to assist in law enforcement, according to Jim Denney, director of KU police. Denney is a member of a committee approved this summer to oversee the videotaping of public events. Other members of the committee include Greg Schackne, student body president; Robert McCormick, university president; general counsel, and George Worrell, chairman of the University Senate executive committee. The committee was formed to insure that police follow guidelines set up for videotaping. Those guidelines include a provision that the tapes may not be used to build a record that could later be used against someone and that the tapes may not be used for officer training. The guidelines also state that the tapping must be done openly and that the operator must be in uniform. In addition, a record of all tapping must be kept and sent to the chairman of SenEx, and the videotape committee will have the option of viewing any tape. At an Aug. 22 committee meeting, Dennie said that tapping helped the police because it provided irrefutable evidence about incidents that occured while responding to a crime. He identified persons involved in the incidents. Videotaping is not done as rampantly as people think, according to Denney, because the tape is only run when there is a disturbance in the crowd. The camera goes into the stands to check on a complaint. Benney said that videotaping helped provide irrefutable evidence about incidents that occurred at public events, but he said that he could be obtained only under ideal conditions. Although Denney claim that videotaping is useful, there are many problems that make its use problematic. Denney admitted that at KU football games people couldn't be positively identified by the camera from across the stadium. Also, Denny said that in an incident, such as a fight in the stands, the videotape may or may not show what actually happened. For example, when an officer who is running the camera in the press box first sees a fight, he turns the camera on. But, it is impossible to BRETT CONLEY FRANKLY, I DON'T BELIEVE IN THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION! NOW, COME ALONG, CHILDREN! TWO CHINA POLICY DEFENSE POLICY CHURCHSTATE COMMENTS GOD PLATFORM ©1980 MIAMI NEWS capture the incident that started the fight. When the police look at the videotape later they are often unable to distinguish an instructor from a dragged stranger who may has been dragged into the fuit. Denney, of course, thinks the benefits of videotaping greatly outweigh the costs. But if the videotape cannot positively identify people across Memorial Stadium and cannot capture everything that happens in a disturbance, then the benefits of taming are marginal. The benefits become more questionable in light of the fact that the policy violates students' rights. Denney claims that if a person is in a public place they are subject to scrutiny, and a teacher is then therefore not a violation of their rights. The simple solution to the videotaping problem is to stop videotaping altogether. Denney and KU police have continued to use videotape because no one has told them to stop. But where does the taping stop? Why not set up cameras along Jayhawk Boulevard and even in classrooms to make sure that no illegal activities occur in any public places on the KU campus? The videotaping of public events is the first step in that direction. Denney has said that if the videotape committee recommended that the use of videotape at public events be abandoned, then he would abide by their recommendation. Therefore, a quick solution is both necessary and possible. Robert Cobb, Vickie Thomas, George Worth and Greg Schnacke should put their committee out of business and restore students' rights by recommending that the videotaping of public events stop immediately. To the editor: Letters to the Editor Preacher force feeds idiocy Last Wednesday marked my first exposure to "wowerism" and I must admit it wasn't as bad, as sickening and as insulting as I had thought. It was by no means a pleasant experience; it was a learning experience. Fundamentalism lives! But as last Wednesday's humiliations proved, the latter such as may be preached by Mr. Smock is lost to any crowd with anModicum of education. Sure in the bucolic backwalls of this great land, such prattile is listened to reverently, but when it charges blindly into the barbarity of campus life, where the Chevrolet cross is worshiped and beer is the sacrament, the fundamental idiocies of Smock aren't tolerated. Smock was confronted by taunts and jeers; he was confronted with both seriously and scholarly rebuttals. And he replied to all of them. But when it came to the beliefs of individuals, beliefs that were anathema to his, then, with a glimmer of satisfaction in his eyes, he unabashedly condemned them to hell. He then said Christians were the most tolerant people in the world. Smock is a man of conviction. But he is sincere? Ten years ago he was a libertine hippie. Today he regurgitates religious doctrine as eagerly as he ingested drugs so few years ago. I am confident that he had goodness of what he says, but I can't accept Smock's views as he promulgates them. he claimed that he saw a light. Maybe so. And if so, then I toast his breakthrough. But I can't respect him for trying to force his light on others. He has never been an ally of them in its own time, and in its own manifestation. No, Smock didn't arouse my ire as he did to many others that saw him. He showed me a man of strong conviction who was proud of his beliefs. He showed me an intolerant Christian not so much as eager to win converts as to display himself a man of God. He showed me a man inimical to my way of thinking. And as everyone watched him darting back and forth within the confine he set up for us, who would glance at an unappreciative audience, I pitted him. Andrew deValpine Prairie Village sophomore The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 56-64) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July at祭典 Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas and at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday for $8 at a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 at a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Editor Business Manager Carol Beer Elaine Strahler Managing Editor Cydyn Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campaign Editor Jody Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Swerpen Associate Campus Editors Whitcowe Sports Editor Mark Spencer, Don Mandy, Clay Whitecome Associate Sports Editor Patti Arnold Entertainment Editor Kevin Mila Makeup Editors Eden Iwawont, Bob Schaad, Jeremy Roberow Wire Editors Lou Wakeman, Tum Teemeddoe Copy Chief Lou Wakeman, Gail Eggers Chief Photographers Chris Todd Chief Photographers Ben Biger, Kyle Combs, Scott Hooker, Dave Krause, Dan Weiss Columbian Amy Holwellen, Ted Licksteig, Bill Menneres, Brett Conley, Scott Faust, Fredd Markham, Susan Schoenmacher, Blake Gumperk Editorial Cartoonist Barb Earbon Staff Artists John Jakke, Michael Wunsch, Bret Benson Staff Writers Chuck Iwawont, Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Renal Sales Manager Ken Walter Regional Sales Manager Nancy Tauser Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Classified Manager Tracy Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Weiss Staff Artist Judy Neelman Staff Artist Beasla Walker Scrubbers Manager Barbara Spehr Sales Representatives Rich Buckley, Amanda Counsel, Terri Frye, Paul Bellroom, Larry Leibengood, Paul O'Connor, Patela Scheung, Thane Shetert, Anthony Tilson, Kay Wauscup, Susan Birnbaum General Manager and News Advisor Rock Musser Chronicle Magazine University Dally Kansan, September 3. 1980 Page 5 From page 1 Carter whether the space program would be continued. Carter responded that the space shuttle would continue to operate. He also proposed the removal of an income tax "penalty" that he said put a heavier burden on a married couple than on an unmarried working couple, when both are working. But party platform talk and the discussion of issues seemed to have been overshadowed by the visit of the president and the domination of the Truman influence in the meeting. As the meeting wore on, Carter struck up to other issues held dear to the audience. They came. religious beliefs and during his playful kidding with baseball player George Brett. When asked about the strain on his religious beliefs during his time in office, Carter said he prayed more now than ever before because of the added burdens on him. The kidding with local hero Brett began with Carters arrival at Municipal Airport. Brett gave a career "George Brett for President" bumper sticker, and the president reciprocated with one of his. At the auditorium, Brett's arrival was greeted with a standing ovation and several minutes of applause. Carter then recognized Brett during his remarks, evoking another uprise from the crowd. The Kansas American Civil Liberties Union yesterday denied a request to investigate the omission of classified employees from the chancellor search committee. Former KU Chancellor Archie Dykes asked the Committee when it was formed in 1979 to examine the status of freedom of expression issues on the KU campus. Classified Senate's plea axed By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter The Committee adopted a report on April 3 that recommended a change to less restrictive wording than that which was in the present policy. Joseph T. Collins, Classified Senate executive committee member, asked the Kansas ACLU in July to consider representing him in a case against the Kansas Board of Regents. IN THE REPORT, the Committee recommended a change in the portion of the Regents Code of Conduct that was adopted Jan. 29, 1977, which states: "Political advertisements shall Pilar Rasor, chairman of the legal panel of the Kansas ACLU that reviewed Collins' request, said the panel thought Collins' case was only marginally related to the interests of the ACLU. "The case was very marginal in terms of our interest." Blue Ribbon Committee on Freedom of Expression that the policy be made less restrict. The panel did not judge whether the claim was valid, Rasor said, and considered the case only on the information provided by Collins in his request. "Our choices are generally limited to what we consider violations of the Bill of Rights, the Constitution and of civil rights laws," he said. not be permitted in enclosed areas of the campus devoted primarily to instruction or in other enclosed areas during non-political events. The distribution of political handbills shall be regulated and devoted primarily to instruction or study or at the immediate site and times of enclosed events." Policy Collins said he wanted to continue to pursue the case but said he did not have enough money and would work within the framework of the Senate to attempt to accomplish the same goal. He said he made the request because he From page 1 The Committee recommended that the policy be rewarded to read: "Freedom of political expression on the campus should be protected subject only to the rights of the University to ensure the safety of individuals, protect property and the continuity of the educational process." French painting added to KU The painting, titled 'Idyl', was presented on a wall, aspiring to the museum's Barbara B Wescock. "This is the most important piece I've seen coming into the collections in 10 years—a major acquisition," Eldredge said. "There aren't that many of his paintings available." A pastoral oil painting in greens and browses on French landscape artist Claude Loirain is the most important acquisition in years for the Space Museum. A director, of the museum, said yesterday. Claude, who is traditionally referred to by his first name, produced about 300 paintings. About 100 of his works are in the collection. "Idyi" will hang in the new acquisitions panel on the second floor of Spencer Museum before being transferred to the 17th century gallery. thought classified employees should be represented on the search committee. Marcel Roethlisberger, professor or art history at the University of Geneva, authenticated the painting and dated it around 1630 based on a slightly smaller version of the painting, dated 1630, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Rothsheimer, worm Eldridge called the leading authority on Claude, will speak at the official dedication of the painting at 2 p.m. in the museum's gallery. The vananced Study in the Visual Arts in Washington. The search committee was chosen by the regents and comprises faculty, students and alumni. The Classified Senate sent a letter in August barnard Franklin,Senate chairman, friedrich koehler Jan O'Neill, Classi ed Senate president, said the Senate would not take any action until after the Regents considered the Senate's request to change the composition of the committee. O'Neill she said talked yesterday with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel about further action if the Regents denied the Classified Senate's request. Franklin said yesterday that the Regents had not discussed the request, but would at its most urgent. Shankel said he would talk to the chairman of the search committee and would recommend that the committee meet with members of the Charged Senate if the Regents did not take action. Jacob Kleinberg, search committee chairman, said he had not heard about Shankel's proposal in the public press. The committee will decide whether to meet with classified employees, Shankel said. He said it was important for the committee to recognize the interests of classified employees in the field. O'Neill said she would be pleased if classified employees could meet with the search committee. It would be "better than any kind of confrontation with the Board of Regents." ATTENTION! PRE-MED STUDENTS A MEETING FOR JUNIORS AND SENIORS INTERESTED IN APPLYING TO MEDICAL SCHOOL WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 3 7:00 p.m. in the Forum Room Kansas Union Important information for pre-med students A. D. BOWMAN BE SURE TO ATTEND! Coming Events This Fri. and Sat. The Janet Jameson Band • September 10 • WESTWORLD • September 20 • Riverrock TONIGHT Claude "Fiddler" Williams MUDDY WATERS And Opening The Show Claude Paul Gray's Gaslite Gang and Tickets are still available at the 7th Spin Club, Kel's, and Better Days Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House A&M RECORDS THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. 25th & IOWA—HOLI "NEW MILE ST. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 7 Spirit Cafe House 25th & IOWA - HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" Mfg. List $7.98 Kief's $4.59 True Colours by Split Enz SPLIT ENZ TRUE COLOURS NEW! NEW! MP3 BY ENZ TRUE COLOURS NEW! NEW! AM RECORDS Programable Calculator For Under $35.00 3 1 4 1 5 9 2 7 - 0.3 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS PI-101 2nd BPM LPM CGI EAM CLR IWM INV 70 Bpm +/- + X X X X X +/- X X X X X X X X X +/- X X X X X Texas Instruments TI-55 Reg.$40 Sale 34.99 ti Features - 10 Memories - 32 Steps Of Programming - 8 common Conversions Built In For Easy Use - FREE Calculator Decision Making Source Book With Each Purchase - ADS TM (AlgebraicOperating System) Save $$ On These Other Texas Instruments Calculators Reg. Sale TI-59 $300.00 $265.00 Reg. Sale TI-58C 130.00 112.00 1010 $14.00 $12.50 MBA 70.00 63.00 TI-35 BAII 45.00 40.00 25. 00 22.00 PC100C 200.00 175.00 BEST BUILT BEST PRICES BEST DEALS YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Hurry Sale Ends Sept. 5 Sale Good For Existing Stock Only Kansas Union Bookstores Hurry Sale Ends Sept. 5 Kansas Union Bookstores Two locations to serve you Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop,Satellite Union we only Bookstore to share its profits with K.U. students. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 3, 1980 BETH RIDENOUR/Kansan Melvin H. Fink Stan Usel, Istanbul, Turkey, junior, browes through the cacti display at the Plant Extravaganza sale in a tent east of Memorial Stadium. The sale, sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women, ends Saturday. boat your way to class with Bass royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts Look in Kansan classified advertising. INFLATION FIGHTER DAYS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY PICCOLA ROUND 1: Our Topeka store is finished remodeling and it looks brand new so they are having a GRAND OPENING SALE! Lawrence is celebrating too by showing how to "punch-out" inflation with activities going on all three days. ROUND 2: Thursday and Friday we will have a punching bag stuffed full of discounts ranging from 10% - 25% off every fall purchase. Every customer will draw a discount! THE KNOCKOUT: Saturday we continue fighting inflation with a SIDEWALK SALE. We can be here for $1.00 or the range from $1.00 to $4.00. Let us help you raise inflation with low prices and great values! LEVIS PLAID SHIRTS ... $10 ... new shirts with embroidery ... BOUCHLE'S SWEATERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $18 WOOL PAIL SKIRTS $22 Slimmed. Large coarse threaded skirts in beavers and taffeta skirts DOUBLE SWEATER Wide assortment of styles and the most popular colors. WORKWEAR $11 Basics and fall colors in polycation twilies from Dickes, Funny Girl & Cameron Bay JEANS $10 A fantastic buy! Blue and shaded denim in basic and novelty styles. JEANS $15 Wide assortment of dark denim suits with belt and pocket treatments. JEANS $20 Baggies and Designer jeans from Cavin Klein, Crazy Horse, and Danik. LAWRENCE TAMARIS 841-9988 MONTGOMERY 841-3900 THURSDAY 11:11 AM - 3:00 PM FADS and FASHIONS TOPEKA FAIR AWAY MALL 375 2628 M F 10 W 8 A 30 S 10 D SUM 7:15 MASTER CHARGE LAYAWAY VISA LAWRENCE 171 MARVIN 842-9988 MUSIC & TALK 30 70 THURS, TUE, SAT 3:00 FADS and FASHIONS TOPEXA FAIRBANNA MAX 273 2639 M P 10 50 D 34 11 H 5 30 SUN 1 MASTER CHARGE LAYAWAY VISA --- Equality aim of new director A woman who wants to become a construction worker or learn to drive a 12-foot rig should not feel overwhelmed about entering a traditionally male-dominated field, according to Barbara Ballard, newly appointed coordinator of KU's Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Women are able to enter any field they choose, providing they relearn the skills they think about themselves and potential careers. Ballard said yesterday. FOR MANY YEARS, men and women have been hesitant about entering a career dominated by either sex, she said. Peer pressure and fear of isolation have a great deal to do with their choice of many students, she said. "Think back to your high school days," she said. "How many female math or science teachers did you have? Science and math are two areas that many people, not just women, shy away from." "Some of the careers like medicine. People are afraid that kind of occupation would be too hard for them." If women can increase their exposure to previously forbidden careers, such as medicine or construction work, and learn to reject notions about the kinds of clothes they want" for women, they can do anything they want with their lives. Ballard said. Ballard came to KU after working at Kansas State University as assistant to Berry. She replaced Barbara Bloom, who AS HEAD OF THE Resource Center here, Ballard will handle all aspects of the center's programs and services. Ballard said she hoped to increase the Center's visibility by working with other campus organizations and establishing contact with student living groups. had been coordinator of the Resource Center since August 1978. Bloom returned to Temple University in Indiana this fall to complete her doctorate. Women have always been equal to men, they just haven't been recognized as such, she said. Many women have pursued traditionally female careers because they didn't see any other feasible options, she said. A woman's goal should be to find self- sufficiency in whatever career she chooses. And, like men, women must accept the responsibilities that come with a job and earn the right to be treated equally with the best in the field, she said. "I feel that I will fight from beginning to end for equality, because it is not something that is given to me, it is something I have always had," Ballard said. "But if I don't go after my women, I wouldn't do it. I don't want or need it. That is what women have been doing for so many years." BESIDES DEALING with women and their career choices, the Resource Center helps all students recognize the importance of growth and achievement, Ballardsiad. She said she liked to work with a "total person" concept: dealing with the personal, social and academic concerns of a student. The Center is designed to deal with personal frustrations and fears before they explode into a serious problem for the student, she said. To be successful, a person needs to know where his competence lies, she said. "If you view yourself as great and feel as if you can take on the world, you can take it on," she said. "But if you are hesitant and really unsure about what you can do, you hurt your own chances to succeed in a chosen career." The Resource Center is planning several workshops for the fall semester that will deal with self-improvement and with encouraging students to find out more about themselves and their interests, Ballard said. THE WORKSHOPS will address topics such as self-identity for both men and women, single parenting, men's views on female equality and asser- A "Helping Yourself" series is being designed to bring together students with common career goals, because students can often benefit from exchanging ideas and sharing fears with other students, when the same type of job, Ballard said. The Resource Center is planning a "Women at Work" luncheon series tentatively scheduled to begin Oct. 1, she said. The series will run for eight weeks, highlighting a speaker from different libraries. "The speakers will represent both traditional and non-traditional areas." Ballard said. "They'll talk not only about their jobs, but about the nuts and bolts of how they lived where they are, what they like about their careers, what they dislike." The Resource Center is open to all students and can benefit men as much as women, Ballard said. f rancis sporting goods 843-4181 731 Musaachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 60044 Check Thursday, Friday Kansan Check Thursday, Friday Kansan on special adidas shoe prices for ADIDAS DAYS Friday, Saturday, 9:00 to 5:30 "sparty things for sporty people" roller skates from $45 Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Mass. 842-3131 Buying A B C We are local buyers and buy on a continual basis. We are making a concentrated effort to buy a large amount of scrap goods and sell them to customers in the community. In most cases, the local buyers who are established businesses are the top buyers. I pay to sell to someone established in the community. Below are some of our buying prices on items generally listed in the ads of the "motel buyers." We appreciate your business and encourage you to get several offers before GREAT PLAINS NUMISMATIC SERVICES 16 East 8th Lawrence, Kansas Phone 842-8000 GOLD CLASS RINGS SILVER Yes, we too will pay up to 125 for clearer jewelry. We buy gold jewelry, by weight Below is the overage price paid for rings. The heavier the ring, the more money MEN'S CLASSRING $65.0 WOMEN'S CLASSRING 38.0 14+ MEN'S WEDDING BAND 50.0 14+ WOMEN'S WEDDING BAND 25.0 Buying all other gold jewelry and dental gold. GOLD COINS (VF or better) $1.00 $150.00 $2.50 100.00 $3.00 700.00 $5.00 150.00 $10.00 Lib 300.00 $10.00 Ind 325.00 $20.00 Lib 610.00 $20.00 G C 630.00 Amazon 100C 575 Mexico 50 Peso 675.00 African Krugerand 620.00 Also buying gold pocket watch cases. We also sell all items listed in this ad. PRE 1964 U.S. SILVER COINS Dimes $1.15 Ea. Quarters 2.83 Ea. Halves 5.75 Ea. SILVER DOLLARS 14.50 Ea. BU Silver Dollars 26.00 Ea. 999 Bons 16.00 Ea. Sterling 10.00 Oz. Foreign Silver Coins 6.00 Oz. Premium paid for better date coins and higher grade coins. FEEL FREE TO CALL US AT 842 8000 10 o m to 5 30 p m for our daily adjustments WHY NOT SELL ON A DAY WHEN THE MARKET IS UP?? TYPE COINS (grading good or better) Hall Cent $14.00 Large Cent 3.50 Flying Eagle Cent 4.00 Indian Cent .45 Wheat Cent .02 Two Cent 2.50 Three Cent 2.50 Shaded Nickel 4.00 V Nickel .20 Buffalo Nickel .15 COINS TYPE COINS Bust Dime $8.00 Seated Dime 3.00 Twenty Cent 30.00 Bust Quarter 27.00 Seated Quarter 5.00 Bust Hall 10.00 Seated Hall 10.00 Bust Dollar 340.00 Seated Dollar 50.00 RARE COINS (good condition more for better coins) 1793 Cents $ 1000.00 1799 Cents 350.00 1804 Cents 200.00 1877 Cents 220.00 1909 S VOB Cent 210.00 1865 Nickels 050.00 1912 Kelts 310.00 1916 Dime 325.00 1932 D Quarter 33.00 1932 S Quartet 32.00 1932 H Halves 65.00 1971 D Halves 60.00 1938 D Halves 19.00 1893 Dears 27.00 1893 D dollars 600.00 1894 D dollars 600.00 1895 D dollars 15.00 1903 O Dars 115.00 1928 Dars 100.00 and lots more—come by and we'll make an offer on other rare coins. University Daily Kansan, September 3, 1960 Page 7 City commission bars deck at local tavern By STEVE BASKA Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission last night told the owner of the East Side Tavern, 900 Pennsylvania Street, to remove an unauthorized deck from his business. The commission also approved the issuance of temporary notes to begin construction on a fourth city fire station. TOM HAYDEN, owner of the EAST Side Tavern, had requested the approval of a site revision plan. The plan included a deck that was built onto the tavern after the original site plan, not showing the deck, had been approved. The commission unanimously denied the request and Hayden must now dismantle the deck. Neighbors have opposed the tavern in the past, saying it would cause too much disruption and the predominately residential area of 9th and Pennsylvania Streets. Commissioner Marci Francisco said that Hayden should have made sure the deck was in the original plans and that there had been ample time do so. The original plans had been discussed at several previous commission meetings. Commissioner Barkley Clark agree "When we start rewarding violations of a site plan we are in trouble," Clark said. HAYDEN SAID to Schumm, "I've got a chain saw. I can just cut it down." Commissioner Bob Schumm said that noise, trash and traffic problems might result if the deck were opened for public use. The commission also unanimously approved the issuance of $280,000 in temporary funds to finance the Clinton Parkway and Lawrence Avenue. got a chain saw. I can just cut it down. Schumm then promptly moved for denial of the request and the commission approved the motion. The money will be used to pay the Marvin Hall renovation to begin soon Renovation of Marvin Hall is scheduled to begin in six to eight weeks, according to Ken Picen, vice president of Crescent Construction Company, Topeka. Andersen Construction was the apparent low binder on the Marvin Hall floor, subjecting a base bid of $1,733.179 for renovation of the 70-year-old building. "It won't be final until we sign a contract," Pecis said. Allen Wiechart, KU director of facilities planning, said yesterday that a contract would be drawn up after bids were studied more carefully. Total projected cost of the plan to improve and modernize facilities for the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design is $2.8 million. Renovation plans by Design/Build Architects of Lawrence call for extensive interior changes to provide design studios and a makeshift room for architecture students and classroom space for students in urban planning. be moved to the Science Library on the sixth floor of Malott Hall. Bids were opened Thursday at the State Purchasing Office in Topeka. During construction, the dean's office will be housed in the Art and Design Building. The more than 650 students and 40 faculty of the School of Architecture and Urban Design will hold classes in Lindley Hall Annex, Blake Health and Physical Education Center, O'Leary Hall and part of the old Fowler Shops in Flint Hall not occupied by art and design departments. Library materials for architecture, engineering and the earth sciences will If renovated as planned, Marvin Hall will be completely accessible to the handicapped through a new grade-level ramp. The master suite is an elevator system to all four floors. Contractors will install central air conditioning, energy saving features and upgraded HVAC systems. cost of acquiring a site, constructing the fire station and purchasing fire equipment. The temporary notes will allow the city to work before the actual bonds are sold. Voters approved a general obligation bond issue on August 5 to pay for the station, which will be contained in the remodeled Grover Barn. The historic barn was used to hide slaves escaping underground Railroad and was a studio for the late Bernard "Poco" Frazier, a nationally-known area sculptor. THE COMMISSION also tentatively scheduled an all-day workshop with consultants of the proposed downtown mall for 10 a.m. Sept. 18. Details of the plans will be discussed and the meeting will be open to the public. In other business, the commission authorized the city manager to sign an engineering agreement with Swisser and Chamberlin for sanitary sewers in Clark's addition, a housing development near 31st and Four Wheel Drive. A bid of $7,805 from Durkin Equipment of Overland Park was accepted for a carbon dioxide feeder for the utility department. On the Record ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Charges against a Lawrence man thought to be the driver of a car involved in a hit-and-run accident two weeks ago in which Mark Allen, Leawood junior, was killed, are ex-convict. This time he by Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone, a Lawrence police spokesman said yesterday. The car then fled the scene, police said. According to police,艾里 was riding his motorcycle at 12:35 a.m., Aug. 23, near 22nd and Tennessee streets when he backed around a corner and hit him. Alen died Aug. 27 at the University of Kansas Medical Center. PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES - Rush Services Available on Black and White Development + Printing In another unrelated hit-and-run accident, Leavenworth County police said they had arrested a juvenile who may have been involved in an accident at Eighth and Iowa streets Friday after the crash resulted in the hospitalization of Carrie Lawrence sophomore, and Thomas George Pitner, Ames, Ia, sophomore. The suspect is a 17-year-old New Orleans youth who was arrested over the weekend for drunken driving, Lawrence police said. - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) - Rush B + W Enlargements - Black and White Prints from slides in 2 days Coleman was still listed in fair condition yesterday in the intensive care unit at the University of Kansas Medical Center. - 4x6" Color Prints from 35mm - 15x20" B + W Prints from color or Black and white film Charges Available To K.J. Departments OVERLAND PHOTO Phone 841-2700 Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon One coupon per customer Good Thru 9/7. Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 RUSTY'S IGA FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS RUSTY'S IGA. FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE, KS NORTHSIDE 2ND & LINCOLN 843-5733 SOUTHSIDE 23RD & LOUISIANA 843-8588 HILLCREST 9TH & IOWA 843-2313 WESTRIDGE 6TH & KASOLD 841-0144 BAKERY 842-1473 Your Savings Store SUGAR FREE Diet Rite Cola Royal Crown, Diet Rite Dr. Nehl, Barrelhead Root Beer 8 pack/12 oz. cans $1.35 Me and my RC Folgers Coffee Regular, Drip, Fine, Electric Perk $2.89 1 lb. 23rd & Louisiana 901 Iowa 608 North 2 6th & Kasold Ad Prices Good Through 9-8 Delicate and Soft Discover the pure Gould feeling in a knit skirt and matching sweater. Colors of heather blue and cranberry give you an exciting choice. Clothes Encounter Holiday Plaza in step with your style 843-5335 25th & Iowa SUA Special Events Information meeting SUA Special Events pr Informational Meeting and CONCERT SLIDE SHOW CONCERT SLIDE SHOW Interested in our concerts and events? At this meeting, we will explain how SUA Special Events works and how you can get involved in concert production. Come talk with us, ask questions and see slides of last season's concerts produced by SUA Special Events Thursday, Sept. 4, 4-6 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union SUA Special Events Patronize Kansan advertisers. VETERANS NOW YOU CAN HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT TOO! WITH ARMY ROTC We think you'll agree that financing a college education these days is no piece of cake, and days is no piece of cake, and $8,800 would go a long way toward meeting this sometimes difficult problem. Army ROTC can help take the pressure off, because as a veteran you may qualify for the Army's newly-enacted Simultaneous Membership Program under which up to $8,800 can be your dependents on your current academic year. This new program will not only enable you to gain financially, but you'll build toward a meaningful future as well. Here's how it works. Depending on available vacancies, you become a member of an Army Reserve or National Guard unit as an officer trainee, and at the same time, enroll in the Army ROTC advanced course at your college. Your Reserve or Guard membership will pay you at the minimum level of an E-5, and you'll receive $100 a month during the regular school year as an Army ROTC advanced course cadet. At the end of your second year of ROTC, assuming there's a vacancy, you'll be commissioned a 2nd LT, and serve with a Guard or Reserve unit while you complete the requirements for your college degree. Upon graduation, you'll continue service with a Guard or Reserve unit while pursuing your civilian career, or you can, if you prefer, compete for active duty as an Army officer. And, you can do all this while continuing to be fully eligible for your G.I. benefits. So, whoever said "you can't have your cake and eat it too" never heard of the Army's Simultaneous Membership Program. FOR FULL DETAILS CONTACT: ARMY ROTC. CPT Gary Enos 864-3311 Page 8 University Daily Kaisan, September 3, 1980 City gets another phone prefix By STEVE BASKA Staff Reporter Lawrence has a new telephone prefix number -749- and it's causing a bit of confusion for Southwestern Bell customers. we are assigning the prefix to about 90 percent of our new customers." Paulk Righn, manager of Southwestern Bell's Resident Service Center in Lawrence, said yesterday. "Some of them say it's not a Lawrence number." The new prefix was necessary because of Lawrence's population growth, Knight said. The last prefix, 841, was added six years ago, and another addition is several years away, he said. THE PREFIX WAS chosen by an engineering group at Bell. The 749 prefix is not in sequence with the 841, 842 and 843 numbers used in Lawrence, but it was the only one available for use in Bell's communication systems. The 864 prefix is used only on the KU campus. Special requests include business communication systems. The new number works throughout the entire Lawrence area, and location does not determine which prefix is assigned. The only new customers who won't receive the 749 number are those who request a number they have previously had or those with special requests. There have been no major problems or changes in service because of the new number, Knight said. "THERE'S NO DIFFERENCE in service with the new prefix," he said. "Things such as the ESS system are easy to use." "But the ESS system is not available." The Electronic Switching System (ESS) offers three-way calling, speed calling, call waiting and forwarding to customers for a monthly charge. Because the prefix is assigned to new customers, many students are receiving it. Bell has had about 4,000 new service requests in August, two-thirds of which are from KU students returning to Lawrence. Despite the many requests, applications are processed quickly because a security deposit no longer is required for customers with a good or non-existent credit history with the company. "I asked for only two considerations at the time the permit was being considered," McMurray said. "I asked that they not use all of our bus stops and that when one of our buses pulls up behind them they move on." Buses Matt Davis, student body vice From page 1 McMURRAY SAID the Jayhawk West bus appeared to be following the request by stopping in front of Snow Hall and the Kansas Union only. president and former transportation board member, said the Jayhawk West bus was intended to supplement the KU on Wheels program, not replace it. In explaining the reasons behind the alteration of the routes this fall, McMurray said the board was working to make the buses more profitable. According to Lawrence Bus Co records, ridership to Wood Creek Apartments was the lowest of any of the routes, and the board thought ridership would increase on the East Lawrence route. Greg Schnacke, student body president, said he would like to give everyone access to a bus, but there was simply not enough money. "Citywide bus service would be ideal," Schnacke said, "but we would need $300,000 to $400,000 plus what we now spend." Sid manages job as SID KU on Wheels runs on a $500,000 annual budget. Despite the elimination of an assistant director's post this past summer, the KU sports information office is keeping up with its workload, according to Sid Wilson, sports information director. "Right now it's business as usual," Wilson said. "Just because they've eliminated a position does not mean we are cutting back." The summer cutback was made "under certain budgetary considerations," Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, said. As a result, John Weltmeter, assistant sports information director, was fired by the University while Bill Newsome remained as Wilson's lone assistant. Marcum said the decision to drop Weltmier rather than Newsome was based on the recommendation of Don Baker, who resigned as sports information director this summer to go into insurance work. Weltmier had been forced to resign in September 1978, and Newsome became an assistant last January. Marcum said he thought it was too hard for the effects of the cutback would be. The elimination of Weltmer's post was the second such cutback in the athletic department this year. Last spring, the department eliminated the assistant athletic director in charge of special events, held by Bruce Mays. Operations director glad to get KU job A new director of facilities operations at the University of Kansas took charge of the campus grounds and buildings yesterday. POLICE DEPT. the Fitness Center Thomas Anderson, an engineer, said his first day on the job had been busy. Facilities operations is responsible for the electrical and mechanical maintenance of more than 140 buildings, the care of about 1,000 acres of grounds. Student Discounts Available "I'm very lucky," Anderson said. "This is a rare opportunity to come into a job that has been running well. I've never done any projects that are really upside down." - Individualized Programs - Professional Instruction - Quality Equipment GO FOR HOME! Enter the home run derby Saturday, Sept. 6 at 9:45 a.m., Field East of Robinson Center "I don't foresee any problems, but then again, this is my first day." And then he said, "I will." - Sauna & Hot Tub 1 6th & Maine 841- 8540 K. U. SCIENCE FICTION - Diet & Nutritional Counseling for more information call 864-3456 ANDERSON SAID it was too soon to tell whether he would make changes on the campus, but said everything seemed to be running smoothly. "I've had ample opportunity in the past month to more or less look it over, and there isn't anything that needs change," he said. Anderson said he was given the opportunity to inspect the grounds at KU and at UT. "I was quite lucky to get this job," he said. "I love Lawrence and I glad to be able to assist." FANTASY ASSOCIATION Thursday, Sept. 4, 7:30 p.m. 99 SPECIAL International Room Kansas Union HAIRCUT, SHAMPOO, & BLOW DRY $1000 ALL SAPIENT AUTOCTHHONS INVITED REDKEN K Good Mon.-Wed. in the month of September. AVA CARE SKIN CARE HAIR CARE HEALTH CARE -NATURAL PRODUCTS- Studio of Beauty MARY JANE Corn's 9th and Vermont 843-4666 open Mon.-Sat. Anderson managed the installation of mechanical and utility equipment on job sites while working for Combustion Engineering. At Babcock Wilcox, he created an industrial plant such as industrial plants and utility plants for coal, oil and nuclear energy. Thursday Night At "Over there, when you work in the oil wells you have to build a town," he said. Anderson said his job at Westinghouse had involved negotiating contracts with foreign countries and he was also town in Saudi Arabia over an oil field. Houses and a general store were among the buildings he said were built. Thursday Night At ICHABOD'S OLYMPIA BEER OLY BEER NIGHT Bottles 50* ANDERSON HAS A degree in mechanical engineering from San Jose State College in California. He has worked for Westinghouse as an area construction manager, for Combustion Engineering, Inc. as a project manager, and for Babcock & Wilcox Co. as an on-site construction manager. Prizes: Schooners, Lights, Posters, Shirts, and a GRAND PRIZE 1 3/4 Miles North Of The Kaw River Bridge check weekday specials each week He said he hoped to implement and expand the programs that were started under Oroke. Free Delivery Individual patient records JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6t+ ★ Discount Prices Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services 864-3456 We fill KU student prescriptions and offer The KU Affairs Mixer, traditionally a get-acquainted session for new KU faculty members and personnel sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Purpose this year when former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is honored. Enter the Racquet and Paddle Championship Dykes honored at mixer Dykes, who resigned Aug. 15 and is now working for a Topeka insurance company, will be honored at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow. The deadline for entering is Wednesday, Sept. 3 at 5:00 p.m. ASTA Tickets for the mixer and dinner are available through the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. The mixer also will give faculty from Baker University, Baldwin, and Haskell Indian Junior College a chance to mingle with KU faculty. Owens said. About 700 people are expected at the mixer and picnic dinner, which will be held in front of the Meadowbrook events at 13th and Crestline streets. 841-6169 Coin and Stamp Show Community Building Alexanders Flowers 82 10a 412-1320 Sept. 6, 9 a.m.-8 p.m; Sept. 7, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Dealers available to buy, sell & trade coins & stamps Admission free - Come enjoy yourself ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS Celebrate with a song Singing messages for all occasions CARRY-OUT Lawrence Coin Club 220 Strong Hall, 864-4861. Orange-Lemon-Lime-Cherry-Grape 40¢ - 50¢ - 60¢ sizes Henry's Slush A refreshing treat that comes in 5 tasty flavors SIXTH & MISSOURI 843-2139 DRIVE-IN Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices ATTENTION STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS bud JENNINGS AND SONS CARPETS 29th & Iowa Use Your "People Book" CARPETS The Office of Student Organizations and Activities is compiling a list of currently registered student groups at the University of Kansas. Organizations that have registered by Sept. 15, 1980 will be included in the fall "Student Organizations Brochure." For more information, contact Office of Student Organizations and Activities SAVE UP TO 75% HENRY'S RESTAURANT Try one of our cool slush drinks to beat the heat. Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CARRENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE - ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 SURPRISE!! To give you an early start on your Christmas projects ... we've moved up our annual sale ... just a little! 4th Birthday Party Come and help us celebrate! Save 25% off entire stock September 2 thru September 20 Headlight, building, canberra, lacushawk, crane, stitch, award, milestone, applique, delay Fall Classes & Workshops Now Forming Stitch On needlework shop 41 West Wtb # 842-1101 * Black夜 Wtb # 842-1101 Hours 10-5 Mon. Sat. . University Daily Kansan, September 3. 1980 Page 9 Scorecard Sports Calendar 3 y from and chance said. 1:30 p.m. - Women's tennis Irverson, Allen Field House 3:30 p.m. - Men's tennis Wilson, Allen Field House courts 4:30 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Milwaukee Brewers vs. Royals Stadium er are th the 4 5 p.m. - Beaumont team barking meet, press box a second, floor of Alen Ashley (35 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Milwaukee Ducks) KKMZ-B, KKKF-M 5 6-35 p.m. — Kansas City Royal at Cleveland Indians, (Ch. 4, KM82-AM, KKXF-M) (Johnson) Sports Quiz A Who was the last KU alumnus to play in a Super Bowl game | | EAST | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 89 | 51 | 61 | .41 | — | | Baltimore | 78 | 32 | 60 | .60 | 1½ | | Cleveland | 72 | 36 | 60 | .60 | 1¼ | | Detroit | 69 | 62 | 65 | .57 | 1¾ | | Milwaukee | 70 | 64 | 65 | .57 | 11 | | Seattle | 68 | 63 | 319 | 12 | 2 | | Toronto | 64 | 77 | 319 | 12 | 2 | Bobby Doughead, left handed quarterback, and John Koch defensively end, were both selected American in 1986. 1:00 p.m. KU - Rugby club Johnson County FRC, 23rd 8:35 p.m. Kansas City Rogers at Lake Canyon, Indiana, 1:45 p.m. Q 6 Philadelphia W L G GP GR Montreal 71 68 431 528 Houston 71 68 538 New York 59 73 447 12 St. Louis 59 73 447 12 Louisiana 58 73 447 12 AMERICAN LEAGUE Today's question W 71 L 58 Pret. GR Houston 79 73 66 Los Angeles 71 77 58 New York 67 65 504 Atlanta 67 65 580 San Francisco 66 65 54 Texas 61 65 51 Kansas City W L F Pct. GB Kansas City 83 47 64 541 29 Oakland 63 58 76 409 20% Minnesota 58 68 76 409 20% Chicago 56 74 74 431 28% Seattle 51 74 94 359 27% Seattle 47 74 94 359 27% Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES NATIONAL LEAGUE tune two five five six seven eight ten 15 words of word $7.20 $7.60 $7.75 $7.90 $8.15 $8.35 $8.55 Each additional word 82 82 82 82 82 82 82 AD DEADLINES Major-league Baseball ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Monday Thursdays 9 pm Tuesday Fridays 9 pm Wednesday Mon 9 pm Thursday Tuesdays 9 pm Friday Wednesdays 9 pm ANNOUNCEMENTS CONSUMER AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION—New York, NY. The Consumer's Affairs Association is now accepting nominees for its Board of Directors. Two of these positions are to be dined on and three positions are to be awarded appreciate your suggestions of candidates. Applicants may be obtained by interested parties at the Consumer's offices. Applications are to be returned to the CA Applications call 843-4088. 1980. For further information call 843-4088. DIABETES SEMINAR Monday, Sept. 7 to 10 Conference Room, Walkin Memorial Hospital, Hall of Science monitoring as an aid in better control." A student is diagnosed for the diabetic student and interested in learning about diabetes. Plumb items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the Kauai business office at 844-5380. ENTERTAINMENT FOR RENT Looking for something new on Sunday? 842. 949 Come out of our SUN! 808. 1087. 842. 949. Come out of our SUN! Open from 5 p.m. 3 t. a.m. Memberships available "Partying is our business." 9-30 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quirt and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-6579 or 842-4185. tf KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE J11 Flint Hall 864-4358 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 1½ bath, attached garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our looks Southern Parkway townhouses, 200 and Kasid, 842-880-7961. From $205.00 available 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. and TWO BEDROOM APTS. Welcomes K.U. Students & Faculty ONE BEDROOM, ONE BEDROOM WITH STUDY JAYHAWK OFFERS: JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS D) Indoor & Outdoor Pools *A) Free Shuttle Bus to Campus B) 24 Hour Security *P) 10 Month Lease Allure *G) Furnished or Unfurnished Models Available C) 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service E) Laundry Facilities on Site S) 10 Month Long Lease CALL 842-4444 3 bdr. apt, rent $350, $100 deposit. All mortgages paid. 6 bdw. Ohio Callio *40-8 ask for Julie Enjoy West Meadows Condo. A brand new design of white wood-burning fireplace, Central air, compass, dishwasher, pool, golf course. Call 814-6033. Utilities $9 more information call 814-6033. for more information 3 bdr. in N. Lawrence. $27 per mon $27 deposit. Bills paid: 841-5968. 9-3 524 Frontier Rd. #2 Newly remodeled rooms, fire alarm system, fire suppression equipment and 2828 weekdays between an am. and pm. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share 1/3 of Mails 2 btr. furnished, excellent location, on bus route. Call 841-2645 at 9:09 p.m. 9-4 Via Capri Apartments. Unfurnished 4 & 2 bedroom beds, available. Central air, wall to quiet location P2; shocks south of Fraser Hearth 424-7931 after 5:30 am on weekdays. For rent now at the area 1 building. 932 Mass Upper floor office space. 1300 square feet. Spacious rooms equipped ceilings room and 3 inside with shink. Has windows and is close to rear entrance. Provides medical care, tomatestr, or medical doctor. Can be made private restroom. Call 843-2140 or 843-0777. Need female to share new 4 bdm.座椅 Very nice, % 1 rent, % utilities, 8423-793 9 - 3 For Rent Now, large studio, completely fur- ranted. Has desk. Room for conference table. Paid $100 deposit, $25 monthly. Contact office. Call 843- 2104 or 843-7077. For rent, nice apt. for men, next to compus May work out part of rent Call 841-4835 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplaces Will take 3 student 2500s 84: 637-733 New and contemporary 2-level duplex, new and contemporary 3-level study, kitchen, dining room, living room garage, central air no. Pets. For more information call 842-4453 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Available now, large older four bedroom flat in Westchester with 150' of living- space. 1908 Massachusetts $360 per room. Call 643-257-5000. Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrences, with walking distance of 5 miles. Perfect for perfect family, duty and duty duing the day. Library, utility rm. and 2 full bedrooms. 812249769035542. Information formation call 842-4455 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 For fall or spring, Nailshim Dr offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a furnished kitchen and plumbing, it weekly maid service to clean, tea and bath, full schedule of social activities and events for your home or if an apartment isn't what you need, HALL 1800 Nailshim Drive, 843-8539, tr Lovely Furnished apartment for one girl with a balcony, furnished with rugs, a month, includes utilities and pet grooming. Available to prospective guests. 1. bdmr. apt. available immediately. Call Cindy = 812-4444. 9-5 Clean. Sleep. Comfortable. Furnished Apt. 10. Buses. On Bus or Bus- Evenings. weekdays. 843-754-724 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialty. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-960-5699. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-960-5699. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $359.8, 3 yea. guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843- 1386. tf New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic matresses set. Be sure to check on prices. Ledom's Furniture 1200 New York St. 843-3228. tf 17. Toyota Corolla, 28 m.p.g. Receive valve temperature, clutch, net speed, 4-9S, 90% ewy, 86% ewy FORD TORN SW 73 t needs some repair. FORD TORN SW 41-623 between 5-7 time. Thomas 9-3 gal, gal inkk, glass top, under- gravel filter, backboard, $25. Price break for quantity buying. Also available, birch wood cabinets made to hold 9 set up 42-258-250 1970 Triumph Spitfire Mark III, 25 mpg and fun! fun! fun! 749-0855. 9-3 1974 Ford F-100 Pickup. Automatic, Alr; Good Condition. $2100 or best offer. 841- 8561. 9-3 Scrap silver for casting. $10 an oz. Call ew- nings 843-7417. 9-3 Gilano Racing Bike 25" Reynolds frame, etc. Absolutely new like. 843-3091- 1977 Pentelite V6-4, Power steering, 2900 and best offer, 841-619. $299 $299 or best offer, 841-619. *VW Karmann Glb. Elia*. Cond. New York incorporation 2520; Hotel offer. (913) 784-6950. Supply: Glb. Elia. Solid Oak Matching Chair, couch and rocker offer. After 8 call 841-2483. 9-3 offering. 1976 Corvette, PS, PB, AT, T-top, AT. 1976 Honda 750 super sport. Both in good condition. 841-2367. 9-5 DOCTORS HOSPITALS GREENS. SIZES 50 BLOUS SHIRTS 19THS. PANTS 12 50 ADD 31 POSTGREENS. PLUS TO PACHI, BOX 4545, FT. LAUD 5 33338. Gas stove $30, G.E. frig. $45, Twin Beds $20, Call 842-2583 at 6 p.m. 9-5 Tired of Laudromas? Kennere Portable clothes洗衣, like new, for only $100. 842-1731 after 5:00. 9-4 1975 Pontiac Venture, Auto, air, and power carrier; $1750. Call 841-7788. 9-3 - - - - and admittance) Reel to Reel AKAI 400-D-B18. Top of the Reel to Reel AKAI 400-D-B18. 8-5 days Weekly. Leave name and nume 1977 Datan glikup 4 speed, excellent companion for maintenance.驾车 843-707-25 after 5 p.m. 1976 Kawasaki KZ 400, good condition. 81-1 4764 9-8 Fender Acoustic guitar. Excellent condition. Fender for easy playing. Amita at 842-1636. 9-8 BOKONON IMPORTS LTD, Sale 20% off paraphernalia E. 12, Bath #841, 9-5-1 www.bokononimports.com 10 spd. bike. Exc. cond., reasonable. 842- 8593 after 5:00 p.m. Joe. 9-5 Pioneer XS-500 ReceiveI $125. Marants I Speakers 500. Like new. $145. $63-213. Used pine group furniture set. Rocker, love sent, couch, chair. Sell separate or together. 843-0471. 9-5 Lowest prices in town on Houseplants. 440 Florida. 842-603-95. 9-Mon-Sat. 842-603-97. 9-Fri-Sat. 35-Watt Arm. Bushed aluminum, 6-point great features. In excel. shape: 849-6010 Epiphone guitar FT 146, $150, shadow pick-up 40, mandolin 30, $430, 840-100 9-5 1977 Yannah RD 400, like new common- dependable, sporty, and economical, call- 864-6923. q-5 FOUND Kevs found in Learned Hall on August 29th Call 842-7881. A white puppy in the area of 13th and 7th floors calls and identify 4-9 x 10-m. 842-8913. Eyeglasses, watches, wallets, Identity card, Senior Student Senate Office D-105 K- 4-24 Union School HELP WANTED Immediate opening for talented singers. Must be uninhibited. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. 9-5 Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person between 10 and 5. Bucky's Drive-In WANTED IMMEDIATELY baby sitter in for two children ages 2-5, Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Approx. 6 more hours per week at flexible plans. 4 Four bleaks west of campus. 842-906-8968 Help Wanted HENRYNS Part-time-Even- er Worker to apply for position necessary not necessary. Apply in Person, 9 am to 6 pm. Email: job@henryns.com Wanted student that has had experience in ice cube machine and commercial refrigeration to work 2 or 3 hours per day. Valid Commercial Refrigerator: 843-656-915 Research Assistant (half to full time) to help evaluate animal management program requirements for animals in the requirement of bachelor's degree in chemistry and pharmacy, supplementing applicants with prior animal and analytical experience, along with a month, depending on qualification and per-journey training to Dr. V J Sella Pharm. Clinic. Master's degree required. Kansas, Lawrence, Ks 60041. Applications must be submitted online or by university/Affirmative Action Employer 9-5 Research Assistant Associate (full time) to aid in the promotion and evaluation of vari- tures in research programs. Requires de- iminations of hachette's degree in chemis- trics given to M.S. or M.D.'s with prior re- sponsse given to M.P. or D.P.'s with prior re- sponsse given to a month, depending on qualifications. Submit resum- ment to the University. Pharma, Chem. Dept. The University. RS 6044. Applications close September 5. RS 6044. Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer Loving, reliable fun person to care for two girls. Christmas friday: $60 per week $45 Monday through Friday: $80 per week G. P. Lloyd's West is now taking applications for a campus party representative, in computer organization or activities deskable. Please apply in 9-12ows Iowa. Immediate positions open for part-time and full-time positions. Employees who work must work entire morning or afternoon; workers must work every day. On the door physical work. Apply in person at www.homesteadwork.com. Blocks of mass. On 13th Street. Y-9-5 Photographers Wanted: Experienced photography technicians who are experienced in supplement quality of personal persons should hold name, phone number, and experience. Job duties include photography, Box 320, Lawrence, KS, 9-5. Commission Saleman wanted to recruit new accounts. Marketed experience helped with lead recruiting, refreshed team and refreshed Encore Copy Corp. Years 20-94 .5911, Ask for John. THE CLEAN is now auditioning for the CLEAR to be familiar with new new wave. Call 811-2256 and Study Opportunity—Local Manufacturing Academic program. Located on a night subscriber for bright, mature 6th grade boy on occasional basis to allow busi- ness training. Required: Call 841-714-2747 (Home) 9-9 Lost: A set of keys with a Brown and yellow key chain, with cats and mice on them. If found contact 864-6273. 9-3 The University of Karnas Audio-Reader Program will offer a university munity program specialist. This person will organize volunteer activity, assist and iden- tify students in the audio-reader community activities in cities across the Karnas Person will also serve as cha- llege development College. College degree re- gistration. College skills, ability to edit and graphic layout experience, editing and typing skills. Travel experience of members of our travel team. Travel incurred, calculated 10-16 brs. per week. Applica- tion date: May 27, 2015. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- oice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- oice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- oice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- voice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- voice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- voice-19-8-18. Contact Rose Hurwitz, Audi- Reward for return of blank notebook containing extensive research data. Inside blue Tackpack taken from my apet, at 1339 ABQ, 845-731 or 845-730 or 8-16 No questions asked. LOST PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRT18 RIGHT 843-4821. 9:30 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MEMBERSHIP card gets you $1.00 highjacket membership card gets you $1.00 highjacket all night long. Only at your place, THE LOUISE WHERE "Partying is our job" in the club. NOTICE Missing from 2113 Wescoe: K.U. tote bag with glasses, keys, I.D. etc. Call Gloria 81-9410 if found. Reward. PULLMAN'S MUSIC DOWNTOWN-LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE music store in Lawrence area. Open daily 9:00-3:50, Thursday until 8:30, 9:36 Mass. Buzzs 843-879 PERSONAL TENNIS PLAYERS. The hot summer has been hard on your string and grip! Call **Kali** for good strings and grip. Member Professional A tennis and K. U.V. Player A tennis, A player 9-5 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC -abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment. Birth care. Resuscitation. IV fluids, or call, cain tp. 8 (p. 93) (612-230-4041 W 109th St. Overland Park, Kanaf Will the woman at the surf & turf party for Mr. Right please contact Wiberg 841-313-3600 K DOG LOVERS CLUB Organization meeting, Wed. 3 Sept. 7:30 pm, Room, Room. Information call Bryant Freeman. 842-1793. 9-3 HOT SANDWICHES--COLD BEER at THE HOT SANDWICHES one block north of campus HAPPY HOUR 4-6 daily. Draws 40 pitches. Now serving New York dinner 9-3 www.sandwichsonline.com YELLO SUB- now open 'til 2 am. Mon- Saturday. Twelve kinds of hot, whole wha- ter meal. Call in orders anytime. 844- 3288. Drunk People welcome. Next to Yamaha on 3rd. 9-15 ATTENTION • PRE-MED STUDENTS IN ATTENTION to seniors and students interested in applying to the program. SAVE SHPT 3. 7:00 p.m. in the Forum on Tuesday at 1:00 p.m. for pre-med students-be sure to check. HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUSE. EVERY 7-10 p.m. enjoy $100 baskets (75% of the cost). Backroom and the atmosphere of the club are always welcome. #249 "Partying is our business" **if** Singing messages for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6100. p-5 SUN TRAVEL Weekend Getaways Presents: The Renaissance Festival September 13 $10.00 September $10.00 (includes transportation SUA will transport you back to a time where wandering minstrels, jugglers, and sword fights are common. See for yourself that chivalry is not dead. For more info, drop by the SUA office, or call 864-3477. Reservation deadline Sept. 6. --additional words THE SPECIALT (especially at the Club Lounge) There are only $1.90 for tables every Wednesday and there no cover charge Only at The Club, 58 Locust, 842-8429 9-30 Looking for the perfect gift idea! We've got it. **ASTA** Singing Telegrams, 841-619-6018 Ben practice daily 6 m. and 6:30 p. 923 Tennessee. Public lecture by Zen master. Seum Kahn, Monday, Sept 8. p. Jay J. Churchill, Friday, Sept 14. p. Jay J. 6-8. For information call 842-7010. 9-5 OPERATION FRIENDSHIP welcome info. Info. BEGIN FRIENDSHIP 1625 HW 1900 hw41 841-900 1625 HW 1900 hw41 841-900 SUPER TGIE AT THE CLUB LOUISE. 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. if Let **ASTA** tuck you in tonight. We'll serve you to sleep any day of the week. **ASTA** Singing Telegrams 81-40-96 9-5 PART TIME ENTRESPHIL OPPORTUNITY If you are undecided about a career, but want to excel in sales or management, able to execute and sales management with a large eastern based company, our part-time may be right for you. For man- information, call 1-800-456-7232. 1411 Equal Opportunity Employer M He Start Needs You to volunteer to wore this shirt. The shirt is made of polyester. Teach a helper, for one day each week. Teach a helper, for one day each week. Teach a helper, for one day each week. Teach a helper, for one day each week. Teach a helper, for one day each week. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-10:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2½ EACH In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times, we serve NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the drinks are served on a beautiful 6 only $6; ladies only $5. Drink and drown at a club THE CLUB LOUSE 508 Locus Hotel. The resort available. Please call us our business. 9-30 THE BIKE GARAGE—specializing in "Tune-Ups" and "Total Overhauls." All work fully equipped. BOKONON IMPORTS LTD. incense sale. Free incense with purchase 12 E. 8th St. 841-3600. 9-3 Introduction in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu- Monkey, Preying Mantis. 841-7450. 9-5 HOUSE OF USHE: 800 MASSACHUSETTS AVE. LINCOLN A 210-563-8800 HUSTLE BELLS -Deta David—Try Miller beer—it goes down smooth!! 9-3 **I's Wednesday and GNO. AT THE HARBOUR LITES, all single women receive 10 pitbites and 6cans bottles from the HARBOUR LITES 1031 Massachusetts-9-2 BIG BLUE IS COMING—Sept. 11th at the Satellite Union. 9-5 Have you had trouble losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are unmotivated in areas such as school or work. Call help. Call 843-1958 for more information 9-5. Tired of cleaning and jering 50 lb. kg's G.P. Lloyd West now has their truck rollin' Tap out of the side anywhere in duffle Call in your service 9-38848. SERVICES OFFERED Einstein's tutors. It worked for Albert. For esistant assistance in mathematics or compi- sition science, or research. 841-7083 English typing. 842-7040 Research, typing. all Sandy 842-7040 Quality repair work performed on most PCBs, PLD's, PCBs licensed technician-perable TV's, diagnostic electronics, also more types of audio-visual equipment, also more Estimates given. Call 843-1572 at 5:00 a.m. Instant color passport photos *immigration* *color & B. Wom. Tom 841-7294* *9-16* Empires 9-30-80 Astrology provides a frame of reference for your life. If you are confused about where you stand, more clearly identified with your zodiac sign may be for you. Call 843-1956 for more information. Job resume prepared by a personed professional. Get an early start on the fall campus interviews. 841-5664 9-12 MISCELLANEOUS Good For Free Drink & Chips With Any Sandwich From 10-2 Only Yellow Sub 530 West 23rd COUPON COUPON Of Pinball Good For Free Game With Any Sandwich The Crossing 618 West 12th --additional words TYPING Tying prices discounted. Excellent work inventory management, term papers, etc. Batty, 842-669-7677 Experimented with term papers, themat- sheets, and printed materials. Experimented with corrections, corrected text, Mr. Wright, ii. Experimented N.I. (uplift) IBM Correcting Software and Sodydy events and weeks. 748- 160. Sodydy events and weeks. 748-160. 8h2-2001 Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality, work, reasonable rates. Their dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Coll Joan. 842- 9127 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Call. Ellen or Jeannan. 841-2172. 12-8 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf IRON FENCE TYING SERVICE Fast try- meter readings to: 442-220-1798, evenings to 11:30 and weekends. Experienced typist, themed, dissertation, science paper writing, selecting electron- Barb. after 5 p.m. #431-8210 WANTED Lowest rate. Experimened typist does clean, quality work. 749-2036. Danette. 9-5 Aaccurate, experienced typist IBM correcting Slecific Call Denna 812-2744. tf For PROFESSIONAL, TYPING Call Myra. 841-4909 if CAR FOOL- from Overland Pork-Pirate careers (as dale) Call Tom evenings 353-149-196 GOLD- SILVER - DIAMONDS Clams Finger Gold-Silver Diamonds more. Free pick-up. 841-746 www.goldsilvers.com Buying gold Paying $450-1400 for men Bucking silver Paying $600-1200 2120 W 25th. Holiday Plaza 82-926-958 2120 W 25th. Holiday Plaza 82-926-958 DRUMMER looking for Rock or Funk Band to play with. Call Ken at 749-0852. 9-8 2 female roommates (in nice large house) 3 male roommates (in nice large house) 4 utilities 811-841-8745, events. Dana 6 utilities 811-841-8745, events. Dana Female roommate to share nice 2 bdm- ant, art room 120/month + $_{1}$_2 utilities 749-885. Professional couple w 4 children seek non-smoking accommodations, transportation to infant and 5-yr-olds, or 3 or 4 mornings a week or T & Th after lunch. Simply Randy at $811*14 for interview apt Female roommate to share 2 bdrms, unfurnished apt on bus route. Pool, near shopping center. $35 month + 1/2 gas and electricity. 749-213-286. 9-5 WANTED: Experienced working rock band reforming. New auditioning bass/ vocal and lead guitar/vocal. Call: 841-1676, 841-299-9 or 749-1348 Roommate needed to share space 3-bedroom, Odle English Matls with balky rooms, has his service and other comforts. Roommate required rent 9-4- 842-370 For more info Housemate wanted at 508 Indiana $50+ utilities. Grad student preferred Call 843- 1163 9-5 Part-time, custodian to work from 6 to 9 p.m. mon.-Fri. Salary to start at $4hr. Experience preferred, but not necessary. Please contact Charlie Watie at 547-2217. 9-555-3800. Roommates wanted: booking new Christia- nelle and Joanna, renting large house/apart. Call Siesta Neat. clean person to share new 2-bdr. 2-bathroom, Apartment A. 42nd and Kaolin Energy efficient air conditioner, disheawer and more. 150 i.e. pools. Call 843-0843 evenings i.e. 9-5 Gain valuable expenence while being a caregiver. Become a volunteer and start meet volunteers to work with 3 and 4 students, or take time to care for children, or time and love to love; call Bob Burke at 407-895-1020; 407-895-1020; Any schedule can be arranged. Roommate for 2 dpr abc. Jayhawk West. 5120 ; Utilities; Call Bret 748-936-536 Female Roostrate wants to share square footage with a new house for $35 plus a utilities on KU bus route 296. Female roommate to share 3 beds, hpm for campus *85* 1.3/8 beds M06 9-5 Roommate to share a 81rd townhouse at 243-769-0666; required deposit required. 81-0281 after 5-90 9-69 The University Daily Person to show 2 bibm ant. 5 min. Person to show 2 bibm ant. 5 min. Student and call Mary C446-4432 student and call Mary C446-4432 A nice house in share. You get 1 room. A comfortable bed. Wash and dry. Christmas prefers. Please call 023-547-6989. ORDERFORM KANSAN ORDER FORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! If you've got it, Kansas classifieds can sell it! just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to University Daily Kansan. 111 Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write Ad Here Dates to Run: Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 1 times 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 times $9.215 $9.250 $9.271 $9.300 $9.335 .02 .03 .04 .05 .06 AD DEADLINE CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch>$3.75 to run: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 3. 1980 Nomad Scribner goes it alone during practices, during games By GENE MYERS Sports Editor Bucky Scrickler is a punter, a football nomad. Most of his football days, games and practices, are spent wandering about. He's his own boss. He's his own coach. He's his own cheerleader. He's his own critic. Fewer than 15 minutes out of every practice Scriner has something to do. The rest of practice he's on his own. "I get a lot of crop from the team," Scribner says. "They say I don't have to work. But it would be still for me to work. I could give my leg lag bumped up." "I give them a hard time, too. I say that the mental pressure is too much to handle. I say that I have too much brains to be basking in my head." SCRIBNER HAS BEEN a football nomad ever since he left Lawrence High School three years ago. His first stop was Pratt County Community College in Pratt. He became a juco Ali-American and earned a scholarship to KU. But last season he was redshirted just "sat around." Now, he is expected to fill the punts prints of Mike Hubach, who has gone on to the pros. But Scriber's nomadic past has made a few problems for the present. "The coaches here want me to concentrate more on height," Scribner said. "At Pratt, my only goal was to kick my way out of there and to get a few more points in training. I impress everyone with an impressive punting average." Scribner's left leg is a vital part of KU's plans for the season. He was supposed to have spent last season as a coach, and then, learning the collegiate punt trade. "I SPENT LAST season getting fat," Scribner said. "I put in all my time and money to do that." much for a punter to do. I basically kept Hubleie and shagged his pants. "I was a nobody last year. I left an I was a nobody last year. I left an returned a nobody. It was kind of nice. The apprenticeship is now over and in its place is a pressure to perform. Scrcriber averaged 45 yards a pint in a competition with the other players. Don Fambridge was still not pleased. "He was OK at times," Fambrigh said. "But he needs hang time on each punt. He must learn that he cannot kick over the opponents' heads anymore." IN JUNIOR COLLEGE, he could boot the ball over heads. The opposition would line up 35 to 40 yards off the line and hit him. He said, and then watch the ball sail past. "I'm in a rut. I've kicked long for so long," Scrierain said. "If I can kick the ball over their heads and it hits the ground, that's all right. But if it doesn't hit the ground that puts too much pressure on the rest of the team. And in the big Eight, the players are so darn quick that you can't do it." On the practice field, however, Scribner is still a nomad. He works with the coverage teams. Punts a little. Watches. "I just jog a little," he said. "I also stretch a little. A punter can't get enough stretching." ON GAME DAYS he will remain a nomad. He will wander the sidelines until he is needed. "The coaches don't tell me anything," he said. "It is obvious what I need to do. Where to kick the ball is up to me. "When I go in to check the deep backs I check the overload and see whether there will be a rush and whether we have the rush covered. 'I can't hear anything except the center and whoever is calling signals. I don't see a rush but I feel it. Then, I drop the ball and boot it.' Baseball team pursues batgirls KU's baseball team wants batgirls for the 1980-81 season. Interested women should meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the press box area on the second floor of Allen Field House. Barb Brow, spokesman for the batgirls, said that members of the team and coaching staff would interview applicants. SUA FILMS Wednesday, Sept. 3 The Man in the White Suit (1951) Tight Little Island (Whiskey Galore) Two great comedies from Eating Studiens. The first stars Alec Guinness as a mild-mannered but resilient destructive fabric—only to find that's the last thing the world wants. With Joan Greenwood and Ernest Theiser, the机组 of whiskey—and the hilarious attempts of the nearby islanders to get it before the government does. With Basil Radford the group of whiskey-makers. Both directed by Alexander Macken-dick. (8/52)m 8:12 W; B-7:30. (The Magnificent Seven) Friday, Sept. 5 Comes a Horseman (1978) Thursday, Sept. 4 Seven Samurai New York holds 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ game lead in 1945 Wyoming, small farmers Jane Fonda and James Case have lightly beautifully photographed Western, directed by Alan Titchener. "What's Our Opera," Doc. ("11") min. Color. Shown uncut for the first time in the United States. Akira Kuwoshi's acuity, colorful, ironic sera of seven warriors led by Toshio Mitani is a great film. By the Golden Boy Film Academy Award Winners (208 film) B&W: 7:30. Coming Home Jane Fonda and Jon Voltage won Academy Awards for their portraits of a radicalized soldier's wife and a paralegal. They were also the effects of the Vietnam War on those at home. Bruce Dern and Robert Carratt o-star *+* Plunk "Duck Museum" (127). The Beatles at Shea Stadium (1964) Roll up for the magical extravaganza with the Beatles. The first is the record of their chaotic concert, the widest of their earliest eras. It is on as they sing their greatest early hits. Then climb aboard for "I Am the Sun." There are two others in this surreal adventure (6552 min.). Plus: "Braverman" Condensed Cream of Beats' Color. 1200 Mild. Magical Mystery Tour Saturday, Sept. 6 Comes a Horseman 3:30, 9:30 Coming Home 7:00 The Royals return to action tonight in Royals Stadium against the Milwaukee Brewers. The series, which included a game Monday, ends tomorrow. Kansas City then goes on a 10-game road trip to Cleveland, California and Oakland. The Beatles at Shea Stadium 12:00 Midnight. From Kansan wire services Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Woodfair Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00. Ticket available at the SAU office, Kankakee Inn. Level: information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshes allowed. While the Royals were off, batting leader George Brett was meeting President Jimmy Carter at Carter's town hall meeting in Independence, Mo. Brett, who is hitting, 401 with 30 games left in the season, gave Carter a "George Brett for President" bumper sticker. Magical Mystery Tour 12:00 Midnight. The Yankees, who have led the Baltimore Orioles by three games or less for the last two weeks, beat the Oakland A's 6-1 in New York. Bobby Brown, who is replacing injured Rupert Hunt, a former hero to lead the Yankee offense. The New York Yankees retained their 1/1-2-game lead in the American League East last night with a combined six-hitter from Rudy May and Rich In Baltimore, the Orioles crushed the Seattle Mariners 10-4. John Lowenstein and Dan Graham hit back-to-back inning in innings to send Jim Palmer to his 16th win. Lowenstein's blast, his third home run of the season, came off弱 Jim Beattie, 4-13. A Bumphy led off with a single and stole second. Eddie Murray walked even though there were two outs. Lowenstein homered. So did Graham. In the American League West, the Kansas City Royals had the day off. Texas, who has crept past Oakland for second place, won last night to keep the Royals' magic number at 12. The magic number is the combination of Kansas City victories and Texas losses that warrant mathematically the title for the Rowsy. THE BEST FROM HOLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-3788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PU Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7:20 & 9:20 R Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 . The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3. Raise the Titanic 7:15 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 2. The Fiendish Plot of Dr Urban Cowboy Sunset Wing West 10th St. 043-8172 Grease SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Footlights 7:30 & 9:30 BUY OR SELL Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hammond Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm & Antiques Imaginative Cards & Gifts 731 New Hampshire Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbriar's Dell) starts at Dusk Holiday Plaza 841-6377 Deli Sandwiches FEATURES GREAT AMERICAN RESTAURANT 205 W. 8th (Next to Mr. Bill's) Nachos Jumbo Dogs Marinated Vegetables Polish Sausage Homemade Chocolate Chip Cookies Open till 1:00 a.m. Wednesday thru Saturday MUNCHIES ROCK ROLL NATION 8 Wed., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. DAVE KHAUS/Kansan staff Bucky Scribner, who is Kansas' No. 1 punter, lets one fly during a scrimimage Saturday in Memorial Stadium. Scribner, a former junior college All-American, has to replace Mike Hubeach, who now punts for the NFL New England Patriots. Wednesday—Ladies Night free beer 7:900 P.M. Thursday—Drink and Drown $4.50 guys $3.50 girls Friday—KLZR Quart Snort hort G. P. Loyd's Wes 925 Iowa. Below J. Watson's (Ladies' Night 7:00 - 9:00 Wed.) Expert Watch Repair - Fast Service (Week-10 Days) - Master Watchmakers - All Work Guaranteed - Watch Batteries Replaced (All Makes) - Ultrasonically Cleaned BRIMAN'S leading jewelers 743 Mass. 843-4366 Lawrence Use Kansan Classified PENN STATE UNIVERSITY Fall 1980 Leagues ... All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 P. M. Specials TILL 6:00 6:30 Dormitory Bowling - Billiards 6:30 All Star Scratch 8:30 Greek Amusement Machines Cold Beer ... 3 games/person $2.00 1:00 K.U. Ladies Bowling - Billiards 6:15 All Campus Wednesday Wednesday 1:00 K.U. Ladies 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) 4:00 TGIF Friday Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Hours For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 Wed. & Fri. Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Sat. & Sun. BOWLING 1:00 PM-11:00 PM IS FUN! Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts DYNAMITE SALE ONE DAY ONLY-THURS. SEPT. 4th doors open from 9:30am-8:30pm You will blow your mind when you see the incredible savings that you can take advantage of during this: SUMMER BLOW-OUT CLEARANCE SALE shirts $2.99 swimsuits $3.99 tops skirts $5.99 pants shorts $2.99 $1.99 vests $5.99 $2.99 other items ???? The University Daily KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas University of Kansas Thursday, September 4, 1980 Vol.91, No.9 Watkins criticizes Winn's legislation By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Democrat Dan Watkins presented evidence yesterday to back up his contention that Rep. Larry Wim Jr., R-Kan., had not passed any laws to help the people of the 3rd District." Watkins is challenging Winn for the 3rd District seat. In his 14 years as representative to the U.S. House, Winn has sponsored 159 public legislation bills and said at a press conference in the Lawrence of Not one of these bills has been passed, he said. He also blasted the incumbent for what he called a poor attendance record. "Larry Winn's public record speaks for itself." Wikkins said. "It is a record of absenteeism—many notes on the floor of Congress and not even showing up for committee sub-committee hearings. "It is also a record of ineffectiveness—after 14 years in Congress the incumbent hasn't even been able to pass one piece of legislation to help the people of the 3rd District." ALTHOUGH THE Democrat conceded that Winn's absentee problem only started within the past two years, he said that it indicated several things. "His absenteeism and frequent trips to foreign countries tends to show a picture of a man frustured, tired and disinterested in his job," Watkins said. Winn was in Lawrence Tuesday night to open his campaign headquarters, but he flew back to Washington D.C. yesterday. He was defended, however, for his sponsorship of bills and attendance record by Jack Brand, 3rd District Republican campaign chairman. "Watkin's charges are ridiculous and irresponsible, and I think he better go do his research." Brand said. "Larry Winn is one of the most influential representatives in the House." "He is a ranking member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and the senior Republican on the Science and Technology committee. He is also a representative committee if the Republicans control Congress." BRAND SAID Winn had one of the best attendance records for his years in the Congress for any legislator. "For his 14 years, Winn ranks in the top 10 percent in attendance of all congressmen." Brand also noted Winn's selection last year to join the U.N. staff, and said Winn had been instilled with leadership for projects in the Lawrence area. The Cairnham and Parkway are two such probrams, he said. "In a Democrat-controlled Congress, the biannual come out are naturally going to have more power." GOP LEGISLATORS have proposed 121 amendments, and 88 of those have passed. Democrats have proposed 175, and 78 have passed. Winn had proposed no legislation in 1980, as of Aug. 21, according to the Congressional Quarterly, the source of Watkins' figures. "It is a convenient excuse, to blame his own ineffectiveness on a Democratic Congress," Watkins said. "The pattern of absenteeism has taken its toll." "The reason Winn hasn't passed any legislation is not because he doesn't introduce a law that has introduced a lot of bills. They don't pass these laws, they don't work at them or they are just bad ideas." Congressional Quarterly statistics show that Winn had the fifth poorest attendance record on roll call votes among Republican representatives in 1979. Watkins said. He said the minutes of the committee meetings showed Winn missed about 32 percent of his committee meetings in 1979-80, and about 36 percent of his sub-subcommittee meetings. "This record of absenteeism these past two years is further proof that the congressman has given up his right to represent the people of the 20 district." Watkins said. Polish strikes to spur change Staff Reporter By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Concessions made by the Polish government to end an 18-day strike by its workers have thrust the country into a state of evolution, Marcin Sar, a visiting associate professor from Poland, said yesterday. However, it's anyone's guess where the evolution will lead, he said. Sar, a 29-year old associate professor of political science at the University of Warsaw, said he spent much of last week on the Dgansk waterfront, interviewing striking workers and interpreting the Polish government's statements for ABC television. "It was a very complex situation," he said. "There are no politicians who say exactly what they have in mind. You have to read between the lines that those politicians were the same in most countries." ON FRIDAY, Sar left his informal job with ABN, and took the last available flight to New York. He arrived in Lawrence Tuesday night, and yesterday he taught the first class of his yearlong appointment at the University of Kansas. He has also taught a number of politics in Eastern and Central Europe. On Monday, while Sar was still in New York, sightseeing and being briefed by Polish officials, he was asked to lend them to their loss. But not before their government accepted a long list of demands, including the right to form free labor unions, to strike and to bargain for better wages and working con- The dispute was settled yesterday when 100,000 Polish coal miners, the last workers still on strike, signed a new contract with the government. Sar said the labor settlements could have far-reaching effects. "If both sides stick to this settlement, it could considerably contribute to the evolution of the political system in Poland," he said. "But I wish I knew what kind of evolution." HE SAID THAT ALTHOUGH Poland could never return to a free market economy, he expected the government to become less centralized and closer to the people. Sar said the problem with the existing state labor unions was not that they were controlled by the party, but that they had lost touch with the workers they represented. For example, he said that the unions have been known to spend more time organizing summer holidays for the workers than solving economic problems for them. "Workers should now have more say in economic problems like wages, prices and inflation," he said. "And there will be less organization—less red tape in state organizations." He predicted that the unions would try to represent the workers' needs and probably would have to quit. See PROFESSOR page 5 6. 2 KU COMMITTEE ON SOUTH AFRICA SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SUPPRESS SCHOOLCHILDREN 100,000 SCHOOLCHILDREN PROTECT AGAINST INFERIOR EDUCATION KUI ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION OUT OF SOUTH AFRICA Keenan Gentry, Lenaza junior and a member of the KU Committee on South Africa, hands out information on the KU Endowment Association's investments in South Africa. The committee had set up an information booth across from Bailey Hall yesterday. DanWatkins Dan Watkins, the Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives from the 3rd District, offers support for his allegations that his opponent has done nothing while in office to benefit Kansans. CHRIS TODD/Kansas staf First team files for student body posts By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Mark Bernstein, Lawrence graduate student, and John Guillory, Springfield junior, this week became the first team to file for student body president and vice president. Student Senate elections were moved from the week before spring break to the week before Thanksgiving by a unanimous Senate vote in the last meeting of the spring semester. Bernstein said Guillory and he had tried entry to begin attracting support. He said he also hoped it would indicate to students that they were serious candidates. He said they would begin forming a coalition in the few weeks and would run a low budget campaign. Bernstein, a two-year senator, said they would be emphasizing student involvement and working to change attitudes toward the University. "The University needs to become a pioneer of the future again instead of playing catchup to it in the past few years, the University has been more interested in profit than in progress." HE SAID the University was living a self-fulfilling prophecy when it continually talked about enrollment decreases and inflation. Calling the University a special institution, he said it needed to get back to emphasizing technology, research and high-quality education. Bernstein served as a graduate senator from 1978 to 1980. He said he thought "the University system really does work. You just have to give it a chance." John Gullory, the team's vice presidential candidate, is a political science major. Because he has not been a student senator, he was required to submit 600 student signatures subject to review by the Student Senate elections committee. Guillory said his lack of previous experience in Senate would be an asset to the campaign. "I've studied the political process and I can go in with a clear mind," he said. GUILLORY SAID he had been active in soca-causes. He said he was involved in the Wolf Creek Nuclear Site sit-in and had worked with Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Clarence Dillingham, former instructor in social welfare. Both Forer and Dillingham have become controversial figures because of their trips to Iran in an attempt to win release of the American hostages. John Knightly, elections committee cochairman, said he was expecting many students as candidates this year because of the change in election time and the political atmosphere. "People feel more collegiate in the fall. It's an election year and people have that political awareness," she said. With each candidacy declaration, Students filling for the November elections receive a $2 filing fee and a signature. By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Summerfield bathroom battle rages Women staff members have lifted the lid of controversy on the third floor of Summerfield Hall with their demands for equal rights to bathrooms. The "bathroom controversy", which has been occupying the free moments of some employees in the School of Business, was triggered by a failure to the lack of a women's restroom on the third floor. The controversy has a long history that actually dates back to the time Summerfield was built, according to John Tolefson, associate dean of business. WHEN THE BUILDING was built in 1959, the first and second floors were equipped with two bathrooms each, he said. The third floor, the fourth, the fifth, and the last, and it was designated for use by men, he said. "It was an interesting commentary on the times," Tolleson said. "The staff was made up almost solely of men, and one ever gave a ride to anyone." As the years passed and the number of women staff members increased, however, some people began to question the fairness of limiting the third floor bathroom to men only. In time, the situation grew into "implicit competition over a scarce resource," Tolefson Last February, Jean Baderschneider, assistant professor of business, circulated a handwritten petition protesting the lack of a women's bathroom on the third floor. "It started out as kind of joke." Bader-schneider said yesterday. "I'm known as being an advocate for lots of things in the department, of which this is obviously the least important. This was really a question of equity—we need a classroom on the floor for each sex." THE PETITION WAS submitted to Toilette with the request that Baderchick deal with the problem, Baderchick said. Among the alternatives was an offer to share the existing bathroom (which violated too many people's sensibilities, Baderschneider said), or to hang a board on the door of the bathroom that could be flipped to indicate which sex was occupying the bathroom. The petitioners also suggested dividing the bathroom by building a wall down the middle and putting in another door, but that plan was not made. It would it cost too much, Baderschneider said. In March, Tollefson sent a memo to the faculty and staff members on the third floor telling them about the petition and requesting their comments, advice or alternative suggestions. According to a later memo from Toullefson, proposals that were considered and subsequently rejected included "a unisex (or nonsex) third floor restroom, a user's choice (men), the installation of portable toilets in the hallway of the third floor and immediate construction." See BATHROOM page 5 Weather RAIN Today's high will be near 88, with thundershowers ending this afternoon according to the KU Weather Board. KU to make picture ID cards according to the KU Weather Service. Tonight will be fair and cooler with a low of 82. Tomorrow will be fair and warmer. Highs will reach the upper 88s. In the extended forecast, it should be dry and hot through the weekend. Highs should be mild. By CINDI CURRIE By CINDICURRIE Staff Reporter New picture IDs for KU students will be available within the new month, Gil Dyck, dean of the school. Dyck said the cards will cost students $15.00. Students are not required to buy new D&L old_id cards. The credit card type ID now used does not provide enough identification for students out "There was more cheating going on than in previous years," Dyck said. HE SAID the need for the new picture IDa had been revealed by the Student Senate and Frank Lester, director of the He said the science department among others had complained because it was difficult to positively identify students taking exams in large classes. "We want a card that is valuable to students at the University as well as in the Lawrence community." The card's design will be similar to the one used now and will have the magnetic tape strip on the back used by the library for checking out Drick said that he did not know how much the entire process would cook and that tids for the oven had to be preheated. The equipment for producing the IDs will be sae tad. he said, but a location had not yet been chosen. Last year's car production was directed by the department's relations and was transferred to the office of adminstr Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, said that the equipment used two years ago could not be modified to produce the new cards. The decision to produce the IDs at KU was made because of problems with Malco Plastics, Inc., a Maryland company that made the IDs last year. Delivery of the cards was delayed last fall because of a change in the card's graphics and last spring because of problems with the billing arrangements. Dyck said there were still 7,000 or 8,000 of last year's IDs in his office. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 News Briefs From the Kansan Wire Services Poles sign for better mine conditions WARSaw, Poland—Polar's 100,000 coalworkers signed a back-to-work agreement yesterday after winning major concessions from communist authorities and ending the latest of the strikes that swept the nation for three weeks. The pact ended the first strike in the vital Silesian coalfields since Poland was founded 35 years ago. Miners were scheduled to be back at their jobs starting with the first 6 a.m. shift today. Full details of the settlement were not announced, but strikers were known to have won a 5-day work week and abolition of a 4-Shift system that kept each miner at work six days out of eight and forced many to miss Mass on three out of four Sundays. The government also promised better safety precautions in the mines, which are vital to the nation's energy supply. Eight miners died earlier this year. The miners also demanded and were granted higher family allowances and better supplies of meat, a commodity whose higher prices touched off price wars. Dissident officials also reported late Tuesday that Marek Kozlowski, one of the political prisoners whose release was a bargaining topic in Gdanak, had been arrested. Chinese premier chooses successor PEKING-Premier Hua Guofeng named Zhao Ziyang as his successor yesterday to lead China in its post-Mao modernization drive. Zhao's appointment had been expected. Observers said it meant Hu had lost a power struggle to Deng Xiaping, the deputy premier who engineered the modernization campaign and who is considered to be the most powerful man in China. China's parliament, the National People's Congress, will formally approve Hua's resignation and Zhao's appointment during its current two- Hua told visiting Japanese Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ito that Deng and tour other vice presidents also would resign during the Congress to pave the way for his re-election. Deng hand-picked Zhao to become premier and possible future chairman of the party. Zhao will oversee China's new pragmatic policies in economic and financial matters and its growing ties with the West, especially the United States. Hua, who for now will remain as party chairman, steps down as premier after a long and reportedly bitter struggle with the so-called moderate party. Hua praised Zhao to Ito as a "very talented figure." Anti-war activist plans to surrender NEW YORK—Abbie Hoffman, the radical Yippie anti-war leader of the 1960s who has been running from the law since 1974, plans to come out of hiding soon and surrender on drug and bail-jumping charges, his lawyer said yesterday. "He will be coming out soon, because he feels now is a good time," said attorney Gerald Leclart. "When people learn his story, they will be truly impressed." Hoffman, 43, contacted ABC-TV three weeks ago and said he was planning to turn himself in during the first week of September and wanted to be in trouble. Walters and an entourage of cameramen flew tweed to Watertown, N.Y., where they transferred to a car and left for an undisclosed place. Police said state authorities were not involved in an attempt to snare Hoffman the surface for an interview. Sources at ABC said Walters interviewed Hoffman Tuesday. The sources said Hoffman had told ABC in a series of phone calls that he would talk to Walters, disappear and then surrender to authorities. Walters also was to talk to a plastic surgeon who claimed to have performed surgery on the fivetute. Help sought to curb refugee crimes MADISON, Wis.—Gov. Lee Dreyfus asked the White House yesterday to send a letter asking the U.S. Department of Agriculture (U.S. Coy) Cuba refuge resettlement center from a base in refugee government A commission that spent two days at the military post verified reports of gang raps, beatings and robberies. It said that the situation was not "out of control" for police. Children, both boys and girls, have been targets of sexual attacks by the largest adult male population because they are integrated with the rest of society. Joseph LaFleur, a Dreyfus alide, said the governor had asked the White House for more military police to beef up security in the compound and for federal prosecutors to try suspects arrested for committing crimes in the compound. The commission said MPs and federal marshals now patrol only the perimeter, leaving the internal operation of the camp to a "government officer" (Fred). LaFleur also said the 200 juveniles at the camp should be separated from the rest of the camp population. The center began accepting refugees last May. Since then more than 9,000 have been resettled around the nation. About 5,000 remain. The camp is to close this month, and the remaining refugees are to be transferred to Fort Chaffee, Ark. Second official tried in Abscam case WASHINGTON—Rep. John Jennette, D-S.C. went on trial yesterday on charges of accepting $50,000 in exchange for introducing an immigration bill that could have led to deportation. Jury selection began yesterday with opening statements scheduled for today. Jenneke is up for reelection in November, but he said he would be bee too with his trial to campaign. He predicted he would be cleared of any wrongdoing. Jennette and co-defendant John Stowe, a former Myrtle Beach, S.C., was charged with a felony charge of stealing an additional $175,000 in return for introducing the private inmate program. Jenrette entered Bethesda Naval Hospital last February for treatment of a woman whose lawyer, Kenneth Robinson, said the defense would focus on that problem. The prosecution is expected to present video and audio tapes of conversations between Jenrette and the undercover agents. Jenrette is the second of six congressmen indicted in the Abscamp inri- tance to come trial. Rep. Myers Myers, D-Pa., was convicted in New York last week. Elephants dine on posh hotel cuisine The elephants took to the meal with relish, stuffing whole heads of lettuce into their mouths, snaking carrots with their trunks and munching on them. A half dozen waiters in black tuxedos, with white tails draped over their arms, minstakes to the elephants and tickled showers occasionally spewed mud. The assorted goodies cost the Hyatt Regency about $400, and most of it was quickly gobbled up. They also ate bananas and peanuts served on trays by waiters. Before the animals left, they performed tricks under the goading of their two legs and then each other or stood on their two hind legs with their trunks raised to the sky. Teachers' strikes spread across nation By United Press International Teachers' strikes spread to nine states yesterday from Arizona to New Jersey. Schools involved had an enrollment of about 800,000 students, but many had not been enrolled. about 5,500 teachers, instructional aides and clerks, citing "no contract, no work," picked 81 schools in Newark, Kentucky, and 47 others. 62,000 students were preparing for the The main issues were higher salaries, cost of living increases, limitations on class size and more teacher preparation time. In another of the larger strikes in Rochester, N.Y., teachers defied the state Taylor law, which penalizes them two days' pay for each day they strike, keeping 28 schools closed on the first day of school for 34,600 students. NEWARK TEACHERS Union leaders said they called the strike when contract talks stalled. They said the education had educed it to make a salary offer. new school year. Their contract expired June 30. The other 26 schools in Rochester are operating with substitutes and advertise. Union officials said 98 percent of the district's 2,300 teachers picked in the final round. News coverage twisted, Reagan says In an interview in Detroit, Reagan said he thought the press was trying to confuse him with a political figure. He said the news media were "aided and abetted" by the Carter administration. WASHINGTON-Ronald Reagan said Tuesday that he thought the news media had followed the lead of Democrats in nipicking and distorting his statements and the result had been a lot of "half-cocked" news coverage. "They have taken their lead from things said by Vice President Walter Mondale and Carter and even Sen. Edward Kennedy's speech, at the opening of a memorial full of distorted quotes and out-ofcontext remarks," he said. "If Mr. Carter intends to campaign on those, he's in for a big surprise." IN PHILADELPHIA, where schools were to open tomorrow, teachers were under a court order to limit picketing. Negotiators were meeting around the clock under the supervision of a state mediator. Reagan has spent much of the last few weeks explaining controversial remarks on Taiwan, evolution, the Vietnam War and the Ku Klux Klan. No new talks were scheduled to end the walkout, which began Tuesday. outside schools yesterday, but officials crowd up in school in session for the principal's 6.900 students. The 20,000 teachers and aides were to report for their first day of work yesterday but instead planned to resume picketing at schools, the district administration building and other locations. A court order limited the number of pickets to six at any location. There also were walkouts in four other eastern Pennsylvania districts. IN THE WEST, teachers were on strike against three Seattle-area schools with 30,000 students. Sierra Vista, Ariz., teachers began picketing In the Midwest, strikes in more than a dozen Illinois districts involved some 700 teachers and more than 33,000 students. In the Chicago area alone, 19 districts had yet to reach contract settlements. Teachers in three Ohio districts with a total of more than 11,000 students were off the job, and more strikes were threatened. In Michigan, teachers' strikes in 29 districts kept 79,500 students either out of school or wondering if opening day would be on time. About 21,300 Rhode Island students were kept out of schools in four districts on the first day of school yesterday by 1,200 teachers who picketed three districts and honored a strike by janitors in another. 3-Day Specials September 4-5-6 1. 20% off Oxford cloth shirts - white, pink, yellow, blue 20% off all plaid shirts THE ATTIC Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 1. 30% off jeans -excluding designer jeans 842-3963 10-5:30 Mon.-Sat. • 10-8:30 Thurs. 3. 2. TONIGHT Due to popular demand every Thursday will be 25c DRAWS MAD HATTER LAWRENCE,KS Every Monday— Inverted Drinks— $1.00 Every Tuesday— Skid Row Night— Wine $1.00 Every Wednesday— Ladies Night— Wine $1.00 Beer 75c Highballs $1.25 8 to 12 Only MAD HATTER 712 New Hampshire 31415927 - 03 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-55 Texas Instruments HL Premium Calculator e1 Compute A/S LB AN-GF V/E m b f 1 2.75% These two TI calculators can help you handle courses in math,in science,or business. Now,and in the real world. One real-world lesson you'll learn in the is importance of productiv- you spend doing the math part of learning how you can't spend learning concepts. A Texas Instruments professional calculator will help make your study time more productive. And it can also help you move into the world of a professional. A world where knowing the concept is only part of the solution. Bringing out the answer requires a working knowledge of a powerful personal calculator. Economical TI Business Analyst-1 with Statistics and advanced business functions. Pre-programmed with business functions for time-value of money, statistician, and other jobs. Consolidating Electronics-Making Businesses Keys to Money Management business school. Other capabilities include percent, squares, logs, and powers. Its 140-page book, "Keys to Money Management" (a $4.95 value), has step-by-step instructions plus sample problems. It's an extra value with every BA-1. problems you'll encounter in Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. This capable calculator has AOS™ easy entry system, statistical functions, 10 memories, 9 levels of parenthesis, trig, powers and roots, plus programability. Its book, "Calculator Decision Making Sourcebook" (a $4.95 value), helps you get all the power pre-programmed into the TI-55. The TI-55 advanced slide rule with statistics and programmability. See the whole line of TI calculators at your college bookstore or other retailer. "Treedark of Texas Instruments." © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated Fifty Years of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED 45731 aile the n a n i e 19 act nts nts 29 put puay nts ctes tree tree University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1960 Page 3 Palestinian talks to resume By United Press International ALEXANDRIA, Egypt—Egypt and Israel agreed yesterday to resume the suspended Palestinian autonomy talks and prepare for a three-way summit with the United States to settle outstanding differences. The agreement was clinched by U.S. Middle East Envoy Sol Linowitz, who flew from Israel to Egypt earlier in the day to rescue the crisis-ridden talks. Egypt had suspended the talks three times in as many months. The break in the deadlock was also expected to give a foreign policy boost to the Carter administration as the president campaigned for re-election. Linowitz told Carter and Israeli护照 company that the agreement in separate phone calls. THE AGREEMENT was disclosed in a joint statement, which Linowitz read to reporters on behalf of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Begin after a 45-minute meeting with the Egyptian leader. In Washington, Carter said the autonomy talks could resume in a few weeks but officials said no precise dates or locations had been set. White House officials said a summit between the leaders of the three nations would not be held until after the U.S. presidential elections in November. "The parties agreed to resume the autonomy negotiations at a mutually agree date and to ponset regarding any other issues of a summit meeting," the statement said. THE STATEMENT affirmed the parties' commitment to the 1978 Camp David accords. The accords, the basis for the talks, aimed to devise a scheme to grant limited autonomy to the 1.2 million Iraqis living in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. "The parties recognize that for the negotiations to succeed, they must rest on a firm foundation of mutual trust and friendship, and they undertake to strongenth that foundation in the coming weeks," the statement said. Egyptian officials stressed the autonomy negotiation would be by waking the "mountain." For both sides, the agreement appeared to represent a compromise, although more so for Egypt, which took pains to emphasize the concession it won—Iron's consent to another Camp David-style summit to discuss differences too deep to be solved in lower level talks. THESE INCLUDED the status of Arab East Jerusalem and Israel's continued policy of building Jewish settlements in occupied Arab land. But American and Israeli officials, who had been cool to the idea of a summit, said the most important part of the agreement was Egypt's consent to resume the autonomy negotiations. Sadat suspended the talks last month after Israel declared that Jerusalem, including the eastern sector captured from Jordan in 1967, its "eternal," undived capital. On Campus ASCENT OF MAN FILM POETRY READING Lower Than The Angels, part of the Jacob Bronnowski film series, "The Ascent of Man," will be shown at 7:30 tonight in 314 Wescott. The series will begin with Dec. 4, and a discussion of each film's subject will follow its screening. Michael Snetzer, an instructor in English at KU, will read his poetry at 7:30 tonight in the gallery of the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont Streets. Poems by Snetzer have been published in numerous magazines, and his reading will open the Arts Center's fall poetry series. TODAY A GRADUATE STUDY ABROAD meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room in the Kansas Union to present information about Fulbright The GERMAN CLUB will have a kauffestunde ("coffee hour") at 4:30 p.m. in the Murphy Hall Lounge. THE LAWRENCE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE will have a Faculty and Staff Mixer with the University of Kansas, Baker University and Haskell University. pm on Monday at Meadowbrook Apartments grounds, 15th and Windsor streets. TONIGHT The ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES Center, 1204 Oread St. , Chicago, Office Iesse Seminar on sexuality in the Center perspective at 7:00 p.m. in the Center THE SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at '39 in the International Room (102) at the University of Michigan. The ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will have an Introduction to Batch Computing seminar at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, January 26, 2015, at Services Facility. The seminar is free. and open to the public. No registration is required. TOMORROW TOMORROW SIGMA DELTA CHI will have a Journalism Mixer at 3:30 p.m. in Marvin Grove. The BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. on the Satellite University cafeteria. An OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will be at 7 p.m. in 500 Lindley Hall. SATURDAY A HOME RUN DERBY will be at 10 a.m. on the field east of the Robinson Center. Registration starts at 9:45. This is a contest involving the batting skills of a team consisting of one man and one woman. A RAQUETBALL AND PADDEL CHAMPIONSHIP will be at 10 a.m. at the Robinson tennis courts. Participants must enable play to. Contests will be in badminton, tennis, raquetball and table tennis. Tired of the Check Cashing Hassle? Want your money when you need it? Having an improptu party? Making an early morning bookstore purchase? Maybe you need fast cash for a last minute date. Whatever your reason for needing cash in a hurry, you can get it at Capitol Federal's Money*Matic terminal in the Student Union or at the one located in the Satellite Union. You can even use the system to cash a check. For your extra convenience, we have Money*Matic locations in the following Lawrence supermarkets. Dillon's Plaza 1740 Massachusetts Rusty's Hillcrest 901 Iowa Dillon's W. 6th 1312 W. 6th Street Rusty's Northside 608 N. 2nd Street Dillon's W. 27th St. 2108 W. 27th Street Rusty's Westridge 6th & Kasold Rusty's Food Center 23rd & Louisiana To earn 5½% interest on your easily accessible money and eliminate unnecessary check cashing hassle, come into any Capitol Federal office and open your Passcard account. It will only take a few minutes—you may save those the first time you use it! If you run short of cash on a weekend trip, you will probably be close to one of the Money* Matic locations in Manhattan, Emporia, Topeka or Salina. All six of our Johnson County offices and our new Wichita office have an automated teller machine, Passcard Center, that allows you to make deposits, cash withdrawals or cash a check, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.-7 days a week. The Capitol Federal Passcard—It adds interest, subtracts hassle, and equals the greatest $ convenience you have ever had. Sign up—Today!! Capitol Federal Savings 11th & VERMONT / IOWA & HARVARD Phone 843-5850 / 841-0700 Lawrence UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Rent it. Call us. 864-4358. Religious Activities at the University of Kansas Sponsored by: Kansas University Religious Advisors KU Bahai Club Baptist, American Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th (West of Oliver Hall Dirk Ott, Campus Minister -841-8001 Sunday Services at First Baptist Church, 14th and Kasold Regular Fellowship Meeting, Wednesday, 5:30 dinner at Center Baptist, Southern Campus Center, 1628 W. 19th - 841-8001 Youne Keefer, Campus Minister Dana Keifer, Campus Minister Rick Clock, Campus Minister and International Ministries Black Christian Fellowship Black Church Fellowship Black Christian Fellowship Friday, 7:00 p.m. - call center for place B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship (Iwish) Office: Kansas Union B-117-8643948 Elon Kortz, Counselor - 841-519-3798 Emily Hirsch, Assistant Faculty Advocate - 864-394-9187 Friday Sabbath Service - 7:30 p.m. at Community Center, 9178 Sabbath Service - 7:30 p.m. at Community Center, 9178 Campus Advance for Christ (Church of Christ) 801 Kentucky=841-5040 Dan Smith, Minister -842-1571 Sunday: Bible Study; 9:30 a.m.; Worship; 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study; 7:30 p.m. 801 Kentucky 841.5040 Campus Christian Fellowship Campus Christian House: 1110 illiamb - 842-6592 Alan Rosenkatz, Campus Minister and Counsellor - 842-6592 Bible Study and Fellowship - Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Friday Fellowship, 7:30 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ Office 189-7 Kentucky, PH D, Reno Desert, Bldg. 841-687 Dallas Reno Desert, Bldg. 841-687 Southern Reno Desert, Bldg. 841-328 Waimee Horn, Bldg. 841-328 Haworth, Twenty-9, Catholic, St. Lawrence Campus Center: 1631 Crescent Road -843-0537 Chapel: 1910 Stratford Road Pigeon Hollow Road Father Vince Kirache, Chaplin Chuck Blankenbicht, Associate Campus Minister Milton Argonautbricht, Social Worker Alice Geller, Public Relations Saturday Muses: st. John's Church - 515 p.m. (Confessions 4-5 and 7:30-8 p.m.) st. Lawrence Church - 145 p.m. Sunday Muses: st. John's Church - 7:00/9:00 10:30 a.m.; Noon; 5:00 p.m. st. Smith Hall - 9:00 10:30 a.m.; Noon Weekday Muses: st. Lawrence Center - 745 p.m. M.W.F. at Danforth Park - 11:30 a.m. T. Th: 12:30 p.m. M.W.F. at Danforth Chapel-11:30 a.m., T. Th; 12:30 p.m., M.W.F. Charismatic, Mustard Seed Fellowship Nick Willems, Advisor - 843-1185 or 864-1393 Sunday Services: 10:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. Christian Science Organization Pat Harris, President; 843-8525 Elanor Dixon, Advisor; 843-9433 David Dornhoff, Dornhoff Chapel Church of Christ, Southside 25th and Missouri-843-0770 I.P. Tyres, Minister-843-2433 Sunday: Bible Class 9:30 a.m.; Workshop 10:30 a.m.; Evening: 6:00 p.m. College-N-Careers Mid-Week Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:50 p.m. indian Hills Church of God, Louisiana at 29th Terrace=843-9565, 843-5400 Eckankar—a way of life Ecumenical Christian Ministries EcM.M For information on discussion classes, call 841-2763 or 841-1982 [VIEW] Center: 1024 Oread - 843-9393 Sponsored by Church of the Brethren, United Church of Christ, United Methodist Church, United Presbyterian Church USA, Phoenix Methodist Church, Jack Brimmer, Campus Pastor Sunday: Fellowship Supper and Discussion; 5:30 p.m.; Worship; 7:00 p.m. Sig Group----7:00 p.m., Wednesday, Thursday Contemplative Prayer—Wednesday, 7:45 a.m. Wednesday, University Forum—11:45 a.m. Student Lounge open daily Supporting Churcharian, First Presbyterian, 2415 West 23rd West Side Presbyterian, 1124 Kaisold Centennial United Methodist, 4th & Elm Central United Methodist, 1501 Massachusetts First Methodist, 464 Vermont Plymouth Congregational, 925 Vermont Star Church of the Brethren Episcopal Church (Canterbury House) 1116 Louisiana - 843-8202 Rev. Peter Caspian, Vicar and Chaplain Holy Eucharist: Sunday, 5:00 p.m. (at House); Thursday, Noon (at Dormitory Chapel) For education and house study Friends, Oread Meeting (Quaker) 1246 Oregon Lunch Wednesday Clark-843-8531 Meetings Sunday 10:00 am, 10:00 pm Join us for pot luck and afternoon refreshment Ichthus Bible Studv First Presbyterian Church, 2415 W. 23d-843-4171 Glenn Smith and Janet Schuenkehl, Leaders To the World of Faith InterVarsity Christian Fellowship Larry Tennady, Student Contact - 864-6498 Steve Garber, Staff - 842-8910 Large Group, Friday 7:00 p.m. in Kansas Union School District Thinking Christmas seminar, weekly Latter Day Saints Student Association Institute Larry A. Erickson, LDS Institute Advisor -841-0489 "T讲解 of the Joseph Smith Presbyter," Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Sundays; Priesthood, 10:00 a.m.; Sunday School, 11:00 a.m.; Sacrament Service, 11:50 a.m. on Cable Road and 12:45 a.m. at 426-5288 Haskell LDS Institute, 126 Indian Avenue, Suite 1824 "The Book of Mormon," Tuesday and Thursday, 7:30 p.m. 15th & Iowa----843-6662 University Lutheran Church Mark Hoehler, LCMS Campus Pater--842-4489 Don Conrad, ALEC-A1-CLA Campus Pater--842-4425 Sunday School Church, worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday Supper Group, 5:30 p.m. Open daily for meditation and studying Worship alone Godless Shepherd Luther, 2312 Harvard Road, 8:15 & 10:30 a.m. Immanuel Lutheran, 1708, Vermont, 10:15 p.m. Lawrence Mennonite Fellowship Meet in home Sundays at 10:36 a.m. on the sunday, Monday through Friday, Lousiana, Apt. 2-841-8614 (Also contact, Rodney and Robeya H凹-8423-8373) Maranatha Christian Center Muslim Student Association 1144 Rhode Island—841-9254 Bob Duvall, Director Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. at jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Friday, 7:00 p.m. at 1144 Rhode Island Navigators Bos 11, Kansas Union Ahmed Rabi, President—843-3788 Friday Jumah ah prayer, 1:30 p.m. at 1300 Ohio Quranic Studies, Friday, 7:00-10:00 p.m. at 1300 Ohio Dave Haynes, Staff Worker--841-1661 2510 Louisiana Nazarene Campus Ministries 1924 Masacreus or 1020 Kasold Riley Layon, Minister; 843-3540 843-7572 Sunday Bible Study; 9:45 a.m. Worship; 10:45 a.m. Wednesday Fellowship and Bible Study; 6:15 p.m. New Life Christian Fellowship 1) 5/10震撼, Apt. 6 2) 10/31震撼, Apt. 84-92/36 Sue Shorek, Adviser. B4-84/88 Steve Krause, Adviser. B4-Krause at Kansas University. Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints 1900 University Drive - 843-8427 W.A. Dods, Presides Elder W.J.A. Paddis, Presiding Elder Sponsor Sponsor - 842-1078 Sunday Church School, 9:30 a.m; Worship, 11:00 a.m. Midweek Fellowship Service, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. The Salt Block (United Pentecostal Church) 12th and Connecticut=842-3550 Karen White, President=841-2453 L.J. Lew, Minister Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in Parlors A & B, Kansas Union. Unitarian Fellowship 3 miles south of Lawrence—on Leary Road, west of Highway 59 Mary Miller, Chairperson —843-623-673 Meredith W. McIntosh Unification Church Center 1545 Rhode Island-842-6800 Jim Stephens, Director Open House, Monday through Friday. 6:00 p.m. Lawrence Zen Group Midland Duncan, Director 842-7010 842-7010 Meditation Daily, 6:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. @ 9:23 Tennessee PEACE Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Opinion Kuby protests were fun When students rights' activist Ron Kuby left the University of Kansas last month to go to law school at Cornell University, KU officials said goodbye to a hell-raiser and hello to sleeping easier at nights. To be sure, Kuby was a man for all causes at KU. Among other things, he was actively involved in movements to foil draft registration, to halt KU investments in South Africa, and to repeal a policy regulating banners at University events. And wherever there was a will, there was Kuby. In fact, it was Kuby who got the entire banner controversy started. At last year's commencement, he unfurled a banner and was then arrested by KU police. Kuby was not about to tolerate such a thing, but KU found out the hard way. Kuby sent engraved invitations for his trial for the charges stemming from Commencement. The entire episode threatened to turn the legal process into a circus. Several days after the invitations were mailed, the charges were dropped. Kuby's unorthodox actions infuriated some, convinced some and bemused some. Undoubtedly he was the symbol of protest at KU. And if someone was complaining about something, one just assumed Kuby was involved somehow or somewhere. Soon, the banner policy that led to Kuby's arrest will be examined by the Kansas Board of Regents. The policy likely will be made more specific. Kuby won't be around to see the results, but his efforts to change the policy appear to have been a success. This is not to say that Kuby didn't have help—many others protested against the banner policy too. And protests will continue to occur. The only thing is that they won't be as fun. Revamping KU Judiciary would correct stern image For years, the University of Kansas' Judicary system has been viewed as a close relative to the American court system. But the University has challenged the judge's ruling and is related than Charles Manson and Sandy Duncan. Those who organize and regulate the University Judiciary system seem to have accepted its role as a simple grievance procedure with no powers worth mentioning. If plans to simplify the Judiciary system are approved by the University Senate executive BILL MENEZES PETER WILLIAM BROWN committee, the entire Judiciary system, including grievance procedures such as Affirmative Action, the Parking and Traffic courts and appellate divisions, would be revamped. The proposed plans, descendants of a study presented to SenEx in January by Francis Heller, a KU professor of law, would attempt to alleviate problems of access and information that the University's internal conflict solvers have had in the past. The most significant changes, and the ones needed the most, would take place in the Judiciary's hearing and appellate divisions. If the plans were approved, these divisions would finally be treated as they should be: simple forums to resolve conflicts within the University community. Despite prevailing opinions, the courts have ruled that a law capable of fairly imposing and enforcing sanctions against parties they found to be at fault. However, those who used the hearing and appellate divisions, and some of those who ran them, had come to think of the divisions in those quasi-official terms, for some unknown reason. University, all powers of sanction rest with the chancellor and the Kansas Board of Regents. The Judiciary never had more than the power of declaratory relief, a kind of verbal spanking. But it compounded its semi-powerful image, and the problems that followed, by adhering to rigid procedures and an abundant use of legales in its written communications and its operations. Perhaps these will become things of the past if the new plan is passed. There is even a passage urging the operators of the revamped system to avoid "the formalism of the legal process" in its written statements. Clearly a step in the right direction. The plan has some gaping holes, however. The participants in the process, through its rules and procedures, have to deal with them. same due process rights as the participants in any state or federal court. Yet the Judiciary rules do not address the problems that have arisen concerning counsel for its participants. Each part of the judicial system, but in general, limited community the Judiciary serves, this alone has not been enough. Witness the hearing for Professor Carl Leban, who this spring brought charges in the Judiciary against former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. Leban charged that Dykes violated the civil conduct code of the community by cloning of associate professor Norman Forer's suspension last December. Dykes had the convenience of using the University General Counsel's office to present his defense, while Leban was given a choice of hiring a lawyer or being assigned a law student from Legal Aid to press the case. While KU law students are surely nice people, it's doubtful whether any of them would have the time and resources to present Leban's case nearly as well as General Counsel. But he chose to delegate general counsel Vickie Thomas, who handled the case for Dykes, had the added incentive of defending her boss. Quite an incentive, to be sure. Another feature of the Judiciary that would not be compromised on renovation is its fascination with secretaries. All records concerning Judiciary cases are kept secret, and by its own rules. The proceedings themselves may be held in secret or transmitted unanimous agreement to the contrary is reached. But because the Judiciary does not really have any power to abuse, the secrecy probably does not remain an issue. It becomes more a matter of protecting the privacy of individuals rather than a matter of keeping the eyes of the community from viewing the proceedings. One thing will not have changed, however, and probably never will. There remains no effective way to press a grievance, like Leban's against the chancellor within the university system. Declaratory relief from a judicial system that has no real power to do more than say in its own feeble way. "You were right and he was wrong," is not very satisfying. The remodeling of the other facets of the Judiciary, the Parking and Traffic courts, for example, will probably help simplify the procedures and make them more accessible to those who need them. As for the hearing and trial courts, it is perhaps safer they might as well replace the Judiciary's 89 members with someone's grandmother, because the function and results would be the same. the problem of not being able to press cases effectively against the chancellor still remains. Somehow it's difficult to imagine Acting Chancellor Del Shankel be cracked over the head with a thimble for violating someone's civil rights. THERE YA ARE MAC. ANYTHING ELSE? UM... YEAH... COULD YOU FIX THAT TO GO FOR ME PLEASE? Dining out difficult for handicapped When so-called normal people see hand-capped adults being fed in public, they usually get turned off. They may not realize it, but they seem to think that anyone who must be spoon-fed or served at a restaurant is not necessarily fitful for many people to accept that it is natural and normal for some people to be fed by others. Handicapped people, including me, have become so accustomed to this situation that we tend to forget that it is unusual to depend upon them. When we are alone, or until we are reminded by others watching us. Few people understand how complicated a meal can be for a handicapped person. I have come to realize that eating in my company may shock to friends who don't know what to expect. After some unanimous moments, they understood the order—under what seemed like laser beam On several occasions, a nice woman has offered to take me to a restaurant. Going out to dinner with a "normal" person is both an ego trip and makes for excellent conversation. But problems can make the event a mixture of frustration and pleasure. When my friend, whom I hadn't known long, came to me for dinner, she nearly broke her back trying to load me into the car and to put my collapsible wheelchair in the trunk. Then we drove to a small, out-of-the-restaurant that is conveniently be freeqre for older customers who didn't know either of us. But ordering food was almost the last straw. When the waiter served our water and brought us the menus, I had to ask for a straw with which to drink it. My speech is strained and nearly unintelligible to strangers, so I had to rely on my friend to decipher the message and to pass it alone to the waiter. My ordering row was all blue. I rushed for me. My companion came the moment for me, and I asked if I could study it. I did not order by preference alone! In making my choice, I also had to consider which foods she would be able to feed me most easily. This done. I tried to articulate my request to both the waiter and to my date. By now, they had teamed up to translate my message. observation from disrupted patrons sitting around us. My date and I now had time to nervously attempt to chat as our meal was being prepared. From the time we entered the restaurant, it FRED MARKHAM 100 seemed as though everyone's eyes were fixed on us. They appeared to be thinking, "I wonder whether they are married or whether she is just married," and "Why did they come to a public place?" The food finally arrived, but as soon as the plates had been placed down on the table, the next ordeal began. Now, my friend had to feed not only herself, but also another person. And she had to feed me in front of dozens of restaurant patrons. From the first bite, tension mounted. We wanted to converse. Yet that task can be embarrassing for someone with my handicap. Those of us with severe cases of cerebral palsy have problems swallowing and choke easily. Thus when we eat, most of our concentration must be on chewing and swallowing nearly. This leaves little opportunity for deep conversation. From my encounters at restaurants, I have learned to become more acquainted with a person before getting to the dining-out stage. Of course, there are no barriers to overcome when I dine out with women who also have cerebral palsy. meet us nappens, one of us will jerk occasionally and food will go flying all around us, but we manage. One time, a woman and I went to an Italian restaurant. She had cerebral palsy, but she could feed herself. We decided to order food because it was not so easy to be easily handled even by "normal" people. was a large one. They probably were just as amused as we were. Needless to say, our audience on this occasion Eating in public can and should be easier for the severely handicapped. First, the handicapped must develop a positive attitude and be more friendly to others. The entitled to be there just as much as anyone else. A different manner of eating does not mean that I must be hidden away at mealtime. In fact, it is not so much my problem as the problem of those around me. Handicapped people must take it upon themselves to abandon their feelings of not belonging. And an excellent way to escape them is to out and hide help so they become accustomed to setting handcapped people out in public. Most of the people who I have encountered in restaurants have been sympathetic and willing to understand. People are by nature good; they just need to be educated at times. Waiters are almost always kind people, and so are restaurant proprietors whose environments are sometimes left in disarray by handicapped people. But there are some people who still need to gain an understanding of the handicapped's problems at restaurants. And it is for the benefit of those people, as well as for me, that I will show you how to deal with them under any situation—even when the maire'd calls for help. "Guess who's coming to dinner?" Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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. WELL, LORD I THINK REAGAN IS AFRAID TO DEBATE ME ONE-ON-ONE. What about John Anderson? REAGAN KNOWS IM FAST. ARTICULATE, WITH TOTAL RECALL. Why don't you debate Anderson? REAGAN TREMbles AT MY ORATORICAL SUPERIORITY! Debate John Anderson! VEAH, YOU CREEP! THAT OTHER VOKE! WHO WAS THAT? Hubert Horatio Hornblower! The University Daily KANSAN (BSFPS 60-644) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and January. Second-class postpaid pay at Lawrence, Kansas or BSFPS 60-643. Send student subscriptions to $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS. Editor Carol Beler Business Manager Elaine Strahler Managing Editor Cydi Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campaign Editor Joel Lewen Associate Campus Editor Jeff Steven Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Dunday, Cindy Whitcome Sports Editor Gane Ayers Associates Sports Editor Patti Arnold Entertainment Editor Wakeup Editors Kevin Mills Wire Collector Ellen Iwamoto Bob Scholl, Jennifer Holler Wire Collector Lolo Winkman, Tom Tedesch Copy Chiefs Chuck Welden John Welden Ellen Iwamoto, Gail Eggers Staff Photographers Ben Biglen, Ken Combs, Scott Hooker, Dave Krau, Dow Terra Columnists Amy Hollowell, Ted Lickeit, Bill Menenez, Brett Coatz, Scott Faust, Fred Marhamn Susan Schoenmaker Glauce Kumpf Editorial Cartoonist Joe Jarvis Staff Artists John Jinks, Michael Wunch, Brett Bolton Staff Writers Chick Howland, Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Kevin Koster National Sales Manager Nancy Koster Campus Sales Manager Betty Light Classifier Manager Treacy Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wenderson Staff Artist Judy Salker Staff Photographer Brian Watkins Tear sheets Manager Jake Spoens Sales Representatives Rick Binkley, Anne Connette, Tier Fri, Bill Croom, Larry Leibengood, Paul O'Connor, Paula Schweinfurth Thaune Shetter, Anthony Tilson, Kaye Wisecup, Susan Birnbaum General Manager and News Advisor Benn Musser Kansas Advisor Chuck Chowins University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Page 5 From page 1 Bathroom THE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS is now raising money to build an addition to Summerfield, which would include additional bathrooms on the third floor. Tolleson said. Until an addition can be built, however, any third-floor construction would be wasteful, he said. A decision finally was made to change the room into a women's facility on a trial basis, he said. After the change was made, one male professor became upset and circulated a counter-petition. As quoted in Tolleson's memo, the petition said: "We recognize there exists a serious problem with respect to restroom facilities on the third floor of Summerfield Hall. However, we object to the arbitrary and ridiculous solution being imposed. It represents a non-solution, depriving about 80 percent of the benefit of 10 percent of the faculty. We suggest the administrative team to generate a more creative and realistic solution." THE SIGN ON THE third-floor bathroom still reads "Women." however. According to several workers on the third floor, the administration is toying with the idea of switching the bathroom from "men" to "women" mainly basis, but no final decision has been made. meanwhile, feelings on the third floor range from amusement to downright indignation. "This is a humorous issue, but at the same time, there are some men who are really offended," Baderschneider said. "They call it reverse discrimination. Actually, the women just used what they could to turn the situation around. We knew if we disfrenchured the men, we would get a second restroom quickly enough." One female secretary said the male faculty members had plenty of time to protest the change. "The funny thing is that when Tolefleon's memo came out, the men didn't say boo," she said. "Once the change was made, though, they got upset." NOT ALL OF THE MEN are up in arms, Didn't matter to him where to the bathroom "When I first came back from vacation, I thought it was a joke," he said. "Then after I saw the fourth memo or so, I realized someone was serious." To try to inject a little humor into the situation, Arthur L. Thomas, professor of business, added a memo of his own to the growing amount of correspondence on the bathroom controversy. Circulated last week, Thomas's memo pointed out that the newly altered bathroom read "Women," while the corresponding bathrooms on all the other floors were marked "Ladies." This discrepancy reflected "subtle sexism" on the school's part, the memo said. One paragraph of Thomas' mea reads: "In ordinary English usage, Ladies is a subset of Women. Thus The American College Dictionary's primary definition of 'lady' is 'a woman of good family or social position, or of good breeding, refinement, etc. (Correlative of gentlemen).' Moreover, the term usually implies chastity (that, the ironic tone of 'ladies of the evening') and temperance (thus, the humor in the policeperson's description of an apprehended miscreant as 'This drunken lady in the gutter here')." THE MEMO WENT ON to question whether female faculty and staff members could use the bathrooms labeled "Ladies" only if they "People on both sides of the fence have come up to me and said they were pleased with the memo," he said. If so, "those of our female colleagues who have eschewed outdated, hobbling stereotypes and who are not chaste, temperate, well bred or refined must either crowd into a single restroom qualified as such according to the dictionary definition. or else must repeatedly be made to feel that they are intruding where they do not belong," the men said. The goal of the memo was to add "a bit of perspective" to the situation, Thomas said. Until a final decision is made on the gender of the bathroom, the subject makes interesting conversation for staff members on the third floor, several of them said. "This is our effort to enlighten the other half," Badscherneider said. "We had fun with it, but at the same time, we proved a point." Professor From page 1 "But one should realize that it's not that easy to divide political and economic influence," he Sar said the strike also would have international repercussions. During the dispute, the most often discussed consequence was the possibility of Soviet intervention in Poland. Poland accumulated the debt in the 1970s,萨 said, after it borrowed money to modernize its infrastructure. Even before the strike, Poland had financial problems, Sar said, including a 17 percent cost of living increase over last year and a $20 billion national debt. TO COMPLICATE matters, the country's agriculture has been plagued by alternating NOW, HE SAID, one of the most important effects of the strike is the amount of financial aid Poland has been offered by Eastern and Western countries. "But fortunately, it didn't happen," he said. Maybe that problem existed only in journalists' To help tide the government over, West Germany offered Poland a $670 million loan, and Austria offered a $300 million loan this summer. In addition, Sarl said it was possible that the United States would offer a moratorium on Poland's debts. Poland's financial troubles were widely known even before the government officially announced them last week, Sar said. The figures could be found in imported publications like I'Express, the London Times and the U.S. News and World Report that were said in reading rooms, he said. ITS MODERATE POLITICAL climate makes bound unique among Eastern European countries. More than 80 percent of the industry in Poland is privately owned, he said, and the Catholic church is a major influence. About 90 percent of the Polish people are Catholic, he said. Sar said that to understand Polish socialism, it was necessary to understand the history of the country. New scholarship benefits Kansans A new scholarship program has been established this fall at the University of Kansas through a gift to the Kansas University Enrollment Association from Fred B. Anschutz of Denver. The scholarships are awarded according to academic achievement and financial need. Please visit your yearbook, yesterday, or next week. "Anschutz Scholarships are restricted to undergraduates who are Kansas residents." Laurie Mackey of the Endowment Association said yesterday. To apply for the scholarship, students must file a Kansas Family Financial Statement with the American College Testing institute in Iowa City, Iowa. "Financial need is determined by the Kansas ACT FFS," Rogers said." The scholarship requirement for KU students is 3.3 or above and 3.7 for high school students." Scholarship winners are selected by a financial aid committee appointed by the chancellor. Anschutz was born and raised in Russell, the son of a banker and farmland owner. He attended KU from 1922 to 1932. After college, he operated an oil and gas business and moved to Manhattan in 1946. Since 1986, he has devoted most of his time to the management of ranch properties. "Anschutz scholarships may provide up to 80 percent of the students' costs of attending the university." "The first Anschutz scholarships were awarded this fall to 83 students. They received a total of $127,300 and are expected to receive the same in the spring," she said. ROCK ROLL NATION Wed., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Wednesday-Ladies Night free beer 7-9:00 P.M. Thursday—Drink and Drown $4.50 guys $3.50 girls Friday—KLZR Quart Snort O G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa. Below J. Watson's (Ladies' Night 7:00 - 9:00 Wed.) Classified ads get results Enroll Now at the University of Oz! 50% cotton, 50% polyester yellow T-shirt printed in three colors plus a diploma signed by the old wizard himself UNIVERSITY OF OZ It's Easy to Graduate Just say 'there's no place like home'; click your heels three times and send $6.95 plus 50¢ postage To: BARE ESSENTIALS Rt. 3 Box 49 Savannah, Mo. 64485 Name ___ Address ___ City ___ State ___ Zip_ Adult sizes: Sm___ Md___ Lg___ Xlg___ Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery Enroll Now at the University of Oz! 50% cotton, 50% polyester yellow T-shirt printed in three colors plus a diploma signed by the old wizard himself UNIVERSITY OZ MEET THE CANDIDATES Also available `15' x 15' natural tote bag printed with the UO seal (plus diploma). $4.95 plus 50¢ postage. MEET THE CANDIDATES Saturday, September 6th 6:30 P.M. 4-H BUILDING DOUGLAS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS BUFFET SUPPER $3.00 DAN WATKINS, Candidate for Congress, Speaker Other Speakers All local Democrat candidates Everyone Welcome! DEMOCRAT COOKOUT Paid for by the Douglas County Democrat Committee Ethan Smith, treasurer (Located at 2449 Iowa, Holiday Plaza) --or Contact I.F.C. office, room 120, level 3, Kansas Union G&R 9IMPORTS 1545 N 3 Foreign Car Specialists Welcome Back KU Students For quality import car repair, talk to Pat, our certified mechanic about your foreign car needs. (ask about our weekly specials) 1¾ miles north of the Kansas River Bridge 843-8322 RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR Win, lose, or just plain exhausted... You'll find the perfect summer refreshment at TENNIS Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept Thnt's Long Overdue Southwest Plaza Shopping Center 123rd Ave NW 802-6499 23rd d 8.14th street 9:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a **tree** blow dry with haircut, now through September 25. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo **tree** with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs. 8-8 Fri. 8-5 Buckys Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon One coupon per customer Good Thru 9/7. Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 SUA Special Events SUA Special Events Informational Meeting CONCERT SLIDE SHOW pr Interested in our concerts and events? At this meeting, we will explain how SUA Special Events works and how you can get involved in concert production. Come talk with us, ask questions and see slides of last season's concerts produced by SUA Special Events. Thursday, Sept. 4, 4-6 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union SUA Special Events THE FRATERNITY FOR THE 80's Θ THETA CHI X 147 Chapters in the U.S. and Canada Theta Chi offers: Chapter involvement, Brotherhood, alumni support social interaction and the opportunity to develop your own fraternity programs. Informational-Interest Meetings: Sept. 9, 7:00 p.m. Sept. 10,2:00 p.m. Sept. 11, 7:00 p.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union For More Information, Call 864-3559 or 864-4861 0 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Committee proposes cutting Senate seats Bv DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter After a brief discussion, the Student Senate rights committee voted last night to recommend that the size of the Student Senate be reduced by half. The proposal, which will come before the Senate next Tuesday, would reduce the number of Senate seats from 120 to 60. The recommendation will be sent to the full Senate, which, in turn, will make a recommendation to the University which will make the final decision. The petition recommends that the Senate Code, which governs University Senate and Student Senate membership, change the rule of one representative for every senator. The agreement of Senate seats to the various schools shall be made on the basis of percentage of full-time enrollment." If the proposal is adopted, the Senate would be composed of the student body president and vice president, three special representatives to the University Council and representative senators. Other representatives, such as those from living groups, would be eliminated. THE NUMBER OF seats for each school would be determined according to the school's size. A tentative number of seats, figured by Student Senate elections committee co-chairman John Knightly and Octavio Viveros, shows the breakdown as follows: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences—Nunemaker; 24; School of Architecture; 1; School of Business; 2; School of Education; 4; School of Engineering; 4, School of Fine Arts; 3; School of Journalism; 1; School of Law; 1; School of Pharmacy; 1; School of Social Welfare; 1; School of Allied Health, 1; Graduate School, 12 and University Special Students, 2. The minimum number of seats each school could have also would be cut—from two to one. The proposed list was determined from spring enrollment figures in the office of admissions and records. Viveros said the committee would be reviewing past enrollments as well as fall enrollment figures, when they become official in October, to assess enrollment trends. THE NUMBER OF seats each school would receive could change every semester if enrollment in the schools shifted drastically. Viveros said. Elected and appointed representatives are expected to increase to 130 this year, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said. He told the committee he thought the Senate's size had increased beyond He said that past Senates had been having trouble getting quorums, and a reduced Senate size could help attendance. Davis said one of the advantages of reducing the number of senators was that the number of coalitions running for Senate seats each year would decrease, despite the increase in campaign campaigns. This would enable more students to run, he said. IN OTHER ACTION, the committee voted to recommend a bill to the Senate that would add to the University rules and regulations a clause stating "no legislation—bill not passed" be considered by the full Student Senate prior to the legislation's approval by a standing committee of the Student Senate." The bill "would state a little more forcefully that legislation would have to go through committee, be put on the agenda, mailed out to senators and only then be considered by the Senate," Davis said. navevbaill/Kansanstaff Memberships available While other KU employees use their lunch hour to rest their aching feet, Oscar Stoebener, a Facilities Operations employee, pitches horseshoes behind FIlth Hall. Wisconsin II Woodland The Clubhouse N 6th St. Phillips 66 Vita Mountaintown Thursday Thursday Initiation Night Get initiated into the clubhouse All the beer you can drink members- guys $3.00 gals $2.00 their guests guys $4.00 gals $3.00 虫 LH must be 21 years of age From $599 Roller Skate outdoor/indoor RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence, KS 65017 THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Are Paying 5% Until December 31, 1980 On all Lawrence Campus bookstore receipts (Main Store, Oread Bookshop and Satellite Shop) for periods No. 68 and 67. Receipts may be redeemed at the Customer Service Areas of both the Main Store and the Satellite Shop. Student I.D. is required. Period 66: All receipts from July 1, 1979 to December 31, 1979 Period 67: All receipts from January 1, 1980 to June 30, 1980 Main Store, Level 2, Kansas Union Oread Bookshop, Level 3, Kansas Union Satellite店, Level 2, Satellite Union AUTHOR AND PRESENTED BY THE BOOKSTORE HENRY'S RESTAURANT SINTH & MISSOURI 843-2139 DRIVE-IN CARRY-OUT Try one of our cool slush drinks to beat the heat. Henry's Slush A refreshing treat that comes in 5 tasty flavors Orange-Lemon-Lime- Cherry-Grape 40¢ - 50¢ - 60¢ sizes Trial date scheduled for anti-draft group By RAY FORMANEK Staff Reporter Staff Reporter A trial for three members of an anti-draft group charged with criminal trespassing at Lawrence High School to begin tomorrow in Municipal Court. The three, members of Kansans Against the Draft, were charged after they allegedly refused to leave school property after being told to do so by both the principal and a vice principal of the school. The incident at Lawrence High School involved a girl named Gabriela goldfish leaflets on school property. Teddy McCullough, Lawrence junior, said the group had received permission from Brad Tate, Lawrence High School principal, to distribute the leaflets on school property as long as they stayed in the building and did not disturb classes. She said Ron Kuby, 1979 KU graduate, had talked to Tate and had received permission to distribute content in information informational alternative ways to deal with the draft. Kuby, reached yesterday at Cornell University Law School in Ithaca, N.Y., said he had discussed the matter in late April with Tate in Tate's office. - Kuby said he agreed to keep the group out of the school building and not to block any entrances or exits to the school. "I told him there would be no intimidation," Kuby said. "We would only hand out leaflets and discuss the issue." Kuby said he was not at the school accident occurred, because he was at work. "It would be a violation of school board policy." he said. Tate said he had discussed with Kuby the group's intention to pass out antidraft leaflets on the public property around the school. Tate, however, denied giving Kuby materials to distribute leaflets on school grounds. "We discussed distributing literature in the street and on the public sidewalks, not on school property," he said. Tate said he was forced to call police Similar incidents have created controversy at the University of Kangas Imaginative Cards & Gifts The course is open to those born on or after July 1, 1967 and will meet from 7 to 10 p.m. Sept. 8 through Sept. 13 on the At Commencement May 19, 12 protesters were charged with criminal trespassing, disorderly conduct or both. The judge recommended advocating First Amendment rights. The charges were dropped last Friday by Lawrence City Prosecutor Colt Knutson after University officials allowed four members of the Academic Council to testify. A replica of the Commencement banner without taking any action against them. The Kansas State Fish and Game Commission will sponsor a hunting safety course next week at the Douglas County Judicial Law Enforcement Center, 111 E. 11th, Lawrence Police Sergeant Ron Dalquest said yesterday. footlights The three other defendants were taken the same offer, but turned it down. BILVER, GOLD & COIN Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boys' Coin & Antiques State sponsors hunting class McCullough said she was one of two people passing out leaflets who had been asked to leave school property at the front of the building. She said she felt that her students were others handing out leaflets, who were surrounded by high school students. SILVER, GOLD & COINS Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza (across from Greenbrier's office) Kerr Mommer, a former KU student who also was charged in the incident, accepted a deferred prosecution offer, which dropped all charges if she agreed to go on School District 497 property under a similar crime for six months. BUY OR SELL McCullough said she and three other members of the group received warrants in the mail eight days after the incident. Those charged are McCullough, Jerry Overland Park sophomore, and Doug Bradley, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, junior. McCullough said that as the antidraft group members began to leave, the Lawrence police arrived and began taking the names of the group members while students continued to heckle them. "Many people are invited to come on school grounds," Tate said. "If they interrupt the program they are asked to refuse to leave they are trespassing." "There was a group of about 30 students heckling and jeering a woman who was passing out leaflets," she said. "They were calling her a comrade and then even began to sing 'God Bless America.'" 5 foot television screen!!! 731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm when he told two members of the group to leave and they refused. The Legendary Graduates of the course, which will be taught by local hunters, will receive hunting safety certificates that allow them to hunt wildlife in North America, Daquselt said. 7 piece group. People born before July 1, 1957 are not required to have a hunting safety certificate to purchase a hunting license, he said. Happy Hour 5-7 Drinks $ \frac{1}{2} $ Price!! Jay McShann & his Tonito second floor of the Law Enforcement Center. Sandwiches & drinks available Try our great new sandwich bar and 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club 15 piece band plays for dancing and listening from 6-9 P.M. Sunday Friday and Saturday Premier of our Big Band Dance — Jazz Up at Paul Gray's Jazz Place K. U. SCIENCE FICTION FANTASY ASSOCIATION Thursday, Sept. 4, 7:30 p.m. International Room, Kansas Union ALL SAPIENT AUTOCHTHONS INVITED Place a want ad in the Kansan Call 864-4358 JACQUELINE WILLIAMS the Fitness Center Student Discounts Available - Individualized Programs - Professional Instruction - Quality Equipment - Sauna & Hot Tub - Diet & Nutritional Counseling 6th & Maine 841- 8540 University Daily Kansan, September 4. 1980 Page 7 KU museums part of Kansas Fair By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Representatives of the KU museums of Natural History, Entomology and Invertebrate Paleontology will descend on the State Fair in Hutchinson next week with snakes, insects and fossils. The museums will at different times occupy an exhibition booth sponsored by University Relations. The exhibits are part of an effort to interest people both in the subject displayed and in the University. The Museum of Natural History has run an exhibit at the Fair for two years. Joseph Collins, vertebrate zoologist at the Museum of Natural History, said the two live snakes in the museum always attracted attention. "Any human being crazy enough to stand behind a booth with a live snake is going to attract a crowd," Collins said. ONE OF THE people to notice that exhibit in 1978 was former Governor Robert Bennett, Collins said. "Someone in the booth saw him and asked, "Governor Bennett, to pet the bullshake?" Collins Bennett did pet the snake, he said. "The media went wild," Collins said. "I think this may have brought us to the attention of University Relations." Another Kansas law was not as friendly with the snakes. Collins said that former Kansas Attorney General Ben Carson next to the KU exhibits one year. "Curt took one look at what was in our booth and left and never came back," Collins said. Since the snakes will be touched and handled for hours every day, they must be well behaved, Collins said. "We generally select animals that are pretty tractable," he said. "I think they develop a sort of stunned complacency after the first two hours." COLLINS SAID he received a variety of questions about the smakes, from "Is that poisonous" to tell a boy snake from a girl snake?" In addition to the live snakes, the exhibit will show color slides of Kansas snakes. The booth also has a computer that provides information about KU. Collins said some people didn't even know where the University was. "I've had some incredible experiences," he said. "I've had people say, 'KU? Is that in Miahattan?'" The booth helps to interest people in the University, Collins said. The Natural History Museum exhibit will be at the Fair on Sept. 12 and 13. The exhibit prepared by the Museum of Entomology in Snow Hall might appeal to an interest in the creepy instead of the crawl. RICHARD SCHROCK, curatorial assistant at the museum, said a number of exhibits were being prepared for the Fair, including displays of tropical and Kansas butterflies, African and South American butterflies on a panel on the life cycle of the silk worm. One of the beetle displays contains an elephant beetle and a rhinoceros beetle, both horned beetles that are about the size of mice. "Actually, this is our most popular display," Schrock said. "Different people look at different things. The farmers look at the grasshoppers, and the kids look at the butterflies and moths." THE MUSEUM ALSO has an exhibit showing how insects camouflage themselves and an exhibit containing a sketch of a fossilized dragonfly that had a 27-inch wingspread. The Entomology Museum exhibit will be at the Fair this Saturday and Sunday. Free samples of characteristic Kansas fossils will be handed out at the exhibit by the Museum of Inquiry, Al Kamb, Al Kamb, assistant curator, said. The Invertebrate Paleontology display will be at the Fair Sept. 11. State tobacco chewers, get ready, aim, spit Kansas tobacco chewers, get out a chaw and get ready to pickup up—there'll be a tobacco spitting contest at this year's Kansas State Fair tomorrow through Sept. 14 in Hutchinson. The contest will have two events, an accuracy contest where chewers will aim at a target and a distance contest for the longest snort. The contest, at 10 a.m. Wednesday, is open to everyone. Arm wrestlers can compete in a tournament Wednesday. Competitors will wrestle at a scoring contest, and those competing in competitive arm wrestling and the contest will be directed by certified referees. Weigh-in for the five men's classes and two women's classes will be at noon Wednesday. Singer Anne Murray will perform at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the grandstand. Other grandstand show feature the Dirt Band on Saturday; trumpeter Al Hirt and his band, Sunday; Charley Pride, Sept. 10; singer Eddie Rabbit, Sept. 11; the Oak Mountain Darvedeels, Sept. 12; Dave Rowland and Sugar, Sept. 13; and Dave Rowland and Sugar, Sept. 14. Tickets for Anne Murray cost from $5 to $8, and tickets for the other shows range from $1 to $5. Advance tickets for the fair will be $2 for adults and $2.50 at the gate. Advance tickets may be bought at Dillons stores. Class ticket sales to return By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter Although the traditional preference given to upperclassmen in student football ticket sales was dropped this year as part of a promotional campaign, it will be reinstated next year because ticket sales are moved to the spring. Details have not been completed, but plans do call for a return to seating preference by seniority, Greg a student body president, said yesterday. "I have it in writing from the athletic department that it will happen again," Schaekke said. This year, after seniors bought tickets, sales were opened to all other students in hopes of increasing group sales. Schneack said he thought group sales had increased, but that students also had shown interest in going back to the old system. The switch to spring sales also will allow preference to be given by date of purchase, according to Nancy Welsh, athletic ticket manager. In the spring, Welsh said, tickets will go on sale at a specified date for all students. The athletic seating board, a student group working with the ticket office, will then assign seating during the summer. all seniors' tickets will be filled first, with priority given by date of purchase. This process will then be repeated for juniors and finally for sophomores. Remaining seats will be available at fall enrollment. When students return in the fall, they should be able to pick up their tickets at enrollment after paying their fees, Welsh said. Since students will be buying their tickets the year before, some refund provisions probably will be made for people who purchase tickets in the spring and then decide not to return in the fall. Welsh said. Schnacke said he hoped moving the sales to the spring would cut down on the long lines seen at the ticket office in the past. "Also, being able to pick up tickets at an event will make it a lot easier for an employee." Welsh said she thought the change would be helpful to the ticket office, too. "I think it will work out better for us," she said. "Spring sales would even out our workload." While details of the spring sales will be completed by the ticket office and seating board later in the semester, the campaign for this year's sale wraps up with a kickoff event also held with KU organized living groups to eat dinner and meet students. In another promotion, dollar-off coupons which lowered ticket prices to $18, were offered to students. From the mass sales at enrollment and at the university Friday, about 5,000 coupons were turned in of 6,000 tickets sold, Welsh said. These totals did not include sales at the University of Kansas Medical Center, the SUA office at the Kansas Union or the Satellite Union, she said. Tickets remain on sale at these places until the first home game and will be sold at McColum, Joseph R. Pearson and Gertrude Sellars Pearson residence nights tonight and tomorrow from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. Suds flow between washers and bar By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Reporter More than one kind of suds will be flowing on wash night for launderers, thanks to three Lawrence businessmen. NEXT TO THE BAR is the Laundromat, or the "Duds" part of the operation. It will contain 20 washers, 20 dryers, carpeting, and air conditioning Billed by the owners as "Lawrence's only beer joint and Laudromat," Suds and Duds, 2120 W. 25t St., opened in the Holiday Plaza last week. when it opens in about 10 days. To be safe, "Sid's" area, there will be no seating. Only the tavern side is open now, and except for the light blue walls with soap bubbles painted on them it resembles other 3.2 beer taverns, with jukebox, pinball machines, and electronic games. "Suds" will be open from 9 a.m. to midnight when the Laundromat is open. the bar and Laundromat are separated, you can sit in the lounge can watch their lair PETE MOORE, an investor in Suds and Duds, said he was certain the idea would work in a college town. He said One of the special features to be installed is an electronic light system. A light in the bar will connect to each washing machine and flash on when the door is opened, and the customer in the bar know when to put down his beer and change the load. he and his friends had been kicking around the idea for about three years before he finally decided, "What the hell—it's just do it!" Moore, a realist, and Pete Harnar, maintenance supervisor for Meadowbrook Apartments, are the investors, and Tom Bell is the manager. Moore and Bell have had experience running nightclubs. Moore ran Bullwinkle's, and Bell ran the Eagles Lodge and Gibraltar's. Moore said he had plans to expand the bubbly business to other college towns. Not only has the "Suds and Duds" logo been patented, Moore said, in the future, hard-core customers also will be to buy "Suds and Duds" soap. SVA FILMS Thursday, Sept. 4 Seven Samurai (The Magnificent Sever Shown uncut for the first time in the United States. Akira Kurosaki's colorful, colorful, ironic saga of seven warriors led by Toshifu Miiture is a great gift of the cinema. 1985 Best Foreign Award Winner (208 min). 8W.K:730. Friday, Sept. 5 Comes a Horseman (1078) in 1945 Wyoming, small farmers Jane Hawkins (1906-2007) and Jason Robards in this beautifully photographed Western, directed by Atan Gilliam, won the Best Feature Film "What's Her Opet." (119 min. Color). The Beatles at Shea Stadium (1964) Magical Mystery Tour Coming Home Jane Fonda and Jon Volewnt won Academy Awards for their portraits of a radically soldier's wife and a paragon of military discipline in the effects of the Vietnam War on those at home. Bruce Duncan and Robert Carpenter stuck to *Mick Auckum* ("127 min.) color. 3:30, 8:30. Roll up for the magical extravaganza with the Beatles. The first is the record of songs they wrote and saw live (see if you can guess what George is on) as they sing their early hits. Then climb aboard for "1 Am I the One" and you'll find others in this surreal adventure. (6552 mln.) Plus: "Braverman" Condensed Cream of Beats. Color. 1200 Mild. Saturday, Sept. 6 Comes a Horseman 3:30-9:30 Coming Home 7:00 The Beatles at Shea Stadium 12:00 Midnight. Magical Mystery Tour 12:00 Midnight. Sunday, Sept. 7 The Lacemaker A charming bittersweet story love about a strong-willed young woman who falls in love with her on vacation but finds herself unable to maintain the Huppert (Violente) is excellent as the young seamless. By Claude Goretta, (108 min). Franchisubtitle Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00. A class fee of $30 is required on campus, 4th unit, information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Studen SAVE UP TO 75% bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS CARPETS 29th & Iowa • Use Your "People Book". ATTENTION STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS The Office of Student Organizations and Activities is compiling a list of currently registered student groups at the University of Kansas. Organizations that have registered by Sept. 15, 1980 will be included in the fall "Student Organizations Brochure." For more information, contact Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 200 Strong Hall, 8644861 Office of Student Organizations and Activities. 220 Strong Hall, 864-4861. Delicate Soft and Discover the pure Gould feeling in a knit skirt and matching sweater. Colors of heather blue and cranberry give you an exciting choice. Holiday Plaza Clothes Encounter - in step with your style 843-5335 25th & Iowa The Kansas City Lyric Opera in The Elixir of Love The University of Kansas 1980-81 Concert Series Presents A Comic Opera in English V The Arts September 6,1980 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Box Office 864-3981 nsas ies LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THESIS BINDING XEROX COPYING THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS IT IS PERMANENT BINDING—DOES NOT FALL APART WITH USAGE Old World Quality Handwork Quality Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Proxyloxin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. 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All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Preliminary enrollment figures show slight increase from 1979 Preliminary enrollment figures at the University of Kansas released yesterday by the office of admissions and records show a slight increase in the number of students at the University this fall. Enrollment at the Lawrence campus increased 152 over 1979 totals. The College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., increased by 238. Total enrollment figures at the Lawrence campus are 22,200 students and 2,252 in Kansas City, Kan. Final enrollment figures will be finished after the 20th day of classes. Breakdown of enrollment by school shows a decrease in the Graduate School and the schools of Education, Fine Arts and Law. Although the total number of students increased, there were 17 fewer freshmen and 26 fewer sophomores. The number of special students exceeded by 31 and doctoral students by 64. Juniors and seniors increased by 41 and 50, respectively. The number of fifth-year students increased by 33 and masters students by 168. Lawrence campus Enrollment by School as of 8-25-86 1979 1980 Allied Health (OT) 291 299 Architecture 436 436 Arts and Sciences 9,735 9,876 Business 928 995 Education 1076 988 Engineering 1,750 1,909 Fine Arts 1,187 1,173 Graduate 3,751 3,710 Journalism 550 585 Law 537 522 Pharmacy 239 259 Social Welfare 398 399 University Specials 322 284 Dual School Enrollments -102 -121 21,088 21,314 To be processed 960 886 TOTALS 22,048 22,200 Two counts of rape and two counts of aggravated sodomy were filed yesterday against a 33-year-old Leavenworth man in connection with the rape of a 25-year-old Lawrence when Tuesday night, Lawrence police said. On the Record The man, Wille Dotson, Jr., was a former U.S. Navy officer and Anglesas County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bond. According to police, the woman had just walked across the Massachusetts Street bridge near Eim Street at 10:30 p.m. and was grabbed from behind by Dotson. She then was forced to the ground and raped more than once, a police stunner. Police said the victim was badly bruised. The woman persuaded the man to follow her to her house during the attack, but took him to another residence, police said. She knocked on the door and it was opened, run inside, locked the door and called the police, police said. Aided with the woman's description of the man, police arrested Dotson near a house on the corner. A 16-YEAR-OLD New Orleans youth was charged yesterday in Douglas County District Court with leaving the scene of an injury accident and failing to report an injury accident, Douglas County District Attorney Mike Malone said yesterday. A hearing date has not been set for the youth, Swanson B. Bennett, who was arrested last Saturday in Leavenworth County for a traffic violation and was found in the Leavenworth County Jail and is awaiting transport to Douglas County. Malone said both adults and juveniles older than 14 years old are tried as a According to Malone, the charges filed against Bennett are traffic violations, the 16-year-old will be tried as a traffic offender. The charges stem from an incident last Friday night in which two pedestrians, Carolyn Coleman, Lawrence sophomore, and Thomas George Pitner, Ames, Iowa, sophomore, were struck by a car. Coleman was listed in fair condition yesterday at the University of Kansas where he was listed in satisfactory, condition day at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Simpson campaign to focus on Dole By United Press International TOPEKA—The Democratic opponent of Sen. Robert Dole, said yesterday that he would continue to criticize the Republican incumbent for deserting his Kansas constituents for his interest in national politics. Speaking at a news conference, Democrat John Simpson said Dole had been side-tracked by presidential politics. Simpson's campaign from the beginning has focused on Dole and will continue to do so, he said. Simpson said Dole is avoiding talking about his Senate record. Instead, he said, Dole is concentrating on his role on a Senate panel investigating the GOP's ties to Libya and on his support for GOP presidential nominee Ronald Reagan. Simpson, a former Republican state senator, said Dole should explain why he gave up his position as ranking minority member of the Senate and maintained Committee and what he did when Rock Island Railroad was going bankrupt. In addition Simpson said Dole was setting his sights on other political jobs. ARMY ROTC PUTS YOU SQUARELY ON TARGET Put your career options on target. At no obligation. You'll be challenged on and off the firing line. For more info, contact CPT Gary Enos 864-3311 Army ROTC Learn what it takes to lead HP Professional Calculators. 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"Sporty things for sporty people" University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Page 9 Withdrawal proposal awaits approval By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter A new withdrawal schedule, which would have given many KU students an extra week to withdraw from classes, did not fall this fall, Gerhard Zuther, an ex-officio executive committee, said early this week. The proposed schedule, which divides the withdrawal period into five-week rather than four-week phases, was recommended by the University Council last spring. When the Council approved the plan, it would make the withdrawal schedules of all schools in the University simpler and more uniform, Zuther said. THE COUNCIL HAD approved the change in April, but the administration still has not. However, the new policy is added in the addendum to the fall Timetable. "This is an awkward situation. We published what we assumed to be the new and revised policy, then discovered that it hadn't been approved," Robert Hoffmann, acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said at *** ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 863-2031 Tonight At ICHABOD'S OLYMPIA BEER OLY BEER NIGHT Bottles 50* 1 3/4 Miles North Of The Kaw River Bridge Prizes: Schooners, Lights, Posters, Shirts, and a GRAND PRIZE yesterday's College Assembly meeting. If the administration does not approve the policy before the first withdrawal period ends—in less than four weeks—it will be too late to change it, Hoffmann said. For undergraduate and graduate students in the College, Hoffmann said, "The withdrawal schedule printer in the 1900 Timetable was the correct version. check weekday specials each week The Council asked Acting Cancellor Del Shankel to confirm the withdrawal policy 12 days ago, but, Hoffmann said, he did not expect a prompt reply. George Worth, SenEx chairman, said yesterday that students in all other schools also should follow the original schedule. "My understanding is that until the If the policy is not approved soon, it could mean a trip back to the drawing board for the University Council, an assembly member said. The Assembly's next meeting will be in early October, but in the meantime, Hoffmann said, it would send letters to him and ask for information on informing them of any schedule change. When the College Assembly, which is the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, learned of the schedule up-up yesterday, it voted on withdrawals on withdrawal policy changes until the University sent its official approval. policy is approved we go back to the old schedule," he said. ACCORDING TO THE original schedule, Sept. 19 would be the last day for students in the College to drop classes and delete them from their transcripts; Oct. 10 would be the last day for them to drop classes and automatically receive Ws-for that course. Students must prove that, students would have to petition to drop classes and would receive either Ws or Fs as final grades. Lawrence Coin Club Coin and Stamp Show Community Building Sept. 6, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sept. 7, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Dealers available to buy, sell & trade coins & stamps Admission free - Come enjoy yourself ATTENTION!!! KU CONCERT SERIES PATRONS If you wish to retain the same seat you have held in previous seasons, please pick up your season tickets prior to MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 Tickets not picked up, or reserved, by this date will be released for sale ... Season ticket patrons who do not pick up season tickets prior to TUES DAY, SEPTEMBER 2, may not be assured of their regular seats for the Kansas City Lyric Opera concert. Place an ad. Tell the world. 864-4358 NEEDS YOU! The Fine Arts are of SUA acts to supplement the 'arts activities' of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, percussion and dance performances, the arts areas literature, art, drama, music and dance. We want your new ideas and input for the 1980-81 film series. We are looking into expanding and improving many areas including, Popular series, Summer series, Midnight series, Classical series, Genre series, Director's series and Sunday series. Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of climbing, skiing and tubing at Sailing Club as well as many special outdoor events. sua outdoor recreation sua films Just like the big shows downtown, only better because we offer so much more for a lot less. Fine Arts sua outdoor SUA Special Events SUN TRAVEL SUI Travel offers a unique, fun and inexpensive way travel for KU students. You can choose from three locations, and Colorado trips, but the possibilities for other travel ideas are almost endless. We need creative minds and people power to pro-tect our national identity. Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas... We are best able to students for our exciting large concerts, but we also bring to Kluu of small alcove acts, jazz band and local bands. One of our special guests is a cellist who includes several groups and长达 as long as six hours SUA Union system tackles bad checks Special events involve a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Education, ushers, stage and light are areas that must be considered when you check out. Check us out and see what can do to help. Attention Informational meeting Sept. 4th, 4: 6 p.m. Woolduff Auditorium Slides will be shown. All welcome. A check is considered insufficient if it is returned a second time to the Union from the student's bank. The student is then notified by the Union and a $5 fee is added to the check for the inconvenience. The student is usually given seven to ten days to respond. iR By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter A new system has been installed by the Kansas Union Banking association which may help reduce the large number of students writing bad checks. New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities But if the student fails to respond after a second notice is sent, the check is sent to a credit bureau or to the district attorney, Ferrell said. indoor recreation Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon, Foos and Gaming and Guarrante Club, these are we and our club. The check verification system will enable the teller processing student checks to determine whether a student has written bad checks to the Union, Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Union, said. FORUMS The teller will also be able to tell how many checks the customer has written to the Union in the previous four days, he said. If the student has written a check on an account that is overdrawn, his name will be placed on a bad check list, which prohibits the student from writing more checks on campus. ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all part of SU Forums Kansas Law states that writing checks without sufficient funds is a criminal violation and subject to review by the county attorney. Under the old system, the bad nationally recognized people to the University for thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch on campus and in the local community who have been influenced by our work. We need innovative people like you to help us with According to Perguson, only a small percentage of students write bad checks. The fee increase is meant to stop them, he said. SUPA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the students and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUMA is encouraged pr public relations This coming year's activities include fall and summer orientation and the Madrigal Dinner. We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is Sept. 5. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! The bad check problem is four times as bad it was two years ago, Ferguson said. Although he would not give specific figures, Ferguson could be based on a two-year old figure on between $10,000 and $20,000. check list was updated frequently and students' names were removed after paying for bad checks if they were overdue, or reasons for having been overdrawn. Although there has been an increase in the check-cashing fee, there hasn't been a change in the $25 check-free fee. You can pay for a check from the KU Endowment Association, KU organizations or payroll checks. This fee will also help mitigate the thousands of dollars of bad checks the Union wrote off this summer, Ferguson said. Because of the bad check problem, the Union has raised the check writing charge to 20 cents. The charge per check had been 10 cents. RATHER THAN reduce check cashing services available for students at the Union and the Satellite Union, the Union Business Office decided to increase the service charge, he said. SUA FILMS A man who believed in war A man who believed in nothing A man a person who believed in both of them Jonnie Holmes Hal Ashby Jane Fonda Jen Night Brun Dern "Coming Home" Walt Disney - Robert C. Jones - Nancy Drew Florence Wagner - Bea Arthur HarperCollins Publishing R Universal Airlines in both of them The Affair **Jane Fonda** *Jan Weight Bounce Deen* "Coming Home" *Wallace Snyder* *Robert C. Tennant* *Waldruff House* *John Calvert* *Hamilton House* *James Holt* R **American Airlines** Presents A Weekend With Jane Fonda Friday-3:30, 9:30 and challenged by a woman. Saturday----7:00 $1.50 each The West was won by men and challenged by a woman. "Comes a Horseman" Justice for love and freedom. JAMES ANN IAN JUNDA JAFFE BARRIS SON OF ROBERTS WHERE THE WEST WAS WON BY MEN AND CHALLENGED BY A WOMAN. Friday----7:00 Friday and Saturday, Sept. 5-6 Friday—7:00 Saturday—3:30, 9:30 Woodruff Auditorium-No refreshments allowed ask ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS Needs qualified student delegates to work with ASK lobbying activities. - ASK contains delegates from the Kansas Regents Institutions. - Delegates discuss and priority educational issues pertaining to the wants and needs of the Kansas Higher Education student. GET INVOLVED Deadline: 5 p.m. Sept. 12th Contact Jeff Evans, Campus Director 105B Kansas Union Associated Students of Kansas Students working for students Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 Young in line to tackle takedown tally By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer By the midway mark of the college football campaign, KU will have crowned a new all-time leading tackler. This impressive feat of strength and agility, however, means little to the recipient. Instead, Scellars Young wants to be remembered as a team player—one of 21 other young men on a fledgling football team hopeful of erasing the past three losing seasons. IN A GAME WHERE heads and egos can inflate as easily as the ball itself. Young's approach, a one-for-all attitude, is refreshing, to say the least. "There's no way I can go out there and do things all by myself," Young said, "it takes everybody working together, Specialists, offense and defense put it together. That's the only way. "Nobody can win a game by themselves. You have to have everybody working together. You can never, ever say one person won a game." THOSE ARE PRETTY strong words for someone who, during the past three years, has single-handedly spearheaded the KU defense. Consider, for example, Young's freshman year, 1977. A part-time starter, the St. Louis native was the third leading tackler on the team with 91 takedowns, 89 of them solo shots. His big game, a 16-tackle effort (14 solo) against the Tigers, was in the game to preserve the Jayhawk victory. He was just rewarded by being named Sports Illustrated's defensive player-of-the-week. "That game and the one against UCLA would have to be the highlights so far," Young said. Against the Bruins in 77, Young also hauled in a key interception. Interceptions notwithstanding, Young's strength, and at 6-foot-5, 320 points there’s plenty of it, primarily in his bone-crushing tackles. Now fourth on KU's all-time tackling little. Young led the team in tackles last year with 94, the majority of leaders Leeroy Irvin's career-high 347 tackles. "I HAVEN'T THOUGH about it," Young said of Irvin's mark, "I'm just out there trying to do the best I can. That's what I'm aiming for—trying to do my best and help the team." "I don't like to bag or predict, so it's hard for me to judge myself. I rely on the coaches. They're the ones who develop the skills of the ballplayers." And as the statistics indicate, the coaches have done a good job with Young. "I do need to improve," he said matter of factly. "That's my goal, to get better as a player and help this team." For Young, playing football is a privilege, and one doesn't abuse a privilege. "I love the game of football," he said. "That's all I want to do. It's an opportunity for a unit to play together." WITH HIS EXPERIENCE, Young will be counted on to provide not only experience to the young team, but leadership. And while he probably would admit he isn't the take-charge type, Young's role of the silent leader will command respect. “When you're out there you have to play—keep your mind on everything that's going on on the field.” Young said. “That's one thing I've learned; you don't understand anybody." And for the past three seasons, no one has underestimated Scellars Young. NEAR Scellars Young Kicking game scores in special scrimmage The KU football team eased off its normal practices and concentrated on its kicking game yesterday, head coach Don Fambrough said. Top booters for KU are ophorebner pouter Bucky Scribler and freshman place-kicker Bruce Kallmeyer. Scribler and Kallmeyer will kick in their first game in a Jayhawk uniform when KU opens its season Sept. 13 against Oregon at Eugene, Fambrough said. "Both are doing pretty good," he said. "We cut practice down some today and concentrated on the kicking game." "We had very little contact but we'll be back at it tomorrow. We worked a lot on organization." Part of that organization will come from newly chosen captains Harry Sydney, fullback, and Frank Wattelte, safety. Sydney switched from the wishbone quarterback position to the fullback slot last year. ANGAS KANSAS Harry Sydney Frank Wattelet AL Eastern dogfight continues From Kansan wire services Baltimore is pursuing, but the New York Yankees still aren't giving ground in the American League East. Last night the Orioles, with Steve Stone's 22nd victory, defeated the Seattle Mariners 5-1. But the Yankees, with Bucky Dent's five RBIs, beat the Oakland A'8-3. The Yankees retained their 1/2-game advantage. Baltimore, which swept its three-game series with Seattle, used run-scorning singles from Eddie Murray in the fourth and Rich Dauer in the fifth. Both scored four hits and at one point retired 13 straight batters between the first and sixth innings. The victory was the 100th of his career. The Yankees scored five runs on a triple and a double by Dent, usually a light-hitting stoplight. Oscar Gamble and Jim Sepner added solo run. Gamble's hammer, a towering blast into the left field, Yves Kissard, was his sixth home run in his last 33 at-bats. Tommy John 19-, was the winner. The Boston Red Sox, the only other title contender in the AL East, had their nine-game winning streak snapped by California. The Angels, behind R Cardew's three RBs, won 9-2. The Red Sox had won 22 of their last 28 games and had crept within 6 1/2 games of the lead. Boston is now $7 \frac{1}{2}$ games back. SAVE on America's Favorite Jeans & Tops at KING of Jeans Jean Clearance Sale (Today Thru Sunday Only) some slightly irregular Women's Levi's reg. to $28 $15'97 Men's Western Shirts reg. to $20 $9'99 All Men's Short Sleeve Knits reg. to $23 $9'99 Levi's Recycled Jean's bells, st. legs, boot cuts $10'99 Dee Cee Painter's Pants $11'99 navy $13.99 Levi's Blue Denim Bells reg. $19 $13'99 Male ★ Brittania ★ Levi's Fashion Jeans up to 40% OFF Levi's Corduroy Bells & st. legs $13'97 some slightly irregular All Women's Tops New Fall Styles! up to 50% OFF Fight Inflation at Lawrence's Biggest & Most Complete Jean Store KING of Jeans Fight Inflation at Lawrence's Biggest & Most Complete Jean Store KING of Jeans LEVI'S 740 Massachusetts biggest SLIM LEVI'S COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-9788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PG Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7.20 & 9.20 R Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 2. Caddyshack 7-90 8-90 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 7. 9N矢0.9N 7:20 9:20 3. Raise the Titanic 7:15 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 7:30 & 9:40 PG 2. The Fiendish Plot of Dr 2. The Flendish Plot of Dr. Fumanchu 7:30 & 9:30 P6 Sunset Lake West 81 St. B43-9172 Urban Cowboy Grease starts at Dusk Coming Events Fri. & Sat. THE JANET JAMESON BAND Featuring the former lead singer of COLE TUCKEY Sunday Special 1 Night Return Engagement Reagae With THE BLUE RIDDIM BAND 20 Riverrock September 26 JOHN HARTFORD 19 LIMOUSINE 29 ULTRAVOX October 10 WESTWORLD 11 LYNCH & McBEE 3 & 4 SECRETS BAND 17&18 BLUE RIDDIM BAND the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Jawrence OperaHouse TOMMY'S Bowl For $1.00? Newly remodeled Hillcrest Bowl is under new ownership. To celebrate we're offering a super student special today through Sunday only! 2 Games for $1.00 with KU I.D. 9:00 p.m. to Close Eat at our restaurant which specializes in Italian food. We have 25c hamburgers too! Joma Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa In Hillcrest Shopping Ctr. 842-1234 John Crum-owner Bill & Alice Jeffress-mgrs. KU Leagues Forming Now --- University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 SR Page 1 SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts MICK'S BICYCLE SHOP 1339 Massachusetts PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND PEOPLE BOOK USE THEM OVERLAND PHOTO TONIGHT! KU Water Ski Club Fall 1980 Organizational Meeting 7:30 p.m. 1339 W. Campus Rd Gamma Phi House EVERYONE WELCOME! KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES une four tu six seven eight nine ten two three four five six seven eight nine ten $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 $2.50 AD DEADLINES Mindy Thursday 8 pm Tuesday Frida 8 pm Wednesday Mindy 8 pm Thursday Mindy 8 pm Friday Mindy 8 pm ERRORS FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Karsan 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 864.4756 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 Karanis Bank office at 841348 ANNOUNCEMENTS DIABETES SEMINAR Monday, Sept. 8-7 8:30 a.m. Memorial Hospital Home blood glucose monitoring as an aid in better control." A new drug is being tested and interested staff at the university. 9-8 Visit the Book End in In Quantrill's Flea Store and look at the book at its 5-8 price weeks 10-15. K.U. Water 818 Club 1988 Fall organizer 30-5-22, K.U. Water 818 Club 1988 9-25 Rwanda. Rwky. Rwency. Bemcone Tonight is the CLUB LOUSE SPECIAL HAPE! From 7-10 onm. nighballs only! Only Tet '57 at the right night at The Club Louise 68 Locust. "Partygrass" our business." --- 9-4 ENTERTAINMENT Looking for something on Sunday? TRY THE CLUB LOUISE 508 LOUise 842- Open from 2 a.m. to 11 a.m. Membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 FOR RENT 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now! I9 You'll like our cool, southern Parkway view. You'll like our southern Parkway Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing For rent facilities, for men, for next to campus. May work out part of rent if Call 844-1185. Welcomes K.U. Students & Facultv These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and two downtown Hanover Place offers 2 laundromats, baths, bathroom, garage with automatic opener, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455 a.m.-5 p.m. JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS ONE BEDROOM ONE BEDROOM WITH STUDY and TWO BEDROOM ARTS From $205.00 available JAYHAWK OFFERS: *A) Free Shuttle Bus to Campus B) 24 Hour Security C) 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt, 3. bathroom, and large efficiency apt, 4. comfortably. Reasonably priced. Call 643-8275. 5. Bedroom apt. Reasonably priced. Call 643-8275. 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplace 68. 843-7333 Will take students 2500 68. 843-7333 B) 24 Hour Security C) 24 Hour Emergency E) Insect & Bacterial Pest Control E) Laundry Facilities on Site *E) 10 Month Lease Available D) Indoor & Outdoor Pools for more information P) 10 Month Lease Available *G) Furnished or Unfurnished Models Available CALL 842-4444 E) Laundry Facilities on Site F) 10 Month Lease Available 524 Frontier Rd. #2 Newly remodeled rooms. Are alarm system, nightfall alarm. 8:32-8:58 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. For rent now at the area I building, 932 Mass. Upper floor office space. 1300 square feet Outer and inner waiting rooms. Reclines. In-wall sundecks. Has windows and is close to rear sinks. Has windows and is close to rear sinks. Can be toitermist, or medical doctor. Can be made to by movin' someone. Private room. Call 843-843-8470. For Rent Now, large studio, completely furnished. Has desk. Room for conference calls. $100 deposit, $25 monthly. Could be used for office. Call 843-2140 or 843-7747. FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to keep on hand, on bus route 814 - 68425 after a call from the police. Villa Carpi Apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. available. Central air, wall to carpet. quiet location. 2% blocks south of campus. 492-903 and 492-908 at 3:50 am / anytime on weekdays. Enjoy West Meadows Condo. A brand new design, with a spacious living fireplace, Central air,介透旅馆, swim comp., dishwashers, swimming pool, golf course, spa and more information call 841-4053. 9-9 New and contemporary 2-level duplex kitchen, living room, kitchen, dining room, living room, 2 full baths, garage, central air. No pets. For more information call 842-4455 a.m. 5-90. p. 9-30 Available now. large older four bedroom 128 McMasters, $390 mon. Call 843-654-9720 138 McMasters, $390 mon. Call 843-654-9720 For fall or spring, Naismith Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a large classroom; it, weekday maid service to clean your room and bath, full schedule for you. You're looking for home or if an apartment isn't what you want, visit the HALL, 1800 Naismith Drive, 843-8539, fax (843) 267-3750. Lovely furnished apt. for one graduate student. Balcony with two additional includes utilities. No pet. No smoking. 10% discount. 1 bdrm. apt. available immediately. Cal Clindy-842-4444. 9-5 3 bdm. berm. apt. $300 month. All util- age for 100 deposit. Call 843-644-894 ask for Julie. 3 bdm. alt. $350 month. All utilities paid. apt. deposit. 843, #244-844, 8-9 ais. Julie Room in house. Prefer upper/grassland privileges. Privileges Close to campus. Call 843-782-6988. 9-8 New excellent quality bedding -or-padded fabric for Furniture. 1200 New York St. 844- London Furniture. 1200 New York St. 844- FOR SALE 71. Toyota Corona, 28 m.p.m. Reverval valve 305, clutch, new tires, 4-aussel, 5288 5388 WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, *new* WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, *new* WHITE WATER, 704 Mass., *new* 1976 Corvette, PS, PB, AT, T-top, AT, 1976 1975 Corvette, sport. Hot in good condition. 841-2367-000 Alternator, starter and generator specialists AUTOCHARGE ELECTRIC 843-969-3500, 3500 AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC DOCTORS HOSPITALS GREENS. SIZES SMILE MEMBER. SHIRTS 91/35. PANKS 10/35. TO PACHI, BOX 4545. FT. LAUD. FL 33338. Gas stove $30. G.E.fr. $45. Twin Beds $20. 641-825-2432 at 6 p.m. **9-15** Used pine group furniture set. Rocker, love sand couch, cushion. Sell separate or together. Furniture set. Lowest prices in town on Houseplants. 440 Florida, 842-0039, 5-Mon-Sat, 9-8 1979 MUSTANG 4. spd. 4 cyl. A.CL. 27,000 mil w/ silver w/ 841-1999. 9-10 Laudromat? Kemorte Portarel clothes to be ready at 5.00; 842-1731 then 9-4 seeing 4 doors low mileage and Excellent business $290 or best offer. 841-619-6. 9-4 1974 Kawasaki KZ 400, good condition. 841- 4764. 9-8 1977 Datan gibbon 4 speed, excellent companion music. maintenance 844-893-7255 after 5 p.m. and maintenance 844-893-7255 after 10 p.m. BOKONON IMPORTS LTD. Sale 20% off all paraphernalia. 1 E, 8th B. $44/100. 9-5 Eiphone guitar FT 146, $150. shadow pick-up 4, mandolin 30, $834. 40-830. 0 apd. blk. Exc. cond, reasonable. 843-159 after 5.30 p.m. p Joe. 9-5 Fender Acoustic guitar. Excellent condition. Improved action for easy playing. Call Alynn at 842-1663. 9-8 35-Wat Shap Brushed aluminum, 6-point Shape Amp 849-010. In excellent shape 849-010. Pioneer X55-SS0 receive $125, Marantz 146 Speakers $50. Like new, 842-974. 843-8 9-8 Reel to Reel AKA1 400-DSS. Top of the line. Less than is the price when new. 864-3256 8-5 weekdays. Leave name and number. 9-8 Bookcares $30, custom orders taken on wooden commodities. M. J. Stough. 843-8929. 9-10 1977 Yamaha RD 400, like new condition, dependable, sporty, and economical, call 86-4-6933. Men's blue star supplying 10k white gold ring with 2 diamonds. Retail $265, asking $150. Call Caron 844-2320. 9-5 CONN ALto Saxophone for sale. Excellent Condition. Call 841-7274 after 5 p.m. 9-5 Papers come due? Have new electric type- power, return. $160. Also, electronic type-phone. 1971 Camaro—Beautiful throughout. Must see to appreciate. Serious inquiries only Call Andy at 853-908-30. 9-10 Blue Plymouth Fury III—air. Call Alden at 843-1772. (50c off with people book coupon) 2 bdm. bungalow, recent extension remodel, 84-935 mws. greenhouse, n.e.t. lot 83-935. Cal. Built. $399,000. 84-935 eyes, or Keith Stanley. 84-935 769. Mass. Real Estate. 84-931. Mass. 84-932 Greek paddles, jewelry, rings, ceramics, transfers, lettering, and novelty items. University Sports Shop 942 Mass. St. 9-4 Mamaran receiver Model 18, 40 watts; channel at nt 0.25 distortion, excellent condition, grips, 18-speed, Raleigh, pedometer/trip meter, good condition, Call 841-4675, 9-10 1964 Chevy 4-door, 327-V, 3 speed manual, snow tires included. Very good condition. =$500, call 841-4847. 9-10 Yard Sale - Antiques, nice clothing (Jr. 9-12) Wash and dry cleaners Plant Fr. 12-5, Sat. 9-15 at 706 illions 10.9 Sunrise Mall Mist. DR & LR Furniture; incl. 5 pc. Dc. Cabinet and Chair and Blinds CAT. cali- m. 841-672-603 941-814-672 FOUND A white puppy in the area of 13th and Tennessee. Please call and identify after 5:30 p.m. 842-8913. 9-4 Eyeglasses, watches, wallets, identify and claim in Student Senate office, B-105 Kansas Union. 9-4 HELP WANTED Opening for opening for talented singers. Must be affiliated: ASTA Singing Team 841-680-3525 9-5 Bucky's Drive-In is now taking applications for part-time employment. Apply in person between 10 and 5. 2120 W. 9th Wanted student that has had experience in lee cube machine and commercial refrigeration to work 2 or 3 hours per week for Commercial Refrigeration, 844-645, 9-5 Research Assistant/Associate (full time) to aid in the synthesis and evaluation of various requirements of bachelor's degree in chemistry, giving a to G.M. or Ph.D. with prior experience to give M.S. or Ph.D. with prior experience, depending on qualifications. Submit resume to Stella, Stella Pharm. Chem.室 KS 60418 University Chemistry KS 60418 Applications close September 5. Opportunity Affirmation - Employer. help evaluate various cephalosporin prodrugs in laboratory animals. Minimum required knowledge includes or biological sciences. Preference given to Bachelor's degree or biological science. Experience. Salary $25-$100,000 per month, depending on qualifications andperformance. Pharm. Chem. Dept., The University of New York at Purchase, September 5, 1989. An equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 9-5 Immediate positions open for part-time and full-time work. All staff members, who workers must work entire morning or af- ternoon, should be able to perform a digital physical work. Apply in person at the office of the HR department. blocks east of Mass. on 13th St. 80-62. Commission Saleman wanted to recruit new accounts. Marketing experience helpful, flexible hours. Need resume and referral. Must be a licensed agent, 25th and 184th-8201. Ask for John. THE CLEAN IS auditioning for the new wave. Call 841-2220. 9-9 Photographers Wanted: Experienced photo- tographer to assist with supplement quality staff. Reliable personal must mail mall name, phone number, and should qualifications to David Bernstein. Resumes to Photography@nationalphotographers.org. Needed Immediately--School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student in a disability. Live in Brooklyn, NY. Dana Wray 831-785-9421, 831-785-9431, 831-785-9411. G. P. Looy's West is now taking applications for a campus party representative. Involvement in campus organizations or ac- tivities will be desirable. Please apply in 9-52 Iowa. Matured house man wanted for sorority. Call 843-4472. 9-10 Assistant Project Director-Youth Coordination office provides coordinated alternative youth programs an part of local drug abuse prevention project. Secretary and director provide educational-based educational-informational programs Flexible work schedule Bachelor degree required Experience equal opportunity employment experience Required equal opportunity employm entations to Douglas County Drug Abuse Center, Rm 927 (842-8886). E-0-5 Study Opportunity—Local Manufacturing Executive and Single Parent needs over-qualified teachers to grade boy on occasional basis to allow build-in training required. Call Muston 841-7341. (Homes) 9-9 Light housework three to four hours week- ly. Must have transportation. 824-0507 - 968 The University of Kansas Audio-Reader will work as a part time hourly (hourly) community program manager. Organize volunteer activity, assist and identify eligible listeners and coordinate community events. Manage the Kansas Person will also serve as chairwoman for the University of Kansas Development Committee. College degree required. Background in public relations art industry. Req. Bachelor's degree or grant writing skills ability to interface with media. Hoursly training 10-16 hrs per week Application deadline 9-11-80. Position available with the Kansas Audio-Reader Network, 150 W. 11th, Lawrence. We are an equal opportunity employer. LOST Lost: A set of keys with a Brown and yellow key chain, with cats and mice on them. If found contact 864-6273. 9-5 Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Indicate blue background taken from m64-1370 at 1338 UHF (Nikon HM64-1371) or 94-126 no questions asked Lost: my passport 8-26 between University Terrace apt. and Lawrence High School before 8:30 a.m. maroon cover. b42-0128 - 9.8 MISCELLANEOUS EPISCOPALIANS. READ THIS! Our Services Begin This Week And Everyone Is Welcome. —Holy Eucharist Thurs 12 Noon On Campus At Danforth Chapel -Sunday Evening At 5:00 At Canterbury House 1116 Louisiana (just south of GSP/Corbin) --part-time custody to work from 5 to 9 p.m. Mon-Fri. Salary to start at $4/hr. Experience preferred, but not necessary. Please contact Watie Watts at 822-241-7. Expires 9-30-80 COUPON Good For Free Drink Any Sandwich Expires 9-30-80 The Crossing 618 West 12th 530 West 23rd Vello Sub PULIAMI'S MUSIC DOWNTOWN--LARGE LAWRENCE area. Open daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Lawrence area. Open daily 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. unit to 262, 864 and 835-8771. CLUB LOUSE. On Monday nights your membership card gets you $100 per week. The club card comes with a place, the CLUB LOUSE that "Parking is our busi- ness." NOTICE DINK AND DROWN every Monday night Hire McDonald's girls to help McDonald's you can choose PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 TENNIS PLAYERS. Has the hot summer season been hard on your string and grip) with the high-energy good strings and grips. Member Professional Stringers Assn. and K.-U. Vary Tennis Strings. YELLO SUB- now open 'till 2 a.m. Mon- Sat. Twelve kinds of hot, whole wheat sandwiches. Call in orders anytime. 841- 950- 737. People welcome. Next week. Yamaha on 23rd. N- 9-5 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. **ASTA** Singing Telegrams, 841-659-760. Is capping driving you hattys? Don't eat the burgers and take the kinks out of your copie- tion! Singing messages for all occ仪ions Deliv- er's awards and advances ABA singing Telegrams. 841-610-69 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC=abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth and Cesarean Surgery. Pubal Call: 914-263-3700 Call: 914-263-3800 440 W. 10th St., Overland Park, Kansas. tau Headquarters is a community of people who can take on any question or just want to talk, call or drop by. We can help with sexual concerns, relationships problems, other personal problems—almost anything you might need to talk about. Headquarters also might be able to someone with someone else who might be able to talk about anything anytime. We never close. Headquarters is funded by Student Senate. United Fund for Education. SUN TRAVEL Weekend Getaways Presents: The Renaissance Festival September 13 $10.00 $10.00 (includes transportation and admittance) SUA will transport you back to a time where wandering minstrels, jugglers, and sword fights are common. See for yourself that chivalry is not to dead. For more info., drop by the SUA office, or call 864-3477. Reservation deadline Sept. 6. LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights) Drinks are only $1.00 for ladies every Wednesday and $2.50 for girls every Club Lounge. 608 Locust, 849-9298 9-30 HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUISE. 7-day 1-10pm. enjoy $10 highlights (75 on Thursday, backpack ammunition and the atmosphere!) at the club. 8:49, "Partying is our business." 8:2f OPERATION FRIENDSHIP Welcome Inter- change 1629 W. 19th, September 8; 841-801. 9-5 1629 W. 19th, September 8; 841-801. Benn practice daily 6 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. 923 Tennessee. Public lecture by Zen master, Seung Sahn, Monday, Sept. 14, p. Jay Law, Tuesday, Sept. 15, p. Jay 6-8. For contact call 842-7010. SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB LOUSE. 3 for breaks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday. Let ASTA tuck you in tonight. We'll seread you to sleep any night of the week. ASTA Singles Telegrams 841-6169 9-5 PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available larger extern base company our part-time information Opportunity Wardrobe 916-425-3700 Opportunity Wardrobe 916-425-3700 Head Start Needs You to volunteer to work with children for the Ames Children's Center. Apply for a job on Wednesday, October 26, 2015 - 9-12 p.m. In keeping with her tradition of bringing announces TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the only $6 required only $5. Drink and drown at only $6. Club LOUSE. 808 Locust. 842-4293. Membership available. "Partner is our business." 9-30 Introduction in Northern Shirab Kung-Fu. Monkey, Preying Mani. 614-7450. 9-5 BIG BLUE IS COMING—Sept. 11th at the Satellite Union. 9-5 Female roommate needd to shore ap, att to be able to reach her phone. please please bill. if interested, call 841-523-6170 TIGF AT LOUSES' BAR with $12 jersey money, 65c schooners and 50c draw. Every KU student can attend. KU Schoeners Tectonics and Fashion Association. First meeting Thursday, Sept 4, 7-30 p.m. International Room, Kansas Union. KU's Student Body will host a day of the World Space Federation I-9-4. Susan! The Indian Earth Cosmetics Repre- sentative from 1 to 4pm come learn from us to the Indian Earth Commuting? From Kansas City to Law- ton Dobbie (816) 942-6050 (evenings) Debbie (816) 942-6050 (evenings) It's the Commodore's CRAZY QUART NIGHT at THE HARBOUR LITES sold to Bainbridge Island, p.m. Hi! the deck with the crazes at 9-4 Hi! the deck with the crazes at 9-4 1031 Massachusetts. 8-4 SUA Indoor Recreation BEGINNERS NIGHT. September 11; 6-9 p.m. Satellite Union. Backgammon, Bridge, Chess, Scrabble and learn to play or teach 9-11 to play. Pleasant Aquarium invited to meet with attractive Libra male call 864-2647. Instant color passport photos. Immigration. color & B/W. Tom 841-7298 9-16 SERVICES OFFERED THE BIKE GARAGE—specializing in "Tunz-Ups" and "Total Overhaul." All work fully guaranteed. 841-2781. tf Have you had trouble losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are unmotivated in areas such as school or work. Call: 843-1959 for more information. 9-546-7250. Quality repair work performed on most PVF systems requires a FCC licensed technician–portable TVP, licensed technician–portable PVF, licensed electronics, also most types of studio cameras and other equipment. Estimates given. Call 843-1572 at 5:49 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 28. Einstein's tutors. It worked for Albert. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call Dave, 841-7683. English grammar, composition, research, typing. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2 1/2¢ EACI HOUSE OF USHE Job resumes prepared by a personnel professional. Get an early start on the fall campus interviews. 841-5664. 9-12 TYPING Have you had trouble loosing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are uninvolved in a school or school activity. Call 843-1995 for more information: 5-956-2700. Experienced K.U. typist. IBM Correcting Soilicetic. Quality work. Feedbacks available. Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-9818. ff Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc., Betty, 842-6807 after 5 and weekends, iff Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics editing, self-correct Selective Call Ellen or Jeannam. 841-2172. 12-8 Experienced ttypier—tterm papers, thesis, mice, electric IBM Selectric. Proreadings, spelling corrected 843-9554. Mrs. Wright, if Typist edit, IBM Pica Eite, Quality welcome; editing edify Call, John 842; welcome; editing edify Call, John 842; I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt Experienced typist-thesis, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selective; Barb, after 5 p.m. 843-210. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- liable, accurate. IBM price/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrn, 481-4980. If Lowest rates. Experienced typist does clean, quality work 749-2036. Danette. 9-5 WANTED Exp. typist would like to do term paper, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-543-6100. DRUMMER looking for Rock or Funk Band to play with. Call Ken at 749-0852. 98- GOLD - SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings, Wedding Bands, Wedding Coin, Sterling etc. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 452-2688. Buying gold, Paying $50-$100 for men's class rings, less for ladies. R&D Coin Shop. 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza. #82-9628. 9-30 2 female roommates in nice large house. Located on Oread Hill $110 a month + 6/ of utilities. Call 841-840, evenings. Dana. 9-4 Female roommate to share nice 2 bdmr. apt. own room 120/month + ½; utilities 749-1895. Female roommate to reserve 2 bdms, unfur- fured roommate, at month +1/2 (3.73 gas and pacing center), at month +2 (4.75 gas and pacing center) Professional couple w/4 children seek non-smoking home truck trips with the infant and 2-yr-old to our home 3 or 4 months a week or T & Th after. Please contact B&B at 867-3114 for interview appt. WANTED: Experienced working rock band reforming. New auditioning bass vocal and lead guitar vocal. Call: 841-1676, 841-2999, or 749-1349. Roammate needed to share spacious 3-bdmir apote. (Olive English Malls) with balcony, bedroom, service area and other comforts. Surprisingly reasonable rent: 9-5 842-7380 for more info. Housename wanted at 508 Indiana. $50 + utilities. Grad student preferred. Call: 912-345- 6789. Roommates wanted. Seeking several Christian men interested in pooling resources and renting large house/apt. Call Steve 814-5223. 9-4 Neat, clean person to share new 2-bdr. apt, at hesterwood Valley Apts. 22nd and 23rd floors, includes cable pool, dishwashers and more. I-8 = 10-8 yards. Call 843-6984 evening. Gain valuable experience while being a Gain classroom volunteer to work with 3 and 4th graders. Learn about time and or time and love to share; call Boby school; 824-6159, comedy by 607 Main Street Roommate for 2 bdr. apt, Jayhawk West. $120 + Roomtime Call Breq 749-8536-96 www.breq.com Female roommate to share 3 bdmr. apt. Close to campus $95 + 1/3 utilities. 749- 2500. 9-5 Female Room wanted to share specious apartment. Tolerant of cigarette smoke, own room. $83 plus 1/2 utilities. On KU bus route. 9-5 841 - 2679. Roommate to share 3 bdmr, townhouse at balanced realty. Roommate to share 4 bdmr, balanced realty. #81-0281 after b-9 Person to share new 2 bdrm. apt. 5-mi. studio and nest. Call Mary 648-4693 studios and nest. Call Mary 648-4693 A nice house to share. You get 1 room. $135/month. Christians preferred. Please call (212) 689-4720. 1 or 2 people to share house. 1/1 blocks or 1/2 people to share house. 1/16 bargable. literals. 1 John 78-2219. 1/9-8 Male roommate for Jayhawker Towers. $110 mn. For this semester only. 749-213-234. Female roommate share desk 2 s/bm. house. Roommate occupancy rate: 1 t p.m. 841-3600 after 1 p.m. 9-10 Female roommate to resume nice 2 bdm. apt. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1650 sq ft. for 1 bdm. Call SarA at 784-9046. Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 4, 1980 。 Sports Brewers tap Rovals in 10th; Brett now at .402 By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo.-A red-letter day it wasn't for the Kansas City Royals. Not only did they lose 3-1 to the Milwaukee Brewers last night, but they failed to reach the 2 million mark in attendance by 5,000. Dennis Leonard pitched into the 10th inning and got the loss, his ninth against 16 victories, and Dan Quisenberry appeared and received nothing for warming up his now-valid right arm. Pitchers Leonard and Lary Sorson of Milwaukee were the show until the 10th. Leonard pitched seven scoreless innings before giving up a home run to Gorman Thomas. That tied the score at 1-1, George Brett's 18th homer of the year in the sixth inning the only other score. Both pitchers were still around the 10th, but Leonard wasn't to last long. With the score still tied, Leonard walked Robin Yount on four pitches. Cecl. Cooper, a 360 hitter, husted. The big first baseman showed some bat skill and dropped a perfect bunt, which Darrrell Porter fielded and aimed at the first base this time, however, and the ball sailed into the right field corner. Yount scored from first and Cooper cruised easily into second. Porter didn't offer any excuses for his error. "I threw it away," Porter said. "Didn't everyone see it?" The Brewers added another run when the Royals walked Ben Oglivie intentionally, and Don Money doubled in Cooper from second. That performance led the Royals went down in order in the bottom of the 10th. Sorenson said the victory was an easy one for him. So easy that he lost track of innings and was surprised to learn that he had pitched 10 innings. "I didn't know the game went 10," he said. "I thought I was pitching in the bottom of the ninth." I thought, 'Good, we scored. I don't have to go back out again.' "Now I'm more tired than I was. I guess I have to have a couple more beers." Brett, the day after his celebrated visit with President Carter in Independence, Mo., was one of the few bright spots in the losing night for the 1962 Cincinnati two straight and Three of the last four games. Brett was 1-for-2 with his horner, an intentional walk and a semi-intentional pass after Willie Wilson singled and stole second in the eighth. Wilson laid in reading batting average went up one point to .402. Brewer manager George Bamberger continued his praises of Brett. "He hit a 24 fastball, but he can hit anything," Bammerberger said of Brett's home run. "Willie Aikens had the same pitch, but he didn't get under it." "Brett didn't miss much of that pitch," Sorenson said. "I would rather give up a higher than a walk, a bunt and a single. He's hot, he hits it in the stands. He's not and its a single. Aikens lined out to second baseman Gantner in the sixth. Until Brett's heater in the steth, the only action in the game was the crowd baiting the umpires. A drive by Yount down the third base in the fifth just missed the third base umpire. As he scrambled out of the way, he began to signal the ball foul, but was overruled by the home plate umpire. Jim Frey, Roy's manager, came from the dugout and the traditional argument ensued with the traditional results. Later, in the bottom of the fifth, a bunt by John Wathan entered fair territory and was fielded by three base coach Gordy MacKenzie. The ball was taken from him and call and continued to do so on every ball hit. The Royals magic number dorped to 11 as the Texas Rangers lost to Toronto. The Royals magic number dropped to 11 as the Texas Hangers lost to Toronto. Texas Rangers lost to Toronto. would mathematically clinch the title for the Rangers. The Royals go against the Brewers again at 7:35 tonight. The starting pitchers will be the Royals' Cy Young award hopeful Larry Gurale, 18, and Chris Fowler, 20, who will meet between the two teams. The Royals now lead the season series 6-5. Five of those victories have been in Milwaukee. Scorecard Sports Calendar 5 6 5 p.m. - Baseball team bagshot team, press box area, second floor of Allen 7:35 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Houston Royal Stadium (KKMZ-B, KKKM-F) 8:35 p.m. — Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians, (Ch. 4, KMB2-AM, KKKX-FM) 1 p.m.- KU-Rugby Club v. Boca Raton County, FRC 23rd 8:30 p.m. Kansas City Royalty at Cleveland indians, FRC 11th Sports Quiz Q Major-league Baseball Yesterday's answer— Today's question — Who was KU's first track and field All-American? Former KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell played for the Los Angeles Rams in the 1980 Super Bowl. Larry Brown, former Jayhawk and, sulted up for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Receiver Ron Jessie, also of the Rams, was injured and did not play. AMERICAN LEAGUE FAST W 81 L Pt. Pct. GB New York .81 51 414 .51 - Baltimore .79 72 860 .53% Detroit .72 72 860 .53% Detroit .67 67 830 .71% Milwaukee .71 64 830 .71% Cleveland .69 63 823 .12% Cleveland .69 63 823 .12% | | W | L | Pct | GB | TB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 85 | 45 | .69 | .639 | - | | Atlanta | 85 | 45 | .69 | .639 | - | | Oakland | 65 | 59 | .485 | .430 | 20½ | | Minnesota | 65 | 77 | .485 | .430 | 20½ | | Chicago | 65 | 77 | .485 | .430 | 20½ | | Indiana | 54 | 79 | .367 | .367 | 32¹ | | Seattle | 54 | 79 | .367 | .367 | 32¹ | A Yesterday's Games California 7. Boston 7. Seattle 5. Detroit 4. Detroit 6. Chicago 4. Cleveland 7. Minneapolis 1, 7 inae, rain Toronto 1. Raleigh 8. Nashville 1. Toronto 1, 10 inae NATIONAL LEAGUE Today's Games Today's Games Seattle (Abbott 9-10) at Boston (Eckersley 9-11) EAST W 1 L 0 Pct. GB - Philadelphia . . . . . 6:30 p.m. Kansas City (Keough 13-12) at Baltimore Flannagan 13:10 p.m. Chicago (Hoyt 8-1) or Trout 10:20 at Toronto California (Tamara 7-9) at New York (Perry 8:10) p.m. Milwaukee (Travers 12-6) at Kansas City (Gura WEST W W 7 L 57 Pct GB - Los Angeles 76 75 47 .571 - Houston 73 58 644 1 - Cincinnati 73 68 654 1 1 Miami 68 65 641 8 San Francisco 66 67 498 10 San Diego 65 78 418 20 Yesterday's Games Atlanta 4, Chicago 3 Miami 4, Philadelphia 10 Chicago 4, Cleveland 19,lm San Diego 4, Mentrea 3 Philadelphia 4, San Francisco 3 Philadelphia 4, San Francisco 3 Today's Games p.m. Philadelphia (Espinosa 3-5) at Los Angeles (Reussas 16-4), 9:30 p.m. Today's Games Montreal (Gullickon 6-4) at San Francisco (Hargesheimer 4-3), 6:0 p.m. Hampton Beach (Fox 5-7) at San Diego (Curtis 6-8). postgame at New York (Scott 0-4) at San Diego (Curtis 6-8), 9-1. Basketball recruit flunks collegiate eligibility test Sports Writer KU should have a record enrollment in 1980, but it won't be thanks to the basketball team. Three prospective players have left the ranks in the last few semesters. First, sophomore center Mark Snow transferred after last spring semester. Then, in August,凯文 Keith Douglas announced that he had been turned up at Barton County Community College Douglas and Snow were names known to most Douglas and Snow. Their losses will be familiarly only due to more information. BRIAN MARTIN, a 6-foot-9 center from Wichita Northwest High School and late signee with KU in the last recruiting season will not attend KU because of academic challenges. He will graduate high school with a 2.0 grade point average. He was enrolled at Hutchinson Community College. To qualify for a major college, Martin will have to pass 24 credit hours with a 2.5 grade point average. If he accomplishes this, the decision is made and he can graduate. He must attend a qualifying考试 to attend KU, his letter of intent is no longer valid and thus, he is open game for any major college. Whether that college will be KU is up in the air once again. "He will have to decide on that later!" Ted Owens, KU basketball coach, said. "We have no idea of what he'll do." WITH THE ADDITION of junior college All-America Victor Mitchell, a brusher of a center, and one-year additional experience for Art teacher Jennifer Pappas, it doesn't seem to be an immediate need for Martin. However, Owens said that Martin would have been a useful tool on this season's team. "He figuried in our plans or we wouldn't have recruited him in the first place," Owens said. Actually, it was Arkansas, not KU, that recruited Martin in the first place. Martin had nearly been ruled out as a prospective signee early in the recruiting year because he had shown great interest in Arkansas and little interest in Kentucky. It became when Arkansas chose not to offer Martin a scholarship. Suddenly, he was available again and KU was his second choice. And now, he is at Hutchinson, a long way from Arkansas. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" From RCA & Associated Labels Polyrock RCA Mfg. List $7.98 Kief's $4.59 VIPES!! A BIT IRRATIONAL Mfg. List $7.98 Kief's $4.59 DYNASTY Adventures in the Land of Music Mfg. List $7.98 Kief's $4.59 DAVE DAVIES D AFL13603 RCA Mfg. List $7.96 Kief's $4.59 MY HOME'S IN ALABAMA псл Mfg. List $7.98 Kief's $4.59 DARYL HALL JOHN OATES VOICES RCA Mfg. List $9.98 Kief's $5.49 RCA B RECORD SET Elvis Aaron Presley 1915 1980 ANNIVERSARY UNITED EDITION Record Set fg. List $69.95 Kief's $49.95 THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. ORD BETTER DAYS S KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas University of Kansas Friday, September 5, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 10 Richard Wohlgemuth, Topeka senior, meditates in the sunlight shining through a south window at the new addition to Robinson Gym before a class yesterday. Wohlgemuth is a physical education major. Student loan bill fails twice in Senate A bill that would have created a new government-backed education-loan program for parents and would have raised loan limits and the cost of loans to be paid by two votes twice last night in the U.S. Senate. The bill, a Higher Education Re-Authorization proposal, would have re-authorized most major higher-education programs through the 1985-86 academic year. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., voted against the bill. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., voted in favor. "The Senate had passed its own version of the Higher Education bill and I voted for it." Kassebaum said last night from her office in Washington, D.C. "It was sent to the House of Representatives and they cut out the savings we had worked into the bill. They polluted the cost with irresponsible proposals," she said. KASSEBALUM SAID THE HOUSE version of the book is on sale for $49.95. An extra an extra 18 billion during the life of the bill. "the bill we passed set limits on the spending, the money, a generous bill," she said. "I voted against it, I voted against it." feel we have to draw the line on excess spending." Because Kassebaum is a member of the budget committee, she should not vote for the nomination. "I'm a strong supporter of higher education and I want very much to see legislation passed in support of it, but this sort of spending was just irresponsible," she said. "There were some excesses built into this bill that we would have had a hard time living with in the future." She said it would be up to the House to send it back to committee for re-working and further development. Draft sign-up gains 93% compliance By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Despite protests at post offices nationwide and court action that claimed it was unconstitutional, a Selective Service System official said the system had been run when which started in late July, had gone quite smoothly. According to Clarence Boston, records manager for the Selective Service in Washington, C.I.A. percent of the men born in Ohio who were requested by law to register for the draft did so on time. Since the end of two-week period, an additional 6 percent have registered, which brings the number of registered men in the city to 1,983. The number registered to 93 percent as of Aug. 22, Boston said. "Compared to 1973, the registration has gone really well," Boston said. "In '73 only 77 percent of the men registered on time." IN LAWRENCE, 833 men registered for the draft last month. "The men can register at any of over 34,500 post offices across the country and are not restricted by hometown or birthplace." Boston has a database to draw any type of regional or local comparisons. Based on census figures taken in 1970, the number of men in the 20 and 21-year-old bracket was figured by Selective Service officials to be 3,880,000. The agency subtracted the average number of deaths, institutionalized people and men already on active duty since 1970. "Actually, we were surprised; many people noted how few people were ever at any one post office at one time registering." Boston said. "It was really spread out." In recent campaign stops in Lawrence, both Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and John Simpson, the Democratic opponent in the race for Dole's Senate seat, spoke against draft registration. Simpson opposed it because he said it would not enhance military defense. He said the money spent on registration could be better spent on pay increases for current armed forces personnel. DOLE BLASTED the registration, enacted by that "doesn't really mean anything." THAT DOLE BLASTED the registration, enacted by that "doesn't really mean anything." "It was designed somehow to show the Soviet union we mean business, but it is just a weak symbol," Dole said. Dole said the registration did not overcome any of the criticism of the volunteer army. He said it did not train men, increase the number of troops in the armed forces, or help in any way. "The only thing draft registration does is create, in my opinion, a false sense of security with respect to our national preparedness," Dole said. Dole also said the registration was ignored by many young men, but he did not advocate punishment or prosecution. "It would cost too much to trace them down and bring them to court. They are still taking late registrations. I do not encourage anyone to break a law of the country. I think there were problems in communication, and confusion after the court problems," Dole said. "Men not registering can be prosecuted," Boston emphasized. "Penalty for failure to register is five years in jail, or 10 in a penitentiary." Boston said he did not expect any punishment for late registration yet. Late registration is continuing, with no penalty, in every post office in the nation. "Some people have been sick, on vacation in the wilderness somewhere, out of the country, or maybe even in jail. We want to give them a chance to register," he said. MEMBERS OF THE Kansas Ant-Draft Organization do not want the chance to register, and are urging all men not to. According to Terry Brians, a Lawrence resident and member of the ant-draft movement, the group is not impressed by both politicians' opposition to registration. "They are opposed to it for the wrong reason." They are opposed to it for the wrong reason. They are opposed to it for the wrong reason. They are opposed to it for the wrong reason. Only they want a professional army. Only they want a professional army. Only they want a professional army. Only they want a professional army. Brians said his group, which he said had 300-400 members in Lawrence alone, protested during the two-week registration period in July at the Lawrence post office and saw parents forcibly pushing young men into the office to register. "I saw scared kids carried into the post office by their own parents," he said. Crusaders seek money to convert world by '85 By IAN SIMPSON Staff Writer The Campus Crusade for Christ loves Jesus. It wants the rest of the world to do the same. To spread the word of Christ, the Crusade launched a massive fund-raising drive last spring. The "Here's Life, World" campaign, supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, stamily by 1985, is attempting to raise $1 billion. “There are a lot of places on this earth where there are people who have never heard of Jesus Christ or His gospel.” John Jones, director of communications for the Crusade, said this week. “It is the duty of every Christian to bring that word to those who haven't heard it.” About $160 million is earmarked for broadcasting overseas, and the bulk of the money will go for establishing grassroots evangelical organizations overseas. In addition, the Crusade is counting on its $6 million movie "Jesus" to help its efforts in foreign countries. BILL BRIGHT, who founded the Crusade at UCLA in 1951, has focused his efforts on famous donors such as Leen Jawerski, John Connally, Roy Rogers, W. Clement Stone and Nelson Bunker Hunt, who already given more than $10 million. Those donors who give or promise to raise $1 million are designated one of "History's Handful," because they will "change the course of handy," Jones said. So far, the Crusade has raised about $160 million, most of it in pledges, not cash. "When you realize that year more money is spent on dog food than on mission work," Dan Keller, KU Campus Crusade said "a billion dollars is really chickfeed." The Crusade is a big operation. According to its 1979 annual report, last year's revenues totaled $49,269,000. The organization had 7,810 full-time staff members working in 114 countries. All the money the Crusade raised came from donations, and all staff members, including Bright, must rely on sponsors to support themselves. According to the annual report, Bright earned $11,403 in 1978, and his net worth was estimated at less than $25,000. DESPITE THE PRESENT interest in raising large sums of money quickly, the average contribution to the Crusade is $49, and the most frequent contribution is $10, according to the annual report. Dan Keller estimated he had about 50 people who donated an average of $15 a month for his support. Of the money he received, 3 percent went for administrative purposes and 10 percent was earned for the Crusade's overseas missions, he said. Crusade staffers are not allowed to hold outside jobs. Keller said the Crusade believed in the infallible nature of the Bible and the second coming of Christ. It also wants the Biblical theory of creation to be taught in public schools. THE CREASU RELIES on "The Four Spiritual Watts" to attract worshippers. The laws are "If God made everything out of nothing, if he could make an axehead float or have Jonah split by a whale—well, it seems that everything is possible, or nales by comparison," Keller said. - Man is sinful and separated from God. God knows man's experience and knowledge of God and plan for it.* Weather A LITTLE WARMER - *We must individually receive Jesus Christ as expiring God, allow us to experience it, and exspire God's love for our lives.* - God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life. - Jesus Christ is God's only provision for man's sin. The message's simplicity concerns some religious educators "It is ludicrous to presume that Christianity can be reduced to a number of simple facts." The KU Weather Service is predicting a high today of 83. Skies will be fair to partly cloudy with a chance of tundershowers late this afternoon and tonight. Sunny should be not and dry win the high again in the mild-90s. There is a chance of thunderstorms Sunday night and early Monday morning. Skies should clear Saturday with the high in the mid-90s. Tonight's low will be 72. Controversy only customer for note-taker By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter A professional note-taker says her new student is in need of KU students who are sick of classes. For $5, any reluctant student can hire Rowena DeCoste, a 29-year-old former graduate student, to attend class and take classes. You have the notes neatly typed by the next day. DeCoste said she would research term paper topics for $15. FLYERS ADVERTISING THE service have appeared on bulletin boards all over campus, but DeCoste said her two-week-old business was not yet flourishing. "Nobody has called yet," she said. Although the service does not seem to be popular with students, it is even less popular with some professors who teach large lecture classes such as Biology 104 or Elements of Sociology. "I think it's completely outrageous," said Alan Sica, assistant professor of sociology, who lectures to about 200 students three times a week. "I hope I don't find anyone who would use that service in my class, and I hope the University will put a stop to it." ONE UNIVERSITY HAS already put a stop to professional note-taking. DeCoste said the University of California at Los Angeles outlawed a similar service last year after several professors said they never saw two of their students until they had graduated. DeCoste said she had never heard of a University rule against professional note-taking. Vickie Thomas, general counsel of the University, said that although there was no specific rule against professional note-taking, University policy stated that students at auditions must be regularly enrolled, officially auditing or have permission of the instructor. However, because there is no specific rule against it, Sica said the service could be "If students indulge in it five or ten times in a semester, then they're not really participating in the class. They might as well punt the class and go home," he said. OTHER PROFESSORS agree that students who try to study in absentia are only cheating themselves. "It doesn't bother me, but it should bother the student," said Everett Grover, a professor of chemistry who has taught as many as 400 students at a time. "Students are the ones who are paying to come here. The professor doesn't gain or lose either way." Joseph Cox, a professor of economics who lectures on 170 students twice a week, said the note-taking service didn't bother him at all. "My students are adults, and it's their At $5 a class period, the note-taking service could be too expensive to be abused by a single student. Sica listed less expensive courses for students who are forced to miss class. STUDENTS CAN SEND a tape recorder to class or ask friends to take notes for them. In special cases, Sica said he asked some of his brighter students to lend their notes to students who had valid reasons for missing lectures. responsibility to learn the subject matter if they're interested in it," he said. However, the best alternative is not missing class in the first place. he said. Tape recorders and even professional note-takers can miss important details in lectures. "I've seen student notes," Sica said, "and I tried to pick up them and the important things they pluck." Everett, a veteran chemistry lecturer, said he had the heart of note-taking services before this fall. DeCoste, who was a reporter for WREN Radio in Topeka and had accumulated 30 hours of graduate study at KU, said she was qualified to take accurate class notes. She is prepared to use that skill to make extra money after she quit her job reporting in Job. "I wasn't aware they were doing this, but I am not surprised they are," I suppose you are. "I was been tricked." Jolly jingle highlight of Dykes' farewell By PAM HOWARD Staff Reporter A farewell poem for former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes left the former chancellor smiling and his wife, Nancy, looking solemn as she held back tears. The poem, written and read by Charles Lacey, a member of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, was a humorous look at Dykes' seven years as chancellor. Lacey read the poem last night at the 14th annual KU Affairs Mixer, which welcomed new faculty and staff members of KU, Baker and Haskell Indian Junior College to the area. Parts of the poem read: "Back in 73, from east Tennessee, came an applicant well-recommended. / And out of the hills, land of acorns and stills/ to the Chancellor's office ascended . . . A new luminary of the broad Kansas prairie raised money, as chancellors he off. He appealed to alums, from distinguished to burns, to support efforts in the region. But he repleinished the coffers as KU solvency grew." THE MIXER, SPONSORED by the Chamber of Commerce, attracted nearly 400 people, mostly new faculty and staff members at the three schools. Carter wished the newcomers luck, success and happiness. He also said that such people Both Carter and Shankel welcomed the new faculty and staff members to Lawrence, and the two men will be at the The crowd gathered under a large awning at Meadowbrook Apartments, on 15th street west of Iowa Street, to eat a barbecue dinner before the event. The chef Ed Carter and Acter Chancellor Del Shankel. Don Ashton, Chairman of the KU Affairs Committee, humorously introduced most of the course material to his students. made local officials proud to be associated with Lawrence. Ashton said the Chamber sought to make Lawrence a better place to live and tried to represent every area of the community. He urged participation in the Chamber and cited the mixer as an example of one of the many things the Chamber does for the community. AT THE CONCLUSION of the event, Former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and his wife were given a standing ovation as they were presented a framed copy of the poem read by Lacev. Dykes spoke briefly, thanking KU students and faculty for the outstanding friendship and support that was responsible for his achievements at KU. KU Band and Spirit Squad members provided entertainment before the program began. 4. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Anderson eligible for campaign funds Independent presidential candidate John Anderson yesterday was ruled eligible for millions of dollars in post-election federal campaign funds, and he immediately prepared to borrow against that money to finance badly-needed television commercials. The Federal Election Commission ruled that Anderson could collect the money as long as he gets at least 5 percent of the popular vote on Nov. 4. The exact amount would be determined by the percentage he receives. The decision is one of two developments that observers say. Anderson needs to give his campaign the credibility required to mount a serious drive for the White House. The other is inclusion in the presidential debates, if they are held. Meanwhile, President Jimmy Carter received the endorsement of the 13.6 million-member AFL-CIO, and Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan campaigned in Carter's southern homeland—Jacksonville, Fla., and New Orleans. While thanking the AFL-CIO for its endorsement, Carter said he had received a call from Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin expressing his satisfaction at the success of Carter's efforts to resume the stalled Egyptian-Iranian peace talks. Carter also invited Begin to the White House Nov. 11—seven days after the election—and got a quick acceptance, announced by Begin's office in Israel. Ronald Reagan, meanwhile, criticized Carter for announcing development of a "Stealth" aircraft invisible to radar of jeopardy in the skies. He also pushed KGB in the process. Defense Secretary Harold Brown had confirmed the existence of the top-secret aircraft at an Aug. 21 news conference after news reports about the technological breakthrough had begun to appear—including an article in Armed Services Journal. Israel. Egvpt agree to future summit CAIRO, Egypt—U.S. Middle East Envoy Sol Linowitz said yesterday that a summit meeting between Israel, Egypt and the United States to resolve difficulties obstructing a Palestinian autonomy settlement would be held before the end of the year. Linowitz, who worked out an agreement between Egypt and Israel to resume the suspended autonomy talks, implied that the summit could be held before the Nov. 4 U.S. elections. However, Egyptian officials, said they expected the summit to take place after the presidential elections. On the second day of his visit to Egypt, which followed a trip to Israel, Linowitz discussed with officials practical arrangements to implement the two-part agreement. The two countries agreed to resume the autonomy talks at a mutually agreed date and consult about a future summit. Linowski conferred separately with Egyptian State Minister for Foreign Affairs Hutros Ghall and Deputy Premier Foud Mohlededin before heading for Paris. Ghali said bilateral talks with the United States may be held in New York or Washington "as a first step" toward tripartite negotiations. He said the negotiations with Israel would cover "a mixture of preparations for the summit and the autonomy question." Billy case, news leak get Senate eve WASHINGTON—A Senate panel studied a report yesterday that said Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti may have delayed Justice Department action on its investigation of Billy Carter in order to first talk with President Jimmy Carter about the case. The Senate judiciary subcommittee probing Billy Carter's financial misconduct met in private session to determine who leaked the report to the New York Times. At issue is a report put together by Robert Kelley, a publican counsel for the committee, concerning apparent conflicts in statements from Civiliett and Joel Lisker, head of the Justice Department's foreign agent registration unit. According to the Kelley report, Liskeer told investigators that on June 11, he had informed Civitelli that Billy Carter had admitted taking money from his employer. The Times said Civiliiett told the panel he did not recall issuing such instructions. The newspaper also quoted Kelly's report as saying that if Civitetti had issued such a delaying instruction, such action "amounts to circumstantial evidence that Civitetti wanted time to talk to the president to see whether he could be arrested and sent for libya for Libya, thus avoiding criminal prosecution for refusing to do so." Civiletti is scheduled to appear before the Senate panel today. Polish plan fails to halt all strikes WARSA, Poland—Thousands of Polish coal miners yesterday refused to join other strikers in returning to work, but the government proceeded with the arrests and imprisonment of them. The first details of a proposed new set of price regulations on 100 items, from food to television repairs, were announced in the capital. Despite a return to the pits for the first time in a week by tens of thousands of coal workers, an estimated 15,000 men kept three mines in Silsilea shut, demanding management changes and assurances that they also would be granted the rights won by other strikers earlier this week. Several smaller walkouts also were reported around the country. In Białskoy, 110 miles northwest of Warsaw, bus drivers struck, seeking benefits won by their colleagues in Warsaw. Another new strike was reported from the southwestern health spa of Busko Zdroi. Under the new price regulations, aimed at curbing the runaway living costs in large part responsible for the present round of strikes, there will be price controls on meat, fish and 45 other food items plus 56 industrial articles. Parliament was scheduled to meet today, and Premier Jozef Pinkowski appointed in a government shakeup at the height of the recent labor crisis, was expected to present official plans for "a fundamental remodeling of the government's work." No details of the plan have been disclosed. Cubans in Afghanistan, rebel claims ISLAAMABAD, Pakistan-An Afghan rebel spokesman said yesterday that 100 Cuban troops and advisers had been sent to Afghanistan. Western diplomatic forces were also present. In Washington, the State Department said it had "no information" about any foreign troops other than the Soviets being in Afghanistan. He said the rebels had killed several Cuban soldiers in recent fighting and discovered who they were by examining their uniforms and identity cards. Hussain said Bulgarian, Czech and Romanian contingents also had arrived in Afghanistan since June. assault, the commandant, a spokesman for the Islamic Front guerrilla group, said that Cuban troops had arrived to help subdue rebel resistance to the government. In New Delhi, India, western diplomats following the Afghan crisis said they could not confirm or deny the rebel report but were highly skeptical of the evidence. In Washington, a State Department spokesman said, "I can state quite accurately that the Department is not providing any notification that many of our past occupations, other than the Soybeans, are in Afghanistan." A State Department source said that moving 10,000 troops from bases in Cuba or Africa to Afghanistan would be a logistical feat that could not easily escape detection. A story on page 5 of yesterday's University Daily Kansan stated incorrectly that Anschutz scholarships awarded this fall to 83 students totaled $127,300. The correct figure was $27,300. Correction Hoffman surrenders, released without bail NEW YORK (UPI)—Abbie Hoffman, the fugitive former "Wipple" leader who got "tired of looking over his shoulder," yesterday ended six years of hiding to face drug and hull-jumping charges. He was freed quickly without Prosecutor Sterling Johnson had requested that a bail of $100,000 bond or $10,000 cash be set for Hoffman. Hoffman's lawyer requested that no bail be set. The case was adjourned until Sept. 15. Hoffman, 43, a former "Chicago Seven" defendant, made a V-for-victory sign with his hand as he left Crimipal Court. Hoffman surrendered at the office of the special state narcotics prosecutor to face the charges which could-but probewon't-bring him a life sentence. Hoffman entered the prosecutor's office at 8:52 a.m. EDT, accompanied by his brother, his sister and Johanna Lawrenton, the former model who had shared his secret life as "Barry Freed," television writer and ecology activist, on an island in upstate New York. surrendered recently have been dealt when the enemy has been allowed to plead to reduced charges. Other 1960s radical figures who have "I glad to be back in New York. I love New York," a smiling Hoffman told reporters as police escorted him from the prosecutor's office to the Criminal Courts building "Everyday, I worried I be caught." The former anti-war activist and political prankster, wearing a beard and with his nose reshaped by plastic bandage, was one of the pounds of cocaine to undercover agents on Aug. 28, 1973, and further charges of skipping out on $10,000 bail. Jack Hoffman said his brother had been ready to turn himself in two years ago. "He was tired of looking over his shoulder," Hoffman's brother, Jack, said. "Deep down, there was always that fear." "The time wasn't right," he said. "The politics weren't there. The time is right now." Hoffman, who interrupted his underground existence to testify in disguise before congressional committees, said he was surrendering to the Justice Department after stopping dredging of the St. Lawrence River in update New York. "The battle to save the river became more important than my own personal safety," the Hoffman said, this week. "I didn't have it, of meaning for me. I really didn't have any identity. I really sort of needed the struggle." Hoffman was a member of the Chicago Seven, a group of radicals charged with masterminding violent demonstrations at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. The group members were convicted in an apportionment that turned the violations. Hoffmann went into hiding after his arrest on the drug charges. Even as a fugitive, Hoffman remained in politics. Not only did he testify before congressional committees, but he also was appointed to a federal commission and received memoranda from New York Gov. Hugh Carney. Jack Hoffman said that during the past six years the two brothers had met in "alleyways, in bus terminals, at baseball games and at football games." They also met in Mexico; San Antonio, Texas; Arizona; and Canada. SVA FILMS Presents The Beatles At Shea Stadium and Magical Mystery Tour The Beatles Fri. and Sat., Sept. 5 & 6, Midnight Woodruff Auditorium-No Refreshments Allowed BOOKS THE SCHOLARS' BOOKSTORE ALL 25,000 PAPERBACKS 1/2 PRICE 1401 Mass. 841-4644 LER Audiotronics Semi-Annual Hi-Fi SPEAKER SUPER SALE SUPER Audiotronics Semi-Annual Hi-Fi SPEAKER SUPER SALE! 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The report also recommends that the Senate form a StudEx subcommittee to set specific guidelines in selecting KU's legislative assembly delegates to ASK and to work on lobbying for KU issues as well as statewide issues. If the Senate decides to discontinue membership, ASK would continue lobbying for student-oriented issues. They would, however, suffer a financial burden. The senate, senate executive secretary and chairman of the ASK board of directors. Although ASK's effectiveness was considered good by StudEx members, concern was expressed during the two weeks before ASK's efficiency in dealing with KU issues. GREG SCHNACKE, student body president, said there were few issues that did not affect other schools. He cited lobbying for state funding for academic buildings as particularly applicable to KU, but said other schools with similar funding of school buildings would profit from favorable legislation. A portion of KU student fees are allocated to pay off Wescoe Hall building bonds, as well as debts for several other campus buildings. Bren Abbott, treasurer, said the committee needed to consider "what the benefits of spending $9.157 for ASK are, what benefits we lose from our time membership and if benefits received are actually worth that money." Because KU would continue to benefit from ASK's lobbying if it were not a member, Templeton said "it would be a cheap outlook for KU to sit back and wait." Mikl Gordon, finance and auditing committee co-chairman, said he wondered whether ASK really represented the students of Kansas. "The KU delegate selection process has been rather shaddy," he said. "If we continue in the future, we should try to make our student has the chance to be represented." BOB FRIGO, graduate senator and University Senate executive committee representative, said the ASK legislative assembly, which is composed of one woman from each state, worked to "eliminate ideas not supported by the majority of students." ASK can only lobby for a certain number of issues he said, and chooses only those most frequently talked about. The Senate will decide whether to renew its membership in ASK at its meeting on Tuesday. On Campus MENNINGER AT MED CENTER DANCE AUDITIONS Karl Menninger, of Topeka's Mennenger Foundation, will speak at 10:30 this morning at Battentfeld Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Menniger's lecture, entitled "A Day in the Life of Tomorrow," is part of the Grand Rounds series sponsored by the Med Center's psychiatry department. TODAY OPEN auditions for the UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY will be at 6 p.m. Monday at the Robinson dance studio, room 242. All dancers are welcome to SIGMA DELTA CHI will have a Journalism Mixer at 3:30 p.m. in Marvin Grove. New withdrawal policy shelved for fall semester Shankel said that he had not yet had time to consider the change and that the withdrawal policy published in the fall Timetable would be used this semester. During next five weeks in the new schedule, a student would receive a "W" for withdrawal after dropping a class. The current policy allows three weeks. A new withdrawal policy approved by the University Council and printed in the addendum to the Timetable will not be extended until the Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday. The new withdrawal policy would have given students an extra week to withdraw from classes and would have taken them out for withdrawal schedule by three weeks. seven weeks to withdraw from classes before a petition is needed. GEORGE WORTH, chairman of the University Senate executive committee, told the University Council yesterday that the Council's proposal had reached the administration this spring but there had been no response. The new schedule would have extended the withdrawal period to 10 weeks before a notification is needed. ministration had thanked the Council for its interest in an area that needed attention, and said it would take care of the situation. Gerhard Zuther, ex-officio member of the University Senate executive committee, said earlier this week that the schedule change would have unified and simplified the University's withdrawal policy. TOMORROW David Henry, University Council member, said the policy changes approved in April had been made "after much discussion." THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Satellite Union cafeteria The new Uniform Withdrawal Policy would have allowed students five weeks to withdraw before classes were over. The current policy allows four weeks. A HOME RUN DERBY will be at 10 a.m. on the field east of the Robinson Center. Registration starts at 9:45 a.m. This is a contest involving the batting skills of a team consisting of one man and one woman. The confusion arose when Robert Hoffman, acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, approved publication of the proposed schedule in the addendum assuming the change been approved by the administration. O ANBESVATORY OPEN HOUSE will be at 7 p.m. in 500 Lindley Hall. A RAQUETBALL AND PADDLE CHAMPIONSHIP will be at 10 a.m. at the Robinson tennis courts. Participants must have been registered by the Association and play Contests will be in badminton, tennis, raquetball and table tennis SUNDAY Worth said that, in essence, the ad- The withdrawal schedule for this semester is the same as previous semesters and allows students only AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ACADEMIC COMPETENT CENTER will be at 10:30 a.m. in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility. A FELLOWSHIP SUPPER will be at 5:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 12th and Oread. A workshop entitled "Beginning Meditative Prayer: A Holistic Approach," will follow. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room at the Kansas Union. MONDAY SUA FILMS Presents A Weekend With Jane Fonda A man who believed in war A man who believed in nothing. And a woman who believed in both of them. Lynne Holmgren Hal Ashby Jane Fonda Jon Voight Bruce Dern "Coming Home" Walker Bush Robert C. Jones Nancy Dudley Hayes Weaver Brian Silver Melissa McMahon Hal Abel R UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Friday—3:30, 9:30 Saturday-7:00 The West was won by men and challenged by a woman. "Comes a Horseman" Bestseller of the Year JAMES MAN JAMIE HONDA TAYSON BROADWAY TIMES WALKER BROADWAY BROADWAY, 20TH STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y. (100) 763-4590 A MASSACHUSETTS REPRESENTATION OF THE CHILDREN'S BOOKS COMPANY Friday and Saturday, Sept. 5-6 Friday----7:00 Saturday—3:30, 9:30 Woodruff Auditorium-No refreshments allowed $1.50 each Limited to Mopeds only 2) Kies Holliday Plaza, 2100 West 25th *Yamaha YH2 Headphones* 1) Alvamar Nautilus Club (start 12:30) West 23rd Clinton Parkway *5 Nautilus club memberships This is not a race, but rather a scenic tour of Lawrence. At each of the five stops entrants will receive a sealed playing card. At the last stop Horizons, the envelopes will be opened. The best poker hand wins a 1980 Honda Express II. Your hand is void if any hand has been prematurely opened. 3) Pizza Hut, 1606 West 23rd * $25.00 gift certificates Stops and Prizes 4) Lawrence Opera House—642 Mass. *2 V.I.P. season passes *5 runner up prizes Sponsored by: Horizons Inc & KY-102 Date: Sat., September 13 All traffic and safety rules must be observed. 1st Annual Moped Poker Run $4.00 entry fee: Every one who completes the ride will receive a special 'Poker Run' T-shirt. Riders meeting: 12:30 5) Horizons Inc., 1811 West 6th *1980 Honda Express II Time: 1:00PM To Enter Return this form with $4.00 entry fee to: Horizons Inc. 1811 West 6th Lawrence, Kansas All entries must be in by September 11, 2000 ♦ All entries must be in by September 11, 1980. Take Advantage of Mr. Stoak's Student Special Name ___ Address ___ City ___ Phone ___ Moped Model ___ For more information contact Roger Davis, 843-3333, Horizons Inc. It's not your basic beef patty on a sesame seed bun. 10% off lunch and dinner (for regular priced items only) Present current student ID to waitress. offer expires 9/30/80 We serve only USDA choice beef—naturally aged with no chemicals. Or try our quality seafood. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas 841-3454 Mr. Steak You can't cut quarry when your reputation is at steak. 1/2 PRICE PLANTSALE Entire selection of foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price A Greenhouse Bigger Than A Football Field Thousands of plants to choose from large and small all foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. - Hanging Plants We also carry an excellent - Floor Plants - All Foliage We also carry an excellent selection of plant supplies • Fertilizer • Macrame • Soil • Baskets • Pottery • Plant Books and More THE MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY CITY OF NEW YORK The New York City Department of Public Works (NYPD) is responsible for the management and enforcement of urban safety in New York City. The department oversees fire safety, traffic safety, public health, and environmental protection efforts to ensure a safe and secure environment for residents. NYPD has a long history of serving as the city's first police department, beginning in 1794 when it was established by the New York State Legislature. Since then, NYPD has expanded its jurisdiction to include numerous neighborhoods, including the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, and Staten Island. NYPD is a highly professional force that relies on a diverse range of skills and expertise. It employs a team of approximately 100 officers, each with a specific role and responsibility. These roles include: - **Police Officer:** Responsible for enforcing laws and regulations, protecting public safety, and responding to emergencies. - **Sergeant:** Provides administrative support to the Police Department, including law enforcement training and assistance. - **Detective:** Investigates criminal activities and crimes within the city, using evidence and techniques from various disciplines. - **Cop:** Combatants who work under the supervision of the Police Department, investigating crimes and providing assistance to victims. NYPD's dedication to public safety and community well-being is reflected in its commitment to continuous improvement and growth. The department is constantly working to improve its operations, technology, and resources to better serve the people of New York City. Pence Greenhouse 843-2004 15th and New York 4 blocks east of Mass. on 15th A Greenhouse Bigger Than, A Football Field Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Search group dreaming The search committee for a new chancellor at the University of Kansas is looking for that just-right candidate. And judging by the committee's criteria, applicants need not be miracle workers—just as long as they are perfect. In truth, a favorable candidate will have to please a lot of different groups in lot of different ways. On the one hand, an ideal chancellor must possess a flair for working with the Kansas Legislature, which allocates megabucks to the University. On the other hand, a chancellor must keep in touch with the needs of the students and faculty. AT THE SAME TIME, a chancellor will be faced with the management of a budget that runs into the millions. And certainly not to be forgotten is the upkeep of the University's public image. A chancellor will have to maintain the University's public image, not only to appease the Legislature, but also to satisfy KU alumni—another major source of revenue. A chancellor's commitments to the Legislature, to the students, to the alumni and to the faculty can easily conflict at times. In these situations, he must sometimes choose between the needs of students and faculty and the wishes of the Legislature or alumni. THE PREVIOUS two chancellors have illustrated two extremes in the office. E. Laurence Chalmers, who served from 1969 to 1972, had amazing rapport with KU students. Rarely has a chancellor been so popular with students. Unfortunately, the Legislature, not to mention some KU alumni, viewed Chalmers as a wild-eyed radical who would be better off supervising a bonfire than running the University. Archie R. Dykes, who resigned Aug. 15 to take a job with a Topeka insurance company, was just the opposite. Dykes mastered the handling of the Legislature and won millions of dollars for programs and improvement projects at KU. Dykes was called to better the University's public image and to win more legislative appropriations. He did his job. But now, considering that the public image could not be better, the University needs someone with a stronger commitment to the students and to the University's academic programs. it needs someone who can communicate effectively with the students and the faculty on a regular basis. BUT DYKES RARELY reached out to the students. He usually addressed them twice a year—at the opening Convocation and at Commencement—and then performed a disappearing act. But Dykes left KU in its best financial shape ever. BASED ON COMMENTS from the search committee's members, the ideal chancellor would be a public relations man interested in student and faculty affairs. But the committee's hopes to hire a person who can "walk on water" may be no more than wishful thinking. The chancellor's duties to the Legislature and to the University community make the job a paradox. The committee cannot have the best of both worlds. Foes of pot decriminalization run from reality of wide use These folks in City Hall, bless their hearts, they mean well, think they can save Dorothy and Toto from the "wicked weed" by zapping away the Ziz Zags. Sorry guys, but how could a law prohibiting the sale of "drug paraphernalis" to minors stop marijuana use any more than do the old-age laws prohibiting possession, possessing, selling or holding the stuff?" With nearly 20 million pot smokers in America, the issue, it seems, is no longer how to stop marijuana use, but how to regulate it. According to a study conducted by the state policies and penalties for marijuana, the number of adult users in the nation has increased "steadily" since 1971 and "shows no sign of AMY HOLLOWELL M. E. MORRIS decrease." The study added that "no large increase in use has been shown in states that regulate capitalization law." So what are legislators from Lawrence to Washington continuing to do? They fuitily continue to wage an expensive and hopeless war against marijuana use. The federal government alone spends nearly $100 million a year to fund the legislation, but millions spent "enforcing" the laws. And beginning in 1975, the United States invested $40 million to contaminate the Mexican marijuana crop with the herbicide Paraquat. (Inhaling 2-Paraquat-contaminated joints daily for two months can cause fibrosis of the lungs, an increase in respiratory function reduces the lungs' capacity to absorb oxygen.) But possession of even small amounts of marijuana is still a crime in 39 states, including Kansas. A first-offender in Kansas faces a possible year in prison and a $2,500 fee, regardless of the amount in his possession. In contrast, a second-offender in Minnesota, one of Decriminalizing marijuana, then, could save us all bundles of money. In California, for example, where pot possession was decriminalized in 1976, $25 million in court costs was saved in the first year alone. Under the California law, possession of one ounce or less is a misdemeanor punishable by a maximum fine of $100. the first states to decriminalize marjuana, faces up to 90 days in jail and a possible $50 fine, if he possesses one and a half ounces or less The blackest marks against marjuanja reform, according to opponents of decriminalization, are health hazards and young users. True, marjuanja use by younger and younger people is more likely now occur between the ages of 14-18, according to a 1979 University of Michigan study. Norman Zinberg, a Harvard University professor, recently found that the number of marijuana users ages 12-17 has jumped 25 percent since 1976 and suggested that decriminalization would be necessary. Last summer Zinberg told the House Select Committee on Narotics Abuse and Control that by giving "formal social control" to marijuana, the "age of first use" could be controlled. He said the "age of first use" would tend to rise, clustering around the newly established legal age. Notice that Zinberg's research is based on protective regulation, not prohibition. More people than ever before are smoking marijuana. Two out of three Americans ages 18-25 have tried pot, and 32 percent use it regularly. A Department of Health, Education and Welfare survey of the high school graduating class of 1977 found that nearly 80 percent had used marijuana as a substitute for alcohol or that class of '77 is the graduating class of '81 in colleges and universities across the country. Marijuana's "harmful effects" are another block to reform. But what exactly are these effects? As most scientists agree, marijuana research is such a young field that long-term effects really can't be charted. However, researchers generally agree that pregnant women and growing children are more sensitive to the growth. There are findings that indicate harm to the lungs, brain, and reproductive system, and there are equally as many findings to the contrary. The scientific community is split on the harm marijuana may cause, but many researchers agree with their UCLA colleague, Sidney Cohen, who told the House committee that "the in-adult use of marijuana—less than once a week—will probably not result in ill effects." . . So why not decriminalization? It could save time and money in the courts and it could cut youth usage. But Kansas, it seems, is worried about Dorothy and Toto and would rather take away the Zig Zags than bring reality to the Land of Oz. The University Daily KANSAN (UPSB 690-449) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except at Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60455. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for each or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $4 a semester, taken through the student activity fee. KU is not responsible for errors. LIVE AT EVERY LEVEL Editor Carol Beker Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Makeup Editors Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Claudified Manager Advertising Market Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Teacheress Manager Sales Representatives Business Manager Elaine Straker Craven Hopper David Lewis Judy Woodburn Judy Woodburn Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Wilkinson Gene Myers Paul Arndal Kevin Mills Ellen Iwamoto, Bob Schaud, Jennifer Roller Kevin Koster Nancy Clanson Barb Light Tara Gove Jane Wendrover Margaret Brian Watkins Barb Speeher Bricoleau, Amnesia, Terry Fry, Bill Green Larry Leibengäuer, Paul O'Connor, Paula Schwender, Bill Roberts Thaime Shetter, Anthony Tilson, Kay Wisecup, Susan Birnbaum Kanan Advisor Chuck Chowins A. DANIEL KRAIN BEE Dan Harkness, director of consultation and education at the Bert Nash Mental Health Center in Douglas County, said responsibility for providing resisted solely on the shoulders of the ex-patient. System neglects mental patients' needs I may have saved a woman from drowning on Tennessee Street one night last week. But she and others could be drowning now because they are alone. They are afraid of their and their loneliness—or are afraid to go for help. There's no water on Tennessee, of course. But the woman, a former mental patient, was drowning just the same. She was being washed away in society's undertow and just happened to bob to eight behind in the glare of her headlights. They might have been someone else's headlights had might have been fatal. As a friend and I drove down Tennessee on a return trip from a late-night Joe's run, we saw someone wandering in the middle of the street with a dog. We walked away, a way around her and left her to face still others. but then formulate, thus, rehearsal. The system failed this woman. In Kansas, and auditioned she was now made only after a court determines a person to be dangerous to himself or others, and patients are released only when they are determined to be no longer dangerous. When a person is released, he is referred to agencies in his county of residence that can help in his reintegration. Referral is as far as the state can go, and that's where the cracks are created. Shocked by the sight of someone risking her life like that, we drove back around the block to see whether we could help. I parked the car. In my rush I blocked a fraternity's driveway. But nothing seemed, or was, as important as getting her off the street. "Is there anything we can do for you?" No, she said. She was okay, just "directing the light on the small, yellow flashlight she clutched in her hand." My friend ran to call the police for help, and I followed the woman at a distance. I grabbed her when she headed into the street again. We walked for blocks. With my arm tightly around her shoulder, and my mouth parched from the situation's enormity, I tried to keep her talking about who she was and why she was trying to kill herself. Although she had tried unsuccessfully to get a job more than once, she said. I was the first person with whom she had had an everyday conversation since she had come to Lawrence. Her parents, she said, had told her they were "through with her." Her monthly government support check, possibly Social Security disability or some form of welfare, was not enough to live What she told me revealed a person who had fallen between the cracks of the many Douglas County agencies and groups that try to help former mental patients find their way from the quiet, often medicated world of a mental hospital where they rent, buying groceries and carrying out a life. She was 22 but not a KU student, she said. She has been in Lafayette since she got out of college two years ago. But she found no one; thus, Tennessee Street. Again and again, she told me she was "tired of being disturbed," and told me she just did not want to go home again, where only loneliness and the books she already had read awaited her. She described a life like a huge empty room where no exit signs pointed a way out. She sobbed. "I just need someone to talk to and someone to help me when I'm broke." He estimated that 30 ex-patients a year in Douglas County fall into the category of the woman on Tennessee Street—people who out of fear, or frustration with the bureaucracy involved, don't manage to link up with those who can help them. If she had known, a good alternative for the woman on Tennessee Street would have been Headquarters, a crisis counseling center at 1602 Massachusetts St. At Headquarters, people who can help in a crisis are available by phone or in person 24/7. SCOTT FAUST B problems are only one of a wide range of problems they are able to dean with. I called Headquarters about my experience, and they said that in a case such as the woman's, they would talk to her, try to find out specifically what information she really refer her to a local agency that could help her. Besides the Bert Nash Mental Health Center, autonomous group counseling organizations such as Project Acceptance and Breakthrough, are providing trust to society through mutual support groups. But all the government dollars and volunteer time that go into these places had not helped the woman before she took her walk. She had not of course been in front of the first referral, no one had come to her. An answer, then, is to take the help more directly to those who need it. By law, the state cannot force ex-patients to cooperate with the patient without first giving course, the patient's right to reject outside help. Nevertheless, programs could be established by the state that allow the various groups to meet with patients in the hospital environment before they are released. There, they could carefully explain how they could help them and how they have helped others. Also, the state could pass legislation allowing the groups to seek out the ex-patients after they are released. Now, the groups' role is strictly passive, because patient privacy laws prohibit the state from giving released patients' names to the groups. But these are not people who have had surgery and must be protected from hordes of solicitors trying to sell rehabilitative aids. They are people who are undergoing a difficult adjustment process not all that different than being freed from prison. Now, there are no transitional living facilities or day treatment programs for ex-patients in Douglas County. These should be established. Funds must be allocated for them. Every possible effort must be made to get the help to those who need it. The undertow is relentless. Letters to the Editor Smock slanders KU women To the editor: I am incensed to be accused by George "Jed" Smock, evangelist-in-residence, of raping the minds of the women students in my classes, but we understand that to be "a manner of speaking." Such nonsensical statements, while in questionable taste, are protected by the free press because they are not intended for student (or any woman) a whore to her face is not "a manner of speaking" but slander and is not protected by any amendment. It is grounds for legal action. I hope the women so slandered will take such action. I see little difference between calling a woman who dresses comfortably and neither a whore and chopping off the head of a sister because she flirted with another man. J. P. Davidson professor of physics and astronomy Free speech protest sees trees, not forest To the editor: Although I admire the energy and ingenuity recently displayed by that group that has been advocating First Amendment rights at the University of Kansas at important University events, I wish they would rechannel all that spunk into a productive direction. If anything, the direction they are now going is a destructive one. Focusing too much attention on trivial rights violations just because they are close by and easy to publicize, while ignoring, for example, Soviet and Soviet-backed rights violations coupled with Soviet expansionism, is like agonizing over a scratch on your neck even as the guillotte line races down upon it. With all their energy and ingenuity, not to mention backbone, surely the First Amendment rights advocates can help us avoid the real pain in the neck instead of being one themselves. Eric Brende Topeka sophomore Commencement no time for political banners To the editor: I, too, Iplease exhibition of political banners at commencement. Graduation exercises recognize an academic milestone, honoring no race, the sentiment and social faction alive any other. No one gets away with selling popcorn at a wedding would would life insurance commercial fixtures. Demonstrators with mature minds recognize legitimate opportunities for display, Lectures, lawn spectacles and just what I'm doing right now are typical. Yes, I am able to imagine an organized protest at a tangle or symphonic concert; all, selected by the committee. If a banner must hang high at next spring's commencement, "GO GET EET. EM.CHISQ 0811." Tra Bond, electrician Facilities Operations University Daily Kansan, September 5. 1980 Page 5 Crusade From page 1 propositions," said Tim Miller, lecturer in religious studies at KU. Lyn Taymor, chairman of the department of religious studies, said, "When you can reduce all knowledge about the ultimate to four steps it is possible that they get comfort from it, more power to them." Richard Quebedeaux of Berkeley, Calif., a longtime student of evangelical movements and the author of "I Found II!: The Story of Bill Bright and Campus Cruse," said, "You read their first book ("The Four Laws") and the second book, "Have You Made the Wonderful Discovery of the Holy Spirit") and you have it all. "They don't read much, even their own magazines, and they read Bibles without commentary or explanation. The Four Truths are just-first-base evangelism." THE CREUSADE has no ties to any established church, and it seeks to work with local churches to interest people in Christ. Pete Brosiamsi, area director for the Campus Crusade for Christ, leads a tour of local churches. We have no design to take away from a church. We are there to help.* Fred Holliman, pastor of the Faith Southern Baptist Church, 1629 W. 19th St., said, "We have had a good working relationship with them. They are very committed people and their beliefs are pretty similar to Southern Baptist, so there are no doctrinal problems." UNLIKE FUNDAMALIST religious organizations like the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority, Campus Crusade has no political orientation. The small alligator has found its way onto almost everything from shorts and shirts to belts and hats. Its popularity accounts for sales of more than 60 shirts bearing the alligator each day in Lawrence, clothing store managers say. 'If the organization came out and endorsed a candidate, 'I'd leave it today. 'Brosmaeli said. "The only way to change society is to change individuals, not by changing political systems," he said. According to movement members, the Crusade has no plans to telewise its message. This is mainly because of a lack of a good television evangelist, Quebedeaux said. "Bright no hafair. He is not a colorful person at all," he said. The crusade has some radio programs in the United States and in Third World countries. It broadcasts in 21 languages and has one aimed at the People's Republic of China. I ZOD Reptiles wallow on shirts, not in water Qaiebdeaeux said he thought Bright and his Crusade were sincere and were doing a worthy job of bringing God to the world, but was skeptical of its success. "It is a systematic approach to evangelism that Bill has, that he can change the world." Quebedeaux said. "But it won't happen. It never has." BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Alligator boom hits Lawrence By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Reporter Once they were on the endangered species list, they were seen at the polo lawns, where they had been practicing their tennis. Gradually, their population increased. One had to look, but they were there. Not camouflaged at all—just sewn on all sorts of different colors. Suddenly, the species seemed to double, then triple its numbers. They were seen in bars and on the street. Now they seem to be anywhere. Is it something to be concerned about? Not unless the Izod shirts are beginning to bother you. Jeff Hawkins, half-owner and manager of Mr. Guy, 922 Massachusetts St., a Lawrence clothing store, said yesterday that when KU students were in town, the store sold 20 to 30 of the shirts a day. Greg Ketchum, manager of Alvaram Pro Shop, also of Lawrence, estimates that with its latest promotion, the shop sells from 40 to 60 shirts a day. Hawkins the alligator shirts have been popular for years, "but the last four years But it is not just shirts. For those who can't get enough, Izod sells allels on clothing from tennis dresses to belts, tennis shorts to socks. THE ALLIGATOR competes for the green with a fox—a similar shirt with a狐fox instead of an alligator marketed by J.C. Penney. The man who makes the sales says they sell from 10 to 30 shirts a day. Hawkins says a French tennis player, Rene LaCoste, wanted to play tennis in a cooler shirt. So in 1946, LaCoste patented the LaCoste Weave, or mesh, that is still used for the shirts. His favorite animal was used as the trademark. Izod shirts can be purchased for $14 or $15, but some of them can cost as much as $30 and $60. KETCHUM ATTRIBUTES the shirts' popularity to the "prep look" in fashion. He says the illigator insignia does sell the shirt, but thinks the Izod shirt is still a good product. Ketchn with Izod accounts for 17 percent or overreach in the United States, and is reaching for 21 percent. Some students are doing more than their share to keep the alligator population flourishing by buying more than one of the shirts. Marie Miller, Del Mar, Calif., senior, says she has four, but bought them all five years ago. She says she bought them because they are "comfortable, practical. You can wear them with anything. They're just a nice, simple shirt." She would have bought them with or without the alligator, she says, and she thinks the stereotypes associated with the shirts are When questioned, several students said they thought of the shirts as fraternity and sorority status symbols, although they didn't consider them exclusive to the groups. "A lot of people are threatened by the idea of classed the 'shirt'," George Calvert, New Yorker. SOME ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISTS have been able to decrease in the alligator population again after a successful drug trial. It is possible to buy a stuffed aligator wearing a T-shirt with a human on it. Montgomery Ward, 23rd and Oaushd streets have three-inch plaid laurel alligator pins. At Carousel, 711 W, 23rd S, a clothing store, ceramic pins made to look exactly like the alligator can be bought for $5. One student, wearing a four-inch, three-dimensional rubber alligator fastened to his T-shirt with pins, claims it is "a family heir." He says the shirts are too expensive. "These shirts are from K-Mart. People don't buy them, but the alligator can put on this on my shirts." RAMADA INN 842-7030 Sunday Brunch 11:00AM-2:00PM All You Can Eat -Salad Bar -Danish Pastry -Bacon and Sausage -Scrambled eggs -American Fries -London Broil -Fried Chicken -Deep Fried Fish -And much more usually $4.95 But only $3.95 with this coupon Good until September 28,1980 This coupon worth $1.00 off any adult portion Long Hair Styling & Braiding DEMONSTRATION Saturday, September 6th [Image of a woman with braided hair and earrings. She is looking to the side.] If you'd like to see some new styles for longer hair, and maybe even be a modell) come to HEADMASTERS on Saturday. We will be Braiding and Designing long hair from 11 am till 4 pm- CHRISTIE AND JIMMY OPEN MOST EVENINGS TILL 8 headmasters 809 VERMONT 843-8808 stop by! 843-4255 get back to class with Bass 10 10 10 Bass TOE Bass royal college shop eight thirty-seven massachusetts Taco TACO SPECIAL --sporting goods Buy one taco... Get one free! Treat yourself to the delicious, crunchy taste of a Taco Tico taco... and a Cappuccino taco! The taco free! One coupon per person per visit. please. Coupon expires Oct 1, 1980 With this coupon 2340 Iowa TACO TICO Everbody loves the taste. Everybody loves the taste. Pier 1 imports 738 Mass (Downtown) 841-7525 Early Jayhawk Discount Valid for a 10% discount on entire line through Sept. 13th. Total sale with coupon 10% Free Lay-A-Way 1 francis 643-4191 721 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 60444 Run for fun, run back to school in adidas shoes at vary special prices for ADIDAS DAYS! Friday, Saturday, 9:00 to 5:30 - Ask the Adidas rep about your running needs - Bring your spouse for these ground-gripping prices - Get your free Adidas T-shirt* with every Adidas shoe purchase ADIDAS DAY SPECIALS Squire was 44.95 two days only 24.95 Nite Jogger was 44.95 two days only 24.95 Runner was 44.95 two days only 24.95 Lady Runner was 44.95 two days only 24.95 Tom Okker was 41.95 two days only 29.95 TRX Competition was 40.95 two days only 29.95 Lady TRX Competition was 40.95 two days only 29.95 Lancer was 40.95 two days only 33.95 Lady Dragon (blue) was 26.95 two days only 33.95 Lady Dragon (beige) was 26.95 two days only 19.95 RUNNING SL '72 . wssa 34.95 NOW 28.95 SL '76 . wssa 34.95 NOW 28.95 passes . wssa 34.95 NOW 28.95 ADIDAS CLOSE OUTS *they're slightly irregular, and you can buy one for 3.50* "Sporty things for sporty people" University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Entertainment Hoochie Coochie man warms Lawrence fans By JOHN McNAMARA Contributing reviewer The steamy, smoke-filled sweatbox could have been any South Side Chicago blues bar, but it was Lawrence's own opera House. The occasion was a rare appearance by the Mannish Boy, the Rolling Stone, the Hoochie Coochie Man—some call him Muddy Waters. Waters, born McKinley Morganfield in the Mississippi plantation town of Stovall, is credited with preserving the haunting Delta blues of Son House and Robert Johnson. In the process he created his own form of city blues backed by a heavy drum beat, cloaked in the subtleties of his instrumentation, to his heart and sandwiched between walling harp and screaming guitars. It was this hard-driving song that Waters delivered to an all too willing crowd last night. Sauntering to center stage amid frenzied aplace, Waters leaped into the blues with a thunderning rendition of his theme song, "Hoochie Cochie Man." Written by Clarence Dixon in the 1980s, it captures Waters' boastful authoritative style like no other song. Picking up an already fast pace, he moved into "Baby Please Don't Go." Waters' dueling with the shrill notes of George "Mojo" Bufords' harp was the only sound that generated intensity that easily brought the crowd to its feet. Slowing down a little and reaching back to his Mississippi Delta roots, Waters played a manshion version of his Robert Johnson inspired "Country Blues." Leaning against a stool, bowed in concentration as though remembering his own troubles, Waters squeezed high notes out of his guitar that echoed the mournful tone of his voice. Waters mixed old and new material in the hour set, including an expected and well-received rendition of "Kansas City." His face creased with age but a look of boyish excitement in his eyes, Waters launched into the bluesman's blues song, "Got My Mom Workin'." Mining across the stage, booming in a voice as resonant as a preacher's, Waters worked the crowd to a peak of blues fervor. He closed the show with this number, returning only briefly to sing another verse as an encore. The Muddy Waters Band—Rick Kreher and John Primer on guitars, Ernest Jones on bass, all illusion in the drums, Lovie Lee on piano and Jojo "Jojo" Butford on harpe—proved their skill early. Opening the show without Waters, they performed a steaming version of the Elmore James' classic "Hurt's Me Too." Primer's nimble fret work made the tune smoke. Lee displayed a voice perhaps as powerful as Waters on "Caledonia" and "Sweet Little Angel." Buford and Kreher established the band, but it was only in the heat for a very tight and versatile blue band. Overall, Waters' material, voice, slide guitar and band were above reproach; however, the brevity of the set—slightly less than an hour—left some of the audience disgruntled. Paul Gray's jazz Band with Claude "Fiddler" Williams opened the show with a rousing music of big band jazz and a touch of country- western. Gray's band proved themselves more than anyone else, including the Count Bates and Fats Waller, among others. Claude "Fiddler" Williams, standing in inconspicuously in the left corner of the stage, brought cheers from the audience with violin playing. "Rose" and "Somewhere Over the Rainbow." 100 ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff Muddy Waters belts out a dose of Delta blues at the Lawrence Opera House Wednesday night Lyric Opera brings Italian comedy to KU Rv JANE NEUFELD Staff reporter The Kanat City Lyric Opera will open the 1980-81 concerts season at the University of Kansas tomorrow with a debut performance of "The Elixir of Love," an Italian comic opera by Gaetano Donetti. The opera will be performed in English at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. The plot of the opera, set in the 1830's, revolves around the efforts of the peasant Nemorino to win the love of Adina. In desperation after being rejected by her, Nemorino purchases a love potion from Dr. Dulcamara, the 19th-century equivalent of a snake doctor. The potion, in reality Bordeaux wine, makes Nemorino bald, and he offends Adina with his arrogant manner of proposing marriage. She and her寄伴 Sergeant Belcore, head of the village garden. Meanwhile, the village women learn that Nemorino has inherited a large fortune from his uncle. Nemorino does not know about his inheritance, and thinks his new popularity with the women is due to a second bottle of potion he purchased. Adina discovers she is jealous of the women around Nemorino and must decide whether to marry him or Belcore. "The Elixir of Love" is staged by Francis J. Cullinan. Russell Patterson directs the Kansas City Lyric Opera. Matthew Foerschler, a special student in voice Kansas City, Kan., will sing in the chorus of the performance. "It is an opera that is not particularly easy to produce and it has been produced in so many ways that anything you do has been done before," Foerscher said. "The difference in our production is in the characterization of Nemorino. He is not played as a village idiot." Tickets for the opera are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office and may be purchased at the door if the performance is not sold out. Xanadu's reality falls short of dream By KEVIN MILLS Entertainment editor Like most utopias, however, Xanadu's perfection is only skin—er, celluloid—deep. In "Xanadu" magic prevails, dreams come true and the 1940s and 1980 coexist in utopian harmony. This maximally produced, minimally directed movie musical features visual entertainment of the highest degree. Lavish sets, stunning costumes and special effects please the eyes with frequency. But the magic stops there. Olivia Newton-John and Michael Beck turn in vacuous performances as, respectively, a Greek muse and a commercial artist. A Greek muse? The script is full of such adjectives as 'glorious', 'radiating' and a roller-string daughter of Zeus. Granted, the premieres for music have often been fantastic and far-fetched. But witty interiors are equally interesting. There is precious little wit in Xanadu. The story is glossy melody and never transcends a junior high sophistication. Beck is a struggling artist who paints poster reproductions of record album covers. Newton-John skates into his life and provides him with divine inspiration. Bek meets construction mogul Gene Kelly, who was inspired by the Newton-John museer in his life. Kelly convinces Beck to his partner in the opening of a nightclub, Xanadu. Xanadu is not your typical nightclub. It offers a rock band, a '40s big band, country music, disco and even disco's celebrated offspring, roller disco. How these musical forms compete under the same roof is a matter of speculation to the magic of an ambiguous, hazy script. One fantasy scene forges the '80s band with the '40s in a highly syncoped hybrid, but the music takes a backseat to the period dancers. Choreographers Kenny Ortega and Jerry Trent mix jitterbugging and modern dance into a natural blend. Spare Time saving graces. The choreography is directed at the ubiquitous camera rather than an audience at the foot of the stage. This enables the movie viewer to share the dance floor with the dancers. The choreographers even pay homage to Busby and his telideoscopic dance routine shot from the ceiling. The ensemble dance numbers are the movie's Universal Pictures has billed Xanadu as the "first, big, lavish old-fashioned music to utilize the new music." If the mediocre fare offered by the Electric Light Orchestra is indicative of the new music, then musicals would be better off in sticking with the old. Gene Kelly, Mr. Enthusiast himself, delivers a graceful, if limited, routine along with Newton-John. What he now lacks in athletic prowess is compensated by style. Newton-John sings five original songs by John Porter and Paul Mantello, undure, but perplexless will album songs. Gene Kelly fans may well wonder why he submitted to such an ill-conceived spectacle as Xanadu. Fans of musicals may wonder if this is the best the rock generation can come up with. Spare Time TODAY MUSIC Jay McShann, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Nation, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West The Janet Jameson Band, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Bonita Shortline, 9.30 p.m. at The Pladium ART "Benton's Bentons," "Americana from the Collection," and "From Drawings to Sculpture: The Creative Process" at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art Stephen Murielio and Tom Overhoiser, photography exhibit at the Lawrence Arts Center MOVIES Airplane, 7:18 and 9:16 at Hilcrest 3 Blue Lagoon, 7:30 and 9:30 at Hilcrest 2 Caddyshack, 7:20 and 9:20 at Hilcrest 1 Xanadu, 7:30 and 9:30 at Cinema Twin Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu, 7:30 and 9:30 at Cinema Twin Chuech and Chong's Next Movie, 7:20 and 9:20 at the Varsity Smokey and the Bandit Part II, 7:30 and 9:30 at the Granada Coming Home, 3:30 and 9:30 at the Union Comes a Horseman, 7:00 at the Union The Beatles at Shea Stadium/Magical Mystery Tour, midnight at the Union SATURDAY MUSIC Jay McShann, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Nation, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Heart, with Robert Palmer, 8 p.m. at the Starlight Theatre, K.C., Mo. The Janet Jameson Band, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Bonita Shortline, 9.30 p.m. at The Pladium THEATRE "The Elixir of Love," an opera presented by the Kansas City Lyric Opera, University Theatre at 8 p.m. SUNDAY MUSIC Big Band Dance with the Jazz Place Big Band, 6 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place ART "The Early Works of Claude Lorrain," a lecture by Marcel G. Roethlisberger, University of Geneva, at 2 p.m. in the Spencer Museum Auditorium MOVIES The Lacemaker, 2 p.m. at the Union KIDS SCHOOL the Fitness Center Student Discounts Available - Individualized Programs - Quality Equipment - Diet & Nutritional Counseling - Sauna & Hot Tub Marantha Christian Ministries - Professional Instruction FEATURES 6th & Maine 841-8540 GREAT AMERICAN RESTAURANT 205 W. 8th (Next to Mr. Bill's) Nachos Deli Sandwiches Quiche Jumbo Dogs Marinated Vegetables Salads Polish Sausage Homemade Chocolate Chip Cookies Tuesdays 7:00 pm Union Jayhawk Room Friidays 7:00 pm 1144 Rhode Island (Cormer of RI, 12th Sr) For more info call: Bdual Dvall 841-9254 Studer SAVE UP TO 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa • Use Your People Book MUNCHIES Open till 1:00 a.m. Wednesday thru Saturday The University of Kansas 1980-81 Concert Series Presents The Kansas City Lyric Opera in The Elixir of Love 图 A Comic Opera in English September 6,1980 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Box Office 864-3981 V asas ies University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Page 7 Advising program urged for KU foreign students By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter As many KU students will attest, enrolling at a major university can be an exercise in confusion and frustration—even if they have been familiar with American colleges all their lives. For students from Europe, Africa, South America or Asia, however, things can be even more puzzling. To help students from abroad understand academic requirements and ease into their class schedules, some students and faculty members at the Kansas university would like to see an advising program established for foreign students. Last semester, 1,563 foreign students, representing 95 countries, enrolled at KU. Most of the University's schools, however, have made few or no provisions for specialized advising of foreign students. GOOD ACADEMIC advising is especially important to foreign students, according to Mustapha Abderahmane, Algeria graduate student, because they almost never have a chance to participate in the summer orientation program that many American students go through. Many foreign students also face the additional task of trying to master the English language and attend regular classes at the same time. Ali Castro, Costa Rica sophomore. said her academic adviser was very helpful in explaining how the American system of education works and in helping her plan her first schedule. However, Castro said, she had a friend who advised failed to understand the limitations of a foreign student who is unfamiliar with the language, and the advisor recommended 18 hours of difficult classes. Some academic advisers simply are not used to working with foreign students, said George Wedge, associate professor of English. For example, foreign students often fare better if they fulfill math and science requirements before enrolling in courses that require a strong foundation. Some students are already familiar with the material covered in math courses and lab sciences, but could use the time to develop their skills in reading and writing English, Wedge said. FOREIGN STUDENTS coming to KU differ from American freshmen in several ways, Sofiana Olivera, Peru junior, said. Foreign students generally have a fairly good idea of what they want to study, whereas American students often take a year or two to decide on a course. Thus, proper advising can be more urgent for the foreign student she said. Also, foreign students make a large investment by coming to the United States. CLUBHOUSE T.G.I.F. at the Clubhouse. 150 Memberships available Wisconsin The Clubhouse 6th St. Phillips 66 Vista Restaurant T.G.I.F. at the Clubhouse. Beginning at 3:00 pm all single shot drinks only 50º. Each hour the price goes up only 10º until 10:00PM when all drinks return to their normal prices Happy Hours 4-8 Mon-Thurs 2 for 1 The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has no specialized program for advising foreign students, but some departments set aside a special adviser, said Steve Goldman, associate professor of English. planning from the start, she said, making it doubly important for them to use their time at the University as efficiently as possible. THE Wedge said he acted as the adviser to foreign students in the department of economics. IN THE SCHOOL of Education, any student with unique problems is referred to the dean for undergraduate or graduate programs, although foreign students generally are assigned to regular advisers. "There's a definite need for foreign student counselors in different departments," Olivera said. "When students get a job, either in their school or in another level, different things are expected of them than of American graduates." Olivera said she would like to see each school or department designate teachers to act as foreign student advisers. Interested advisers would be more attuned to the problems of foreign students, and if they didn't have all the Wedge said he had been working for several years to generate interest in establishing a program for foreign student advising. Foreign students who intend to return home to work need help in tailoring their education to fit the situations and cultures they will find there, Olivaera said. Students who hope to work in an employer need, however, probably will need a more knowledge of the world and its people, shesaid. departments, all staff members are accustomed to foreign students, he said. LII The School of Social Welfare has few foreign students, but any foreign undergraduate is advised by the director of the undergraduate department. No special provisions exist for graduate students. We'll give you that new look you want HAIR BENDERS Of the 10 major schools at KU, six said they made no special arrangements for the advising of foreign students. Those schools were: Architecture, Engineering, Fine Arts, Journalism, Law and Pharmacy. He has brought up the matter before the University Senate Committee on Foreign Students for the last two or three years, but it has not been a prominent item on the agenda and hasn't been discussed fully, he said. HAIR BE. foreign graduate students are advised to work under the general director of the master's program. Easy care styles for men & women Open Tues. Wed, Fri 9-5 Thurs. 10-6 Sat 9-2 842-9641 answers, they could refer the student to someone who did, she said. HAIR BENDERS 24th & Iowa MANY FOREIGN STUDENTS are unfamiliar with the classes offered within a department or school and may greatly from an adviser who could accustom with basic requirements and outline course options, Abderrahmane said. Featuring The Former Lead Singer of COLE TUCKEY TONIGHT AND TOMORROW MARC JACKSON AND THE BEATLES THE OFFICE OF Foreign Student Services is not allowed to do academic advising, said Clark Coan, dean of the office. "I think it would help to have someone available who specialized in foreign student advising, not that he would have to be limited to that," he would have to be limited to that, after two or three semesters, a student, he would out that he could have organized his weekly schedule differently and it would have been better." In the School of Business, no special programs exist for advising un- adjusted students. Cheap Pitchers and Drinks 8-9 $1.25 Highballs $1.50 Pitchers THE JANET JAMESON BAND Sunday - Special One Night Appearance BLUE RIDDIM BAND !REGGAE-SKA-DANCIN'! Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 693-842 892-630 Coming Events * September 12 * Kelley Hunt and The Kratics * September 10 * WESTWORLD * September 19 * Limousine The University Counseling Center is aware of the great cultural differences between foreign and American students, Linda Hedrick, Lawrence graduate student and part-time staff member of the Center, said. Tobert House Lawrence Opera House 1234567890 GO FOR HOME! Enter the home run derby Saturday, Sept. 6 at 9:45 a.m., Field East of Robinson Center For more information call 864-3456 RICK'S BIKE SHOP MOPEDS ph. 841-6642 1033 VERMONT Friends wish you luck on a big exam. Good friends stick around to see how you did. CHEMISTRY LAB CHEMISTRY LAB They say they were just hanging around killing time and by the way, "How did you do?" You tell them a celebration is in order and that you're buying the beer. "Look," one of them says, "If you did that well, buy us something special." Tonight, let it be Löwenbrau. SINCE 1970 BAR SHOWING TICKETS FOR BEER AND WINE AT THE BAR. Löwenbräu. Here's to good friends. © 1980 Beer brewed in U.S.A by Miller Brewing Company Maplewood, Wisconsin. Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Inflation causes rise in loans By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter The high cost of college education has made the KU financial aid office a popular spot for students, according to Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid. Traffic in the office of financial aid has increased dramatically during the last two years, Rogers said yesterday. Since the fall term began, most students have come to the office to apply for Guaranteed Student Loans, Rogers said. Guaranteed Student Loans interest loans made by banks, usually in the hometown of the applicant. So far, 3,896 students have received more than $9.9 million in GSL loans. RONNI WILSON, New York City sophomore, has been to the office of financial aid several times in the last two years seeking a GSL she applied for in July. "I need the money to help pay rent," she said. Wilson said that she received a Basic Educational Opportunity Grant but that it was not enough after tuition and books. Wilson also said that she worked part-time but that she did not earn enough money to live on. Financial aid is designed to fill the gap between what a student needs for educational and living costs and what a student earns or receives from his parents, Rogers said. Most students fall in the dependent, single category, he said. The budget for this category is based on what it would cost to live on campus. Living off campus is more expensive. Some students living off campus are finding that the gap is not being filled with more financial assistance applying for GSL loans, Rogers said. Rent increases are one reason that students living off campus are finding themselves short on funds. Since July 1979, housing costs have risen 18.1 percent according to a report by the Kansas Department of Human Resources. THE COST OF renting a one-bedroom apartment in Lawrence has increased $10 to $40 in some buildings since last semester. Twenty-eight of 30 Lawrence apartment managers contacted this week reported rent increases of 10 percent to 12 percent. The Jayhawker Towers Apartments, 1603 W. 15th st., increased rent by $35 on all apartments because of inflation and other factors. Bebau, manager of the Towers, said: MARK TIBBS, Wellington senior, 1390 Ohio, said his rent increased $100 this month after the new owner made a third bedroom out of a storage room. ment in the Trailridge Apartments, 2500 W. Sixth St., increased by $40 because of inflation, Ricky Pierson, manager, said. Tibbs and his roommate, Bob Rusnak, Stilwell senior, lived in the apartment during the summer and had planned to split the $250 rent. Instead, they found they had to split the $350 rent and find a third roommate. The rent for a one-bedroom apart- Although Tibbs and Rusnak have no complaints about the rent, they do complain about the cost of food. "The three of us spent $125 for each meal and were gone in one week," Rusnak said. Food prices rose 1.1 percent nationwide from June to July, the highest consumer price increase of the year, pointing to the Human Resources report. Rusnak said their food bill averaged $200 a month. Both Rusnak and Tibbs work and receive aid from their parents. Rusnak was employed to be a GSL loan, but that it was spent on rent, books, food and August rent. Bucky's 5 Cheeseburgers for only $2.25 with coupon One coupon per customer Good Thru 9/7. Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 "The system doesn't stop a person from jumping over the turntie and running out the door," he said. He wanted to steal a book will steal it." However, the system will prevent books from being spirited out of Watson. Watson Library employs a person to sit near the exit to watch for books that have not been checked out. The exit person is supposed to check purses, briefcases and bookbags. However, the library cannot detain a person who refuses to allow his belongings to be inspected, Malinowsky said. Some people take books of erotic art and pornography because they are too embarrassed to check them out, Malinowski said. Only a small number of people deliberately steal books. "Once we install this detection system, we won't have people going through briefcases and bookbags," he said. Jane Fonda and Jon Voight won Academy Awards for their portraits of a radically altered soldier's wife and a paranoid policeman. The effects of the Vietnam War on those at home, Bruce Dern and Robert Carrontie co-plan, "Duck Uckum." (127) Friday, Sept. 5 Comes a Horsman (1970) SWA FILMS "Most of the time, people who take books have picked them up by mistake or take them because they're in a hurry," he said. "Some of them probably have good intentions of returning them." in 1945 Wyoming, small farmers Jane Fonda and James Cohen. Her work in this beautifully photographed Western, directed by Alan McGraw, "What's a Doctor, Doe?" (119 min). Color. No studies have been done on the number of books lost each year at the University of Kansas, he said, but studies at other libraries show estimated yearly losses of 4 to 10 percent. MALINOWSKY SAID a really determined person still could find a way to steal books. Coming Home The Beaties at Shea Stadium (1964) Magical Mystery Tour If KU has been losing a similar percentage of books, the system should more than pay for itself, Malinowsky said. Roll up for the magical extravaganza with the Beatles. The first is the record of their lives (see if you can guess what George on is) as they their great early hits. Then climb aboard for "1 Am the Molecule Man," then others in this surreal adventure (65/52 min). Plus: "Brawnman's Condensed World" Color. 1200 M ill. night. Kendall Simmons, stacks supervisor at Watson, said that magnetic tape already had been attached to books in four levels of the library and that all the books would have the tape by March. Saturday, Sept. 6 Comes a Horseman 3:30, 9:30 Coming Home 7:00 The Beatles at Shea Stadium 12:00 Midnight Magical Mystery Tour 12:00 Midnight Sunday, Sept. 7 The Lacemaker A charming bitterwell love story about a strong-willed young woman who fails to understand the situation but finds pressure builds building up. Huppert (Viollete) is excellent as the young semateurs. By Claude Blythe (108 min). FrançoisSublitle. Color: 200. Library theft alarm to be installed book by hand, either on the book spine or on one of the pages. Monday, Sept. 8 Dr. Zhivago (1988) The tape must be attached to each A strip of magnetic tape will be placed in each book. When a book is checked out, the strip will be demagnetized, Malinowsky said. If the tape is not demagnetized, an alarm will sound when the person carrying the book walks through the detection gate. H. Robert Malinowski, associate dean of libraries, said the system would be used in the art, music, science and mathematics libraries, as well as in Watson Library. "According to the manufacturer, there are very few false alarms," Malinowsky said. A new library security system that will sound the alarm on book thieves is ready to be installed at four KU campus locations at Watson Lawson later this year. Boria Pastemake's famous novel is brought to the screen brilliantly by David C. Hare, with his 1970s film Sharl, Julie Christie, Tom Courtenay, Rod Stelger and Klaus Kinai, Freddie Young's sumptuous cinematography and 1975sumptuous Oscar wins (Oscar 187 min). Color: 7:30 unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00. All other admission fees are Union, 4th level, information 664-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. HE SAID THAT jewelry and metal objects would not trigger the alarm. "It's to keep the honest people honest," Malinowsky said. BAG SHOP Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves. & Sun. MEET THE CANDIDATES Saturday, September 6th 6:30 P.M. 4-H BUILDING DOUGLAS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS BUFFET SUPPER $3.00 DAN WATKINS, Candidate for Congress, Speaker Other Speakers All local Democrat candidates Everyone Welcome! DEMOCRAT COOKOUT Paid for by the Douglas County Democrat Committee Ethan Smith, treasurer (Located at 2449 Iowa, Holiday Plaza) SNA FILMS Presents: "A PURE PERFECT MOVIE EXPERIENCE." — Leo Lerman, Vogue Magazine "Isabelle Huppert gives one of the best performances of the year." — Bob Lape, ABC-TV "Isabelle Huppert is marvelous! And 'The Lacemaker' is marvelous!" — Gene Shallt, NBC-TV ISABELLE HUPPERT in The Lacemaker A CLAUDE GORETTA FILM A CALMONT/ACTIONNEW YORKER FILMS RELEASE Sunday, Sept. 7, 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium—Kansas Union - no refreshments allowed- 1/2 PRICE PLANT SALE - Floor Plants Entire selection of foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. Thousands of plants to choose from, large and small all foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. - Hanging Plants - All Foliage all foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. We also carry an excellent selection of plant supplies * Fertilizer * Pottery * Macrame * Soil * Baskets * Plant Books and More . . . -3 --ask Pence Garden Center West *914 West 23rd * 842-1596 Place an ad. Tell the world. 864-4358 ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS Needs qualified student delegates to work with ASK lobbying activities. - ASK contains delegates from the Kansas Regents Institutions. - Delegates discuss and priority educational issues pertaining to the wants and needs of the Kansas Higher Education student. GET INVOLVED Deadline: 5 p.m. Sept. 12th Contact Jeff Evans, Campus Director 105B Kansas Union Associated Students of Kansas Students working for students University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Page 9 Rent jump upsets Stouffer Place, poll indicates By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter Most residents of Stouffer Place Apartments are unhappy because of rent increases and the need for minor changes. A survey taken earlier this summer, The survey, conducted by the Stouffer Neighborhood Association, found that residents thought that needed repairs, such as to bathroom flooring, and on painting and cracked plaster, had not been done. They also were unhappy with rents, which were recently raised from $110 to $115 a month for furnished one-bedroom units. Utilities are not included in the rent. RESIDENTS RANKED air conditioning as the most important need for the complex, although Jerry Skillett, chairman of the neighborhood association, said the survey was taken during this summer's heat wave. some residents installed room air conditioners, but most apartments are not. The Stouffre association was organized in the summer of 1978 when After the rent concerns, ranked second, residents said they wanted additional lighting near the new sidewalks. residents asked the KU office of housing for new sidewalks. Three new sidewalks have been installed in the complex. percent would like to rent unfurnished apartments. Residents ranked that 10th on the survey. Residents in the one- and two-bedroom apartments were extra bedridden, with their fourth bedroom. The complex has no storage space. Residents ranked that fifth on the list, and many of the residents have lived in other locations. They have their own furniture, about 25 SIXTH ON THE LIST of concerns was a day care center for residents' children. There are about one hundred children in the complex. Some residents have organized a cooperative day care center run by different mothers in the complex. Seventh on the list of priorities was a recreation building for the apartments. She should be because of the impending enrollment situation area might help attract residents. The residents' eighth concern was Residents last year requested and received a chain-link fence between 19th Street and a play area in the complex, Skilllett said. more playground equipment. There are three play areas in the complex. OTHER CONCERNS on the list in- telligence utilities, a storm shelter and better lighting. About half of the residents said they thought the laundry facilities in the basement of Building 1 were inadequate. Residents said the apartments needed to be kept cleaner and cooler. Also among residents' concerns was the size of refrigerators in buildings 1,2 and 3. When kitchens in the complex were remodeled several years ago, full-size refrigerators were installed in most apartments, but 37 units still have the old small refrigerators. Only about a third of these appliances in those apartments said small refrigerators were adequate. Some residents of Building 14 complained last year about roof repairs, but theirs was most of the residents were satisfied with overall maintenance of the buildings. Skillett said the association included a representative from each building. THE BEST TIME TO WATCH COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PG Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7.20 & 9.20 R also midnight Fri & Sat 'Night Games' Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7.30 A 9.30 2. Caddyshack 7. 20 & 9. 20 3. Airplane 7:30 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 7:30 & 9:40 1. Xanadu 7:30 8:40 2. The Fiendish Plot of Dr Fumanchu 7:30 & 9:30 E Sunset CITY West 6th St. 843-9172 Urban Cowboy Grease XGALIBUR Mary Louise We are glad to welcome Carolyn Pool to our professional staff. Hair Cutting For Men And Women Full Service Salon Of Westminster REDKEN Products We use and recommend Redken products For Appointment 841-7667 2711 W. 6th, Suite D Lawrence, Ks. JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6th & Michigan H SkL Travel offers a unique, fun and inexpensive way to explore the world known for its own petite Palau Island, Florida, and Colorado possibilities for other travel ideas are almost endless. Explore mindful minds and people power to promote these new adventures. Outdoor recreation encompasses the activities of campers, volunteers, and staff. Baiting Club as well as many official outdoor events are held at various locations. We fill KU student prescriptions and offer ★ Free Delivery ★ Discount Prices SUN TRAVEL Individual patient records Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book sua outdoor recreation SUA sua films Just like the big shows downtoftown, only better for Midsize. We are looking into expansion for less. We are looking into expanded moving in Midcity areas including Popular series. Summer series, Midcity series and Popular series. For a series and Sundays series. And for the 1980s. Fine Arts We want your new ideas and input for the 1980-81 film series. The Fine Arts area of SUA acts to supplement the 'arts activities' of the University. People with ideas and energy are needed for staging workshops, performances, exhibitions and the arts areas literature art, drama, music and dance. SUA Special Events SUA Student Union Activities is now taking applications for committee membership. You can be a part of the exciting plans of SUA by sharing your time, talents, and ideas in these areas . . . iR Chess, Table Tennis, Bridge, Backgammon, Football, Go, Arm Wrestling and Quarterback Club. We are looking for people to coordinate these events and others. FORUMS indoor recreation New ideas are always welcome for other indoor recreational activities. We are best known to students for our excellent large concerts, but we also bring to KU a lot of smaller acts that include jazz groups and local bands. One of our special events is the outdoor concerts that include several group shows. Special events involves a lot of students when it comes to promoting a show. Security, ushers, staff and light crew are areas that must be considered for every show. Check out us and see what you can do to help. nationally recognized people to the university and thought provoking programs. We also keep in touch with everyone around us and in the local community who have something innovative to share with us. We need innovation people like you to help us with ideas, issues, lectures, discussions and debates are all part of SUA Forums. pr public relations SUA Public Relations is responsible for promoting the image and activities of our programming board to the creative team and the University community. Anyone with creative ideas for promoting SUA is encouraged to apply. This coming year's activities include fall and summer orientation and the Midday Dinner. We need your help in these programs. Experience is not a necessity, however interest is required. Deadline for sign up is Sept. 5. For more information stop by the SUA office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477. Get involved—SUA is for everyone! 5TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS 9TH STREET MASSACHUSETTS Weavers Inc. Serving Lawrence . . . Since 1857 Weaver's Inc. 3 WAYS TO CHARGE AT WEAVER'S Weaver's Charge Account Great Fashion Buys! master change VISA' master charge Shop Saturday 9:30 A.M. To 5:30 P.M. PATTERN 235 Pick A Pair of Plaid Jumpers Your Choice: 29.00 Great fashion look with your favorite shirt, cowl neck top or sweater, these wool and polyester plaid jumpers. Far left, grey sweater on back Left, red kilt skirt with fringe, square neck. Junior sizes. 2nd Floor Pre-Season Sale! Tweed, Corduroy & Velveteen Blazers Outstanding Values! Excellent Selection! Reg. 50.00 to 75.00 39.88 to 48.88 Important addition to your wardrobe—a smartly styled blazer to top your favorite skirts, pants and dresses. From our large collection, choose from polyester and cotton or 100% cotton corduroys; 100% wool or wool and polyester blends and 100% cotton velveteens. Superb colors. All fully lined. Junior and Misses sizes. A 1234567890 Sportswear—2nd Floor SALE! BONNIE DOON KNEE SOCKS NYLON OPAQUES Reg. 2.25 Pr. Tails Reg. 2.50 Pr. 3/5,40 3/6,00 CABLE OR FLAT ORLON OPAQUES Reg. 2.50 Pr. 3/6.00 Talls Reg. 3.00 Pr. 17/20 ARGYLES Talls Reg. 4.00 Pr. 3/9.60 Phone 843-6360 Hoslery—1st Floor --- 1 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Scorecard Sports Calendar 8:05 p.m.-Kansas City 7:15 p.m.-Milwaukee (CN, & B) KAMK, KAMK-KKY, NIL 11 p.m.-RUJ Club Vy nil 11 p.m.-KC County, RF. 2d and Ivory 6 8:35 p.m. — Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Indians, (KMK2-MB, KKKX-FM) 1:50 p.m. - Hanesma College Royal at Cleveland Indiana, (KKMZBLE, KKMXFK) Cleveland Indians Chefs vs. Oakland Dodgers Arrowhead Stadium (KCMO M) Sports Quiz Q Today's question— What trackman leads KU in total number of NCAA champion- ship? Yesterday's answer— While the first answer that may come to mind is mire Gilen Cunningham, who was an All-American pick in 1932 and 1933, Tom Poor, high jumper, was KU's first track and field Athlete, Poor, who was chosen in 1923, cleared the f-6-foot-mark. A AMERICAN LEA EAST Major-league Baseball W 8 L Pct. GB New York 82 51 417 .17 Boston 72 70 564 .9% Detroit 72 58 534 .14 Milwaukee 72 68 539 .13 Toronto 68 43 521 .12 Toronto 56 77 432 .8% W L Pct BAL GB Kansas City 85 49 694 - - Missouri 60 57 1283 - - Oakland 66 69 489 19% Minnesota 58 77 430 19% Chicago 56 76 424 28% Nebraska 56 80 391 36% Seattle 57 85 384 36 Yesterday's Games NATIONAL LEAGUE Seattle 7, Baltimore 1 Oakland 7, Boston 1 New York 8, California 3 Milwaukee 9, Kansas City 5 W L W Pct. Philadelphia 72 68 1.04 Pittsburgh 72 62 1.03 Tennessee 72 62 1.03 St. Louis 59 72 1.40 New York 59 72 1.40 Chicago 59 72 1.40 Yesterday's Games Montreal 4, San Francisco 0 San Diego 3, New York 2 Philadelphia 3, Los Angeles 2 Los Angeles W L Pet. GB Houston 75 78 564 Houston 75 78 564 Atlanta 68 65 311 San Francisco 68 65 311 San Francisco 68 65 311 footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters,Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 [access from Greenwich Village] SR SR MOTOBECANE FRANCE Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE -ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 843-1211 BUY OR SELL LIST OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 731 New Hampshire 9 am-5 pm "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalma 2:1 and Acts 4:25 "IF MY PEOPLE, WHICH ARE CALLED BY MY NAME, SHALL HUMBLE THESEMELS, AND PRAY AND SEEK MY FACE, AND TURN FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN WILL I HEAR FROM HEAVEN, AND WILL FORGIVE THEIR SIN, AND HEAL THEIR LAND." 2nd Chronicles 7:14. "The glory of God is to conceal a matter, but the honor of kings is to search it out." Probably a great cause why God permits devils, evil libellers, God-for-skeans wretches to so get the upperhand over His people and their families. In such matters he takes headofthe command to "TURN AWAY FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS"; in such matters as Sabbath Observance, Strict Chastity and Modes in dress, Honesty, Hating Covenetiousness, etc., etc. Consider Hebrows 12:14 and Pharisees 11:37. In WITHOUT WHICH NO MAN SHALL SEE THE LORD. Some one has truly said: "Heaven is cheap at any cost!" devil and hell — everybody is doing it! In the days of John Calvin a terrible plague broke out in Geneva. It was very contagious and great multitudes were dying. On account of its awful contagion most of the preachers refused to attend the dying; they said they knew it it was their duty, but they had rather "go to the devil" than the infested areas! In Numbers 15:32-36 there is the record of God ordering a man stoned to death for "gathering sticks upon the sabbath day." In our day we may well wonder if there are not a lot of so-called God's people who would prefer to be stoned and then gather sticks on the sabbath day; such as golf sticks, baseball sticks, goat-post sticks, fishing, or sticks, etc. According to our diagnosis and witness bearing, there be many who claim to be God's people and Christians, but many who claim not to be. In order to "way," they reserve to themselves the liberty of judgment regardless of what the Bible says, or the discipline of the denomination to which they are committed. In order to "be" their religion, they will willing to run the risk of disbelieving God, and going to the TENNIS "If it smell evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve; but as for me and my house, we will serve The Lord." – Joshua 24:15. Probably this testimony will offend many, however, you may should pay it no attention unless when you joined Christ's Church you sought sincerely to obey such Scriptures as be present in the life of your community BETWEEN BY THE MEMORIES OF GOD, THAT YOU PRESENT YOUR BODIES A LIVING SACRIFICE, HOLY, ACCEPTABLE TO GOD, WHICH IS YOUR REASONABLE SERVICE!" Jazz Up 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club At Paul Gray's Jazz Place P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Tonite & Saturday Jay McShann & his 7 piece Group— Jay is just back from another Sunday successful European Tour! Premier of our new Sunday Night Big Band Dance —our 15-piece Big Band plays Count Basie dance music for Listening & dancing From 6-9 P.M. links & Sandwiches A Drinks & Sandwiches Available!!! We Give Discounts Attention: Thesis Copiers Below are the comparative prices for July 1980 making 5 copies of a 100-page thesis onto 25% rag paper-collated. We called and found: Kinko's... $35.00 Lawrence Printing... $35.00 House of Usher... $35.00 Encore Copy Corps... $26.25 Why pay more? That's why you'll say Encore University College Copenhagen Lawrence Institute Kronen ENCORE COPY CORPS (We also feature typing, editing, and binding) "Your One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa (Holiday Plaza) 842-2001 Village Inn PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT All You Can Eat Pancakes $1.79! Served With 2 Link Sausages 4:00 p.m. to Close 821 Iowa Lawrence (midnight til 1:00 AM) FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS Drinks $1.00 GAMMONS SNOWS 23rd & Ousdahl (Southern Hills Center) University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 Page 11 The University Dailv Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one tire two tires three tires four tires five tires six tires seven tires eight tires nine tires 15 workhorse for fewer $2.20 $2.20 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $3.25 $3.25 $6.25 $6.25 $8.50 $8.50 $10.50 Minimal word AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday > 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday > 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday > 9 p.m. Thursday Tuesday > 9 p.m. Friday Wednesday > 9 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The 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 Elijah Hall 864.4358 Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be issued in person or simply by calling the Kauai Business office at 843-1483. ANNOUNCEMENTS DIABETES SEMINAR Monday, Sept. 8, 7:30 a.m. Memorial Hospital, "Home blood mucositis monitoring as an aid in better control." A special clinic will be held at the university and interested staff at the university. *9-8 Visit the Book End. In Quantitril's Flea Market, for quality used books at reasonable prices. Weekends 10-5. 9-5 Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible Study, every Tues 7.30 p.m. Partners A & B Union. The Salt Block. 10-2 SCHOLARLY LITERARY TECHNICAL HOOD BOOKSELLER. We also have 25,000 paper booklets. Come in and browse our books you see at 141. Massachusetts, 814-644-6732. 814-644-6732 ENTERTAINMENT Looking for something on Sunday? TRY THE CLUB LOISE, 508 Louiset, 842-261-7300. Open from outside our building at 1 a.m. Membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 FOR RENT For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out of part rent. Call 812-4185. tf 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 1½ bath, attached garage, all appliances, pool, townhouse, also looks. Parkway Townhouse, 26th and Randolph, 842-3800, 11f JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS Welcomes K.U. Students & Faculty From $205.00 available ONE BEDROOM. ONE BEDROOM WITH STUDY and TWO BEDROOM APTS. From $205.00 *A) Free Shuttle Bus to Campus B) 24 Hour Care E) Laundry Facilities on Site $^*F)$ 10 Month Lease Available JAYHAWK OFFERS: Maintenance Service ) Indoor & Outdoor Pools CALL 842-4444 C) 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service P) 10 Month Lease Available *G) Furnished or Unfurnished Model Available B) 24 Hour Security C) 24 Hour Emergency B) Inued & Outdoor Pools C) Laundry Facilities on Site Models Available 524 Frontier Rd. #2 3 bbm townhouse with burning fireplace 4 will Take 1 wheel 2500 168. 743-733 684. 743-733 2. bedroom ant, small efficiency api; 3. bedroom ant, large efficiency api; 4. comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 841-670- 4502. Newly remodeled rooms, fire alarm system, fire suppression equipment, 843-329-3288 weekdays between a. am, and b. pm. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ garage with automatic opener, kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4458.5 a.m.-5 p.m. For rent now at the area I building. 932 Room out and room in. Owner. Outer and inner waiting room. celephin room and 3 inner rooms with bedroom. Owner. Parking lot. Parking lot. Ideal for ophthalmologist, optometrist or medicine doctor. Can be made to visit online. Call 843-2104 or 843-0777. tf For Rent Now, large studio, completely furnished. Has desk. Room for conference calls. Paid. $100 deposit. $375 monthly. Could be used for office. Call 843-6777 or 843-0777. Enjoy West Meadow Condo. A brand new building, burning fireplace. Central air, microwave, comp. didwash器, swimming pool, golf course. More information call 841-4053. 9-9 Village Carder Corp.安防管理 *Uniserval 1 & 2* Buffalo carder apartments. Annual car hire with railcar permit. quotient loot, $12 books with small office. quotient loot, $12 books with small office. quotient loot, $12 books with small office. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdrms, study, study room, laundry room, garage, central air. No pets. For more information call 482-4453. a.m.-5 p. 9-30 Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrence, family 4; kitchen, dining, ding room, liv- ing space, $125/month. $225/month. $425/month. No pets For more information call 824-425-3858 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 available now, large older four bedroom four-bedroom apartment in New York, 101 Massachusetts. $360 mo. Call 643-5750. Sale ends February 25th. For fall or spring, Naimshlim offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of being in a large building; it, weekday maid service to clean your room and bath full schedule or social activities with your roommate; or if an apartment isn't what you want, HALL. 1800 Naimshlim Drive, 843-8539, trf HALL. 1800 Naimshlim Drive, 843-8539, trf Lovely. Furnished up. For one graduate university, 250 sq ft. includes utilites. No pets. Smokings 18%. 1 bdmr. apt. available immediately. Call Cindy=842-4444 9-5 3 bark office; basement贴 $300 board. All uil 建筑;basement贴 $300 board. All uil designs. Office space $1,499. 3. barm. apt. $250 month. All utilities paid. 4. bill. 843-734-850, 8-4-15 Jolie Room in house. Prefer upperclass,grad. Room in college. Please close to campus. Call 842-5882. Male roommate to rent apt. Kitchen, laundry, pool, cent, air conditioning, utilities paid (exe phone) Foos table . . . party( exe phone) Eve 841-5740. 3234 W. 26th St. Boston, MA 02116 BRAND NEW FOUR-PLEX! For only $25 per month. You can live close to shopping, restaurants and a distance to KU. And you'll be the first to receive a free bottle of air, refrigerator, disposal. Diluck Gick Edmondson Real Estate at 841-7844 or Bob Mondson Real Estate at 9093 to see. 9-15 mondson Real Estate. Boomhouse needed-Apt. near Jayhawk Broadway needed-Apt. near Jawahar and waage pred. Prefer Senior. 749-1733. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-909-3600. AUCOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-909-3600. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843- 1386. tf New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattresses set. Be sure to check on prices. Ledom's Furniture. 1200 New York St. 833-3228. 71. Toyota Corona, 28 m.p.g. Receive valve job, rings, clutch, new tires, 4-speed. 843, 5288 eves. 9-5 1979 MUSTANG. 4 spd. 4 cyl. A.C. 27,00 m. silver w./red. 841-1999. 8-10 1976 Corvette, PS. PB, AT, T-top, AT. 1976 Honda 750 super sport. Both in good condition. 841-2567. 9-5 G gas steve $30. G.E. frg. $45. Twin Beds $20. Call 842-2583 at 6 p.m. 9:5 BOKONO IMPORTS LTD. Sale 20% off all paraphernalia. E 12. Eth. B 581. 9-5 Epiphone guitar FT 146, 165, shadow pick-up 40, mandolin $30, 843-4050, 9-5 Lowest prices in town on Houseplants. Come see us today! West Side Greenhouse. 440 Florida, 842-0039, 9-5 Mon.-Sat. 9-8 DOCTORS HOSPITALS GREENS, SIZES INDEX OF THE PATIENTS ADD $1 POSTAGE & HANDLING. SEND TO PACCHI, BOX 4545, FT. LAUD, FL. 33338. 9-5 1974 Dainton globus 4 speed, excellent companion vehicle with maintenance.耳 843-787-25 见 p. 109. Yard Sale: Encourage nice clothing (Jr. 9-14). Yard Sale: Encourage nice clothing (Jr. 9-14). Yard Sale: Encourage nice plants. Ft. 12-8. Sat. 9-12 at 760 illumination. Ft. 12-8. Sat. 9-12 at 760 illumination. Fender Acoustic guitar. Excellent condition. Brownstone for easy playing. 9-8 Allyn at 842-1663. 35-Watt Amp. Braided aluminum, 6-point featured great features. In excerpts. 844-6610. **Bookcases** $30, custom orders taken on January 14, 2017. M. J. Stough. 9-10 8892. 10 spd. bike. Exc. cond. reasonable. 843- 8593 after 5 p.m. p Joe. 9-5 2 bdm bungalow, recent extensive remodel 843.736 floodplain; 953.250. Call 843.732; or George Waters 842-943-094; or Keith Stanley. 843-736 Mass. 843.321. Hafeld Real Estate. 9-12 Mass. 843.321. 1971 Camaro—Beautiful throughout. Must call Andy at 843-904-6982. Call Andy at 843-904-6982. Men's blue star sapphire, 10kt white gold ring with 2 diamonds. Retail $255, asking $150. Call Caron 864-220-295. 9-5 1977 Yamaha RD 400, new condition, sporty and economical, catalog 681-8633 Pioneer XS-500 Receiver 116 Mantz 4G Speakers 750 Like new 182-947 83-121 *** * To Reel to Reel AKAI 400-D-88. Top of the Reel to Reel AKAI 356-D-8 3-weeks. Leave name and nure 2356-D-8 3-weeks. Leave name and nure CONN Alto Xasphone for sale. Excellent Condition. Call 841-7274 after 5 p.m. 9-5 1964 Chevy 4-door. S27-4V, A3. 3 speed man- ufactured. Chevy 4-door. B51-4V, B9-10 B51-4V, B9-10 B51-4V, B9-10 Mannariz transmit Model 18, 40 watt/cha- man at 0.2% distortion, excellent conditio- n, girls, 10-speed, Raleigh, pedometer, meter, good condition, 911-645 817 price phone, microphone. 864-2934. 9-10 Blue Plymouth Fury III-air. Call Alder at 843-1772. (50c off with people book coupon) 9-8 Papers coming due? Like *new* electric type- ware, Power return. $140. Also *new* type- ware. 1976 Kawasaki KZ 400, good condition. 841. 4554 Drawing Table 30" x 42" and padded stool for sale. Barely used, like new condition. $135. Call 842-0250 after 5. 9-11 Misc. DR & LR Furniture; incl. 5 pe. Dl, Lounge chair and Blinds. Call after 5. Pier. 78 Mazda GLC, ex. cond., best offer. 842- 5152. 9-11 Garage Sale, 1713 St. Andrew Drive, Drive (Amal) Walker, Drafty, Drofa, Tiles, Houseware, Bicycles, Clothing, Toying, Mice, Sat. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-3 p.m. Double Bed. Mattress, Box springs, Bedding. $100 or Best Offer. Call 9-10 2945. Dipolar Senior. 14 ft. Sailboat. Good condition. Trailer, lifejacket, maddies, instructions. Pried to sell. 842-9227. 9-11 75 Mustang 2, 4 cyl, new radials, luggage rack, inspected, excellent condition $2.300 call Tom after 6 p.m. at 843-512. 9-11 HELP WANTED Immediate opening for talented singers. Immediate opening for ASTA. **B-5** 骨架 841-619. **B-5** Buckey's Drive-In is now taking applications for new employment. In apply in person between 10am and 5pm. Wanted student that has had experience in ice cube machine and commercial refrigeration to work 2 or 3 hours for. Valid Commercial Hydration, 844-965-4. 845-965- Bucky's Drive-In 2120 W. 9th 9-5 Research Assistant (half to full time) to develop and implement drug in laboratory animal pharmacology required of basic laboratory science. Prefer molecular biology. Applicates with prior animal and analytical chemistry experience. Perform monthly, depending on qualifications and pervious time. Submit resume to DEP University Kansas. Lawrences, K 6004. Applications must indicate Affirmative Action Action Number 9-5 Assistant Project Director-Youth Coordination to initiate and coordinate alternative drug abuse prevention project. Seek participation in other community-based educational initiatives. Schedule a Bachelor degree with some graduate experience. Equal opportunity employment experience required. Equal opportunity employment requirements to Douglas County Drug Abuse Council, U.S. Department of Justice Law Enforcement Code 097 184-3888. Research Assistant/Associate (full time) to manage research and training in cephalothin prodrugs. Minimum requirements of bachelor's degree in chemiscience, or equivalent, or be given to M.S. or Ph.D.'s with prior research experience and ten months, depending on qualifications. Submit resume to Dr. J. Stella, Pharm. Chem. Department, University of Hawaii at Kaua'i, KS 65449. Applications close September 5. Contact Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Immediate positions open for part-time and full-time work. Please refer to our website. Workers must work entire morning or afternoon at the door physical work. Apply in person at the York office of Manus, on 15th March. York's blacks east of Mason, on 15th March. G. P. Lloyd's West is now taking applications for a campus party representative. Involvement in campus organization or security destroys. Please apply in position 925 lows. Photographers Wanted: Experienced pho- graphicians with own education. Reliable people should man name, phone or email. Born Bernstein Photography, Box 530, Lawrence, KS- 9-5 downtown wanted to recruit businessman to join the firm. downtown wanted to recruit businessman to join the firm. Early Application Corp. 25th and Iowa County Corp. 24th and Iowa County Corp. THE CLEAN is now auditioning for the THE CLEAN is now auditioning for the new wave. Call 841-2220. p-9 Matured house man wanted for sorority. Call 843-4472. 9-10 Study, Opportunity—Local, Manufacturing needs to cater to local needs over night baby sitter for bright rooms. Sixth grade boy on occasional basis to allow busi- ness on school days. Call 9-98 Basil 841-7417. (Home) Call 9-98 Basil 841-7417. (Home) Needed Immediately--School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student in a disability. Lift training hours: all Dana Wray 842-915, 841-279, 843-1011. The University of Kansas Audio-Reader team is a full-time university program specialist. This person will elicit listeners and coordinate communication between the university's eligible listeners and coordinate communications with external organizations. The Audio-Reader community shall manage the Audio-Reader Community. Light housework three to four hours week- ly. Must have transportation. 824-6507-908 ATTENTION SKIERS! Part-time student in 1980-1981 school year. Job involves promoting for commission plus free travel. Call or email: Parkade Flash, Columbia, M6250. Parkade Flash, Columbia, M6250. care staff needed for extended day $310/hr. to care staff B41-6721 or $310/hr. to Care Jack Hammel B41-6721 or school age children. Application deadline is 8 p.m. We are an equal opportunity en- ployee. required. Background in public relations, art and graphic design experience, editing and publishing skills, and members of small towns. Travel required. Job description 9-11-80. Position available on a seasonal basis. Reader Network, 150 W. IIh, Lawrence, MA. We are an equal opportunity employer. Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Indicate blue backpack taken from my apt, at 1338 Ohio. #86-2731 or 86-2731. No questions asked. #9-16 I Counter girls needed. Work 2-8 nights per week. Apply at Bum Sum Weeks. 2054MAY Lost: A set of keys with a Brown and yellow key chain, with cats and mice on them. If found contact 864-6273. 9-5 Salesperson (male or female) needed at partition desired. Call Duane Morris 615-840-2593. Lost: My passport 8-26 between University Terrace apt. 417 and Lawrence High School before 8:30 a.m. Maroon cover. 842-0128. 8-8 Wanted: Passport was lost and found by the student who he did not receive it. Student read this design to phone 864-3617 from owner of passport to whom gave it. LOST NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE TABLE ON Monday nights your membership card is valid for all night long. Only at your place, THE TABLE IN LOISE where "Partying is our day." NOTICE THE CLUB LOUISHE TGIF TONIGHT 3 for 1 Highballs 508 Locust 842-9429 7-8 p.m. DRINK AND DROGWN every Monday night drink a cocktail, then go to McDonalds on 8th ¢h) $4.00 girls have $5.00; boys have $7.00 $12.00 MISCELLANEOUS PULLIANA MUSIC DOWNTOWN- LARGE- lawrence 792 Open daily, 30. Thurs. lawrence 792 Open daily, 30. Thurs. EPISCOPALIANS. READ THIS! Our Services Begin This Week And Everyone Is Welcome. —Holy Eucharist Thurs. 12 Noon on Campus At Danforth Chapel -Sunday Evening At 5:00 At Canterbury House 1116 Louisiana (just south of GSP/Corbin) The Crossing 618 West 12th Good For Free Game Of Space Invaders With Any Sandwich Good For Any Free Game With Sandwich Purchase Yello Sub 530 West 25th PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 TENNIS PLAYERS. Has the hot summer your string and grip) and the cool winter your string and grip) Call David at 841-703-6556 good strings and grips. Member Professional Stringer and K-U. Variety Tennis Stringer. Is copying driving your牟牟? Don't let the kinks out of your capitals stop you from taking the kinks out of your capitals. LOUISE'S Friday Afternoon Special $1.25 pitcher/s 656 schooners 1000 Mugs Singing messages for all occasions Deliv- ing to Lawrence ASSTA Singing Telegrams. 841-610-5977 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. **ASTA** Singing Telegrams, 814-619-698. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortion to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth attendance to Tuba. Tubal ligation 6/30- appt call 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. 4401 W. 109th St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax headquarters is a community of people who are interested in helping you question or just want to talk, call or drop a phone. You can also contact us, concern, drug information, suicide prevention, drug problem problems, other personal problems that we can help you talk about. We can also help you get in touch with someone special and allow them to abide by our rules. 814-2548 or drop by 814-3096 anytime. We never close. Headquarters is a place for people to get married Dg Co. and private donations. 9-8 Pledges, Pledges have your fun we know walkout's just begun. Hettwer and Ellis leading the way, But upon your return you'll have to pay. Love, AΦ activities. HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. Everyday 7-10 p.m. you can enjoy $1.00 hibiscus (75c) or $2.00 garden (the aerial sphere of The Club Louise, 508 Louse, 842-924). "Farting is our business." LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louise on Wednesday nights). Drinks are free and no cover charge. Only at the Club Louise, 508 Sherbrook, 842-929-829. 9-30 En practice daily 6 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. 923 Nennessee. Public lecture by Zen master, Kansas. Public lecture by Zen master. p.m. Jay-hawk room Kansas Union Reform- hack 6-8. For information 842-701-701. 9-5 OPERATION FRIENDSHIP welcomes Intro- cation members 1629 H 19th, September 8, 841-8001 SUPER TIGF at THE CLUB HUOLE, 3 for night. From 7 to 8 p.m., every Friday night. Let ASTA tuck you in tonight. We'll serve them with our new Asting Telegrams, 91-416-6190, 9-5 ASTING Telegrams, 91-416-6190 PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY. willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern based company, our part-time internship requires a Master's degree information, call 817-563-1021, Monday through Friday, 8:45-12:45. --to run: Copy due: MONDAY ... Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY ... Tuesday 3 p.m. SUN TRAVEL Weekend Getaways Presents: The Renaissance Festival September 13 $10.00 (includes transportation and admittance) SUA will transport you back to a time where wandering minstrels, jugglers, and sword fights are common. See for yourself that chivalry is not dead. For more info, drop by the SUA office, or call 864-3477. Reservation deadline Sept. 8. --to run: Copy due: MONDAY ... Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY ... Tuesday 3 p.m. TOIE AT LOUISE'S BAR with $1.25 pitchers, 65c schooners and 50d draws. Every Friday from 2 to 1 6. Be there -Aloha! BIG BLUE IS COMING—Sept. 11th at the Satellite Union. 9-5 In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more goodies this SATURDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the items are $10 each only. $6 only, drinks and drowned at only $6. LOUSE CLUB, $50. Loctau 84-92492. LOQUES AVAILABLE "Partying is our business." Finally roommate needed to share apt. at: 9315 Sheridan Ave, Denver, CO 80210. $118 cash bills. If interested, call 811-456-4567 Instruction in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu Monkey, Preying Manus. Ki741-750. BIG BLUE IS COMING-Sep 11 at the Satellite Union Susie' The Indian Earth Cosmetics Representative will be at the Attic Sat, Sept 6 to 11.90 a.m. to 4.00 p.m. Come learn how to use Indian Earth. 9-5 Commuting? From Kansas City to Law- ence, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Debble (816) 942-0660 (evenings) 9-9 *** Pleasant Aquarius female invited to meet with attractive Libra male. Call 864-2647. 9-12 LOUSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUSE Everyday and $15 kitten. 7 and Mihch. "Partying" with $15 kitten. The Moffitt Beer Bar is now holding quities only. Call 842-5068, 843-9344, 844-7101 or 844-6152. ECKANKAR: A way of Life. Free Intro- mation. 1, 2, 3 p.m. Pearl Room, Kansas Union TAKE a break after classes at LOUSE TAKES a break after afternoon supervision days until 6 BOKONOON IMPORTS LTD., Incense sale船 with purchase of $12. EURN 8-95 841-3600 89-53 Its Friday and TOGI is wild at THE HARBOR LITES. All pitcheres only 1.30 from their hometown. The Harbour Lites 'T-Shirt to memorate, the HARBOR EXPRESS leaves you in memory, the HARBOR EXPRESS leaves for Memorial Stadium. It's a trip the HARBOR EXPRESS leaves. 16031 Massachusetts, first-class dive. SERVICES OFFERED Have you had trouble losing weight or regaining it? You can unravel it in areas such as school job. You can change this and hymns you call. Call 843-195 for more information. 5-201 Quality repair work performed on most devices is carried out by a licensed technician–portable TV's, stores, electronic appliances, also most types of audio/electronic equipment. A detailed estimates given. Call 843-1827 after 5:00 p.m. Have you had trouble losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are unmotivated to improve this and hypnotherapy help. Call 843-1953 for more information. 9-5 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2½ EACH HOUSE OF USHE: 238 MAJESTIC STREET & LAWRENCE STREET 813-767-8111 Kintuin's tutus. It worked for Albert. For Kintuin's grandfather, it was 541-743 years. English grammar. Cursive letters. German. English. Greek. French. The University Daily Job resumes prepared by a personnel professional. Get an early start on the fall campus interviews. 841-8664. 8-12 LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes with other students. Beginner, Advanced sessions start Monday evening. Sept. 8. Details C. Gels, 842-5955, 811-3355. 9-8 Instant color passport photos. Immigration. I.D., portraiture, resume, portfolios, slides: color & B/W. Tom 841-7294. 9-16 THE BREK GARAGE -Complete professional garage for vehicles specially made. Garage, specialty, turnoff, lockout, turn key, and regeneration services. TYPING Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 and weekends. t Experienced K.U. typtl. IBM Correcting Solitic. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening and weekends. 748- 9818. ff Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Calc. Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 12-8 Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mike., electric IBM Sectric. Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-954. Mrs. Wright. if IBREA FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- alble. OPEN 8:42 - 2001 FOR YOUR TRAINING COMPANY ENCORE COPY CORPS 354 N. LAKE, Holiday Plaza 842 3500 Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations, term papers, mise. IBM correct selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-210. tff Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 8242-2744. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- liable, accurate, IBM pico/clite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. 1 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4890. M I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt WANTED Female roommate to share 2drm, unfurnished apt. on bus route. Pool, near shopping center, $35/month + 1/3 gas and electricity, 749-2438. 9-5 GOLD--SILVER--DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Coin, Sterling ear. we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4711, or 542-268. Buying gold. Paying $40-$110 for men's watches. Buying a watch. Holiday Plaza 842-968-5281 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza 842-968-5281 DRUMMER looking for Rock or Funk Band to play with. Call Ken at 749-0852. 9-8 Professional couple w/4 children seek non- care for infant and use own transportation to care for infant and see child up to 3 or 4 mornings a week or T & Th after- break. Respond by attending a brief 314 interview appt. WANTED: Experienced working rock band reforming. New auditioning bass/vocal and lead guitar/vocal. Call: 841-1676, 841-2999, or 749-1349. Rommate need to share 32-unit bdmst assist (Ole English Mails) with balcony, office, service and other comforts. Surprisingly service rent. 642-3780 for more info. Housemate wanted at 508 Indiana. $50 + utilities. Grad. student preferred. Call 843-9-5 Part-time custodian to work from 5 to p. pm. Month-Fri. Salary to start at $4/hr. Experience preferred, but not necessary. Please contact Charlie Watts at WA12-2271-9.5 Neat, clean person to share new 2-bdr. Hot water heater. Apts. 22nd and Kaold. Energy efficient appliances can disaster pool and more. 1-85- 915. Call 843-0884 evenings. Gain valuable experience while being a child. Reqs: high school diploma or start needs volunteers to work with 3 and 4 children, time and love to call, babysit or time and love to have Female roommate to share 3 bdmr. apt. Close to campus $95 + 1/3 utilities. 749- 9-5 Female Roommate will share guestroom apartment. Tolerant of cigarette smoke, own room. $83 plus 4 utilities. On KU bus route. Call 841-2679 9-5 Roommatts to share 814broom townhouse at: 2607 Fashion Ave, 814-0281 deposit required. 814-0281 after 5:00 - 9:09 Person to share new 2 bbmr apt. S.min. studied and call Mary. Call Mary 864-443-8510, studied and call Mary. Call Mary 864-443-8510, A nice house to share. You get 1 room and a table. Christmas preferred. Please arrange for 2 adults per guest. 1 or 2 people to share house. 1/3 blocks or two people to negotiate. 1/8 blocks. ties. John 749-2215 9-8 Male roommate for Jayhawker Towers. $11/mon. For this semester only. 749-2134. 9-10 Female roommate share two bdrm. house, 300 sq ft. 1 pim : 11:46 - 266 after 1 pim 9-10 1 pim : 8:41 - 266 after 1 pim Female roommate to share nice 2 bdrm. apt. $117.50 plus 1$ utilities. Furnished except for 1 bdrm. Call Sara at 749-0946. RIDERS: depart Wichita Monday A.M. depart Lawrence for Wichita Wednesday P.M. 316-943-6366 or 316-685-5863. 9-15 Knoonete for 2 bdmr, apt. Jayhawk West, 129 +1 / 2 utilities. Call Randy 749-2721 after 6 p.m. 9-9 CLASSIFIED HEADING: Breakfast cook for sorority. Call 843-4472. 9-8 -KANSAN- Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 15 words or less 1 time $9.25$ additional words 0.2 0.3 0.25 0.05 1 time $9.25$ 0.25 0.05 1 time $9.25$ 0.25 0.05 1 time $9.25$ 0.25 0.05 1 time $9.25$ 0.25 0.05 1 time $9.25$ 0.25 0.05 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 ADDRESS: PHONE: --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 5, 1980 . ... Knee operations fail to spoil Odell's life without football By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Sports Writer He drummed his fingers heavily on the dining room table. Absent-mindedly shuffling the pages of Grant's anatomy textbook like a deck of cards, he was completely unaware of his actions, as if his mind didn't know what his body was doing. He fidgeted in the straight-backed chair and rotated a sweaty lemonade glass in his other band. John Odelm will not keep still, and as the opening is scheduled, this season draws him. He will find it even harder. Odell, a former standout lineman for the Farmers League, has been unsuccessful, to organize a football team. THE 8-POOT-5,250-pound defensive tackle was hurt during the second game of the 1978 season against the Washington Huskers, a dismal match-up for both KU and Odell. The Huskies trounced the Jayhawks 31-2 and mangled Odell's knee. He suffered a broken fibula, torn ligaments and a dislocated knee, one of the most serious injuries an athlete can suffer. THE HUSKIES faked inside. Odell's assignment was the fullback. He closed the hole. The ball went around the end. Odell followed until someone hit the side of his right knee. "I rolled around on the turf a little while, and that was it," he said. The only reassuring aspect of Odell's injury, according to head trainer Dean Nesmith, was that the veins and nerves to the lower leg were not injured. "In all my years, I've seen only three dislocated knees," Neasim said. "John's injury is the only one I've seen that happened during a fall." He recalled the incident to mend, but John has worked hard at it." KU FANS REMEMBER Odell as a standout sophomore who, in 1977 and 1978, showed signs of becoming one of the greatest defensive players in KU history. Bud Moore, then KU's head coach, said Odell was one of the top newcomers in the nation at defensive tackle. After his injury, Odell used every bit of courage he exhibited on the playing field to recover from his injury. Even when he remobilized beehive he never play again. Odell kept struggling back. His first operation came three days after the Washington contest. "I intended to be able to play again by the end of the 1979 season," he said. "I thought I would play again up until two weeks before my second surgery." The second operation was one of reconstruction. "THEY WENT IN and pulled everything up their backs. "Odell said: "It seems I had enough the first time." After the surgery, the leg steadily improved, then arradially worsened. "I think the knee was too loose for the muscles to take over," he said. "It's better now than it was." "I'd say that I have about 75 percent of my original strength back." To regain that strength, Odell has been working out on an orthatron machine, which exerts pressure according to the amount of resistance the athlete exerts. "It helps strengthen both sides of the leg," Odel said. "But right now I'm taking it slow." THE WORDS CAME out in a rush, and judging that I was on his face, the speaker didn't like the sound of his face. "I thought I would play again for a long time, but it's getting kind of ridiculous," he said. "I've been out of college football for two years. It would take a lot for me to come back even if I would have just quit, but with my injury, it would be a long shot." Now, instead of hitting blocking dummies, Odell is hitting the books. He said his grades had been low. Odell, once a double major in journalism and physical education, said he dropped journalism because of a lack of time. He says he intends to earn a degree in advertising later. AND INSTEAD OF GETING in shape for a season of hard-hitting Big Eight football, Odell is "I can play a slow game of tennis and a slow game of basketball," he said. "I used to be pretty good at basketball, but not anymore. Odell said that when he ran, the knee "went too far back." "It doesn't bother me to walk," he said. "I can run at a good speed for half a mile, then it gets faster." Odell is a realist, but not a pessimist. "Who knows, I may be back next year," he said. "I'll call up me now. "But I stand the chance of getting out there and really messing my knee up. In some cases where there is nerve damage, dislocated knees have been amputated. "It's not like I'm scared to get out there." IF ODELL FEARS anything, he is careful not to show it. His injury has not changed his caretaker. "Pro ball was a long shot," he said. "I suppose all guys who play college ball think about it. I might have been good enough to play, but that's just mustbe." "I don't want to be a coach all life, maybe I should just say," he said. "There are lots of other things I like to do." Odell will to coach football in high school and college but he is not ruling out other opportunities. Right now, Odell contributes his time instead of tackles to the KU football program. He helped freshmen players through enrollment and has become the idea of going back on the field to help coach. KANSAS "I don't know if I'd feel right coaching guys I'd baby'd you right, and I don't know if Baby'd you right, either." ONE REASON ODELL keeps active in the John Odell program is Head Coach Don Fambrough. Odel, a tremendous respect for him, had his tremendous respect for him. "He was here when I was playing, but he wasn't coaching," he said. "The other coaches weren't the ones who recruited or coached me. They're kind of distant." "He knows me, knows how I played, and knows if I was any good. Time will tell if he'll pull the team around, but he certainly knows how to treat his players." While Odell has physically adjusted to his injury, his mind is still on the game of football. "I DON'T MISS two-days, and I don't miss the practices, he said. "But when games start, I practice." "I wish I could go out there. It just eats me alive." Odell confessed that he missed being in the limelight. too "You get used to people knowing who you are and other players knowing how you played." "It's hard to handle. Everybody goes by the wayside." In front of a mirror, "I just feel it was a little before my time." He froze for a moment. Tape, mind aid return from injury Picture 14 football fields end to end. Now picture them rolled up in a ball. That's about how much tape KU trainers use to treat injuries each day. "Most of our time is spent in prevention, taping and training the athlete's spine it was built by resistive exercises." Dean Nesmith, men's head athletic trainer, estimated yesterday that his crew used 80 to 90 rolls of tape every day to combat injuries. Each roll measures 15 yards. Nesmith said that the most important part of a trainer's job was to move injuries, rather than merely treating them. Nesmith said a resistive exercise was one that strengthened a limb or joint and made it less stiff. "ANKLE INJURIES are the most common, especially in football," he said. "Tackling and blocking are aimed at the legs. Knee injuries are not as frequent, but are more serious. "Ligaments are easily torn and require an operation. Rehabilitation takes about six months." Cynthia Booth, head women's trainer, said that motivation was essential to recovery from illness. "THE ATLHETE IS anxious to get back in competition," she said. "Our goal is to return them to the level they were at before the injury "Sometimes it's hard to make them go slow." Both men's hair is dark and thick grey. Booth, who has been a trainer for both men and women, said the injuries for both sexes were basically the same. "There's not that much difference in working with men and women," she said. "The injuries are quite different." Brewers bomb Gura, Quiz for 8 runs in 9th Neamith, in his 43rd year at KU, said he had not noticed a dramatic increase in decrease in blood pressure. "I think the numbers are basically the same," he said. "The equipment is better, but the boys are still bad." Sports Writer By MATT SEELEY "I'd like to be the star," White said. "Maybe next time." KANSAS CITY, Mo.—It may have been Frank White's birthday, but it was the Milwaukee Brewers who did most of the celebrating last night. The Brewers' barrage put a damper on White's birthday. But White managed some celebrating of his own with his first hometown of the year in 1943. His White's solo shot broke a 1-1 tie in the fifth. Down four runs run into the ninth inning, the Brewers erupted for eight runs to beat Kansas City, 9-6. That spoiled what appeared to be a bawning end to a festive evening for the Royals. Quisberry, however, failed this time. The lk-dabler served up seven Brewers' singles on Sunday, including ROYALS' STARTER Larry Gura, struggling throughout most of the game, gave up back-to-back singles to start the top of the ninth. Kansas won 6-4, but the Ravens, who was brought in for the fourth time this season. "I'm not a strikeout pitcher." Quisenberry said. "I was roughed up like this once. One time my older brother got hold of me when I was five." UNTIL LAST NIGHT, Quisenberry had entered the lead in the team effort to win all six. "Hey, I hope no one says anything bad about Quisenberry." Milwaukee's Thomas said. "The kid's done a helvella a job all season, and we really didn't hit the ball that hard tonight." THE ROYALS SEEMED to have the birthday cake caked after the seventh. George Brett knocked a three-ball, no-strike pitch off Milwaukee starter Bill Travers into the left-centerfield for an 19th home run of the season. The bummed run was followed by a four-minute standing ovation. After White's home run, the Royals scored again in the sixth to go ahead 3-1. Catcher John Wathan doubled and came home on Jose Cardena's single. Two innings later, however, the candles on the cake went out. "We got even with Kansas City for embarrassing us at home," Brewer manager George Bamberger said. "I think we have a chance to win club. We should have been doing this all year." The Brewer victory completed a three-game sweep of the Royals and marked the first time this year that the Royals had been swept at home. It was the first time since April 13, when the Royals lost their third straight in Baltimore, that Kansas City had been swept. White's birthday was not spoiled by the loss, "It's not a game where it's going to tear you up," he said. "We haven't won the division yet, though." Brett finished the game one point lower than he began it, going 1-for-3 and dropping his major-league leading average to 401. Brett also established a Kansas City record by reaching the 100 RBI mark the earliest in a season. His home run gave him exactly 100. John Mayberry, the previous title holder, accomplished the 100 RBI feat on the 14th of September. THE ROYALS' loss kept their magic number at 11. The number is the combination of Kansas city victories and Texas losses needed for the playoff season. The eastern Division title. Texas was idle last night. More than 21,000 fans attended last night's game, putting Kansas City over the 2 million on the field. Flanagan, Orioles falter From Kansan wire services Mike Flanagan, last year's Cy Young winner, lost miserably for the second straight time last night as the Baltimore Orioles dropped another game behind in the American League East. Flannagan was pounded by the Oakland A's for nine hits and four runs in four innings. He dropped the Orioles 2% games behind division-leading New York. The Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Part Stop Shop 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 KU HERPETOLOGY PROUDLY ANNOUNCES A HALF-CENTURY OF THE DR. BILL SHOW. HAPPY 50th BIRDDAY, WED Yankees edged California, 5-3, last night. Fianagam, 13-11, now has surrendered 14 ties and eight runs in his last 4½ innings. Oakland's Matt Keough stopped the Orioles on six hits. The A's victory was their first ever against Flanagan. He had won nine straight. HAPPY 50th BIRTHDAY, WED —YOUR STUDENTS --- ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 SHEAR DIMENSIONS No. 174 MARKUP BY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PUBLIC LECTURE Zen Master Seung Sahn Donna Hamilton Kathy Hollingsworth Allison McCoy Kenna Rothwell Rosilie Adams Monday Sept. 8 at 8 pm Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Shear Dimensions welcomes you to their one stop total expert hair and skin care services. Hair designs by Shear Dimensions. No appointment necessary Master Charge and VISA. (sculptured nails and manicure) Open Monday—Saturday and Evenings 1802 Massachusetts Dillon Plaza phone: 843-3114 COVENANT PLAYERS Drama with a message at UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 15th & Iowa SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 at 7:00 P.M. Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Bible Study 9:30 a.m. Supper Group 5:30 p.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Meet the Covenant Players & (cover charge) MOFFET-BEERS BAND BOTTOMS UP! a serious drinking establishment 715·mass. 12-12 mon.-sat. Also Try These Weekly Specials: Tuesday $1.00 pitchers 8-12 pm Wednesday Ladies Night 25c draws 8-12 pm Thursday Thursday $1.50 pitchers 8-12 pm TGIF 75c Big Mo Mugs 12.5 Fall 1980 Leagues 12-5 pm ... P. M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 4. 30 Dormitory Tuesday 6:30 All Star Scratch All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 Bowling - Billiards Bowling - Billiards 6:30 All Star Scratch 1:00 K.U. Ladies Amusement Machines Amusement Machines Cold Beer 6:15 All Campus Join A Fall League NOW 8:30 Greek Friday 4:00 TGIF Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Sunday 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) Hours Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Sat. & Sun. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM Join A Full League NOW For Reservations/info. call 864-3545 BOWLING IS FUN! 1 18 18 18 Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION 0 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Monday, September 8, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 11 BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff COLUMBIA RIVER BEN BIOLEK/Ransan Haiti KU and K-State canoeists plunge into the Blue River near Manhattan to prepare for the start of the KU-K-State canoe race sponsored by the universities' residence hall organizations. The canoeists then traveled down the Kansas River to reach Lawrence. Promises of trophy, beer lure canoeists down Kaw Rv JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter A Kansas State University residence hall team may have won the hall division of the KU-KState canoe race yesterday, but an independent Lawrence team called the Rogues beat K-State's time by almost two hours. And the Rogues didn't even get a trophy for their time of 15 hours, 34 minutes. That's because they are awarded only to be awarded ball teams. Of the event's five treenements went to Manhattan. The first KU team to finish the race was a group of Joseph R. Pearson and Lewis hall See CANOE page 5 V Z 10 Beverly Zimmerman, Jody Metcalf and Jeff Greene, part of the K-State Van Zile residence hall team, rejoice after finishing first among the residence halls entered in the KU-K-State canoe race Saturday and Sunday. --- Canoe terms... Creatures that inhabit the waters of the world. BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Canoe teams change crews and continue down the Kansas River near Wamego. U.S. Senate vote tables proposal for loan program By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter A conference committee report that would have created a new government-backed education loan program for parents and would have raised loan limits and interest rates on student loans was tabled and sent back to the governor to defeat last Thursday night in the U.S. Senate. The report had been defeated by two votes but the senators voted against it asked for another. The senators The conference committee was convened when the Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives pass a bill different bills on education matters. The committee will discuss to discuss the bills and work out a compromise. THE COMMITTEE'S REPORT would have authored most major higher education programs through the 1985-86 academic year. Students from Kansas voted differently on the report. "I have always been a strong supporter in higher education, and I want very much to see legislation passed in support of higher education, but this sort of thing is irresponsible," Kassebaum said last week from her office in Washington D.C. "There were some excesses built into this bill that allowed them a hard time living with in the future," she says. According to Kassabue, the house-proposed Legislation would have to loan an extra $2 billion in cash for the construction of a new school. THE RE-AUTHORIZATION report contained 10 major provisions, including the loan program for parents and the higher loan limits and interest rates on student loans. The conference report, according to David Bushong, a legislative assistant to Kassebum, would have raised the maximum Basic Equalization scale from 6.75 to 8.25 and creased it on a sliding scale to $2.600 by 1985-86. The conference report called for an increase in the maximum on the Supplemental State Incentive Grant, up to $2,000, and raised the maximum available from the Guaranteed Student Loan to $3,000 for independent students, increasing the aggregate student maximum for four years to $12,000 and to $25,000 for graduate students. The report proposed increasing the interest rate on charged borrowing with no interest charged while borrowing with no interest charged. Bushong said the report would have increased the interest rate charged on National Direct Student loans to 4 percent and established an institutional loan program that would have additional funding to institutions that attracted a high percentage of minority students. See BILL page 5 Plant sale avoids controversy Staff Reporter By KATHY BRUSSELL With the temperature topping up at 89 degrees and the humidity seeming just as high, Friday afternoon had definitely passed the comfortable mark. Inside the big red-and-white-striped tent just east of Memorial Stadium, however, the climate was even hotter and steamer than it was outside. The tent was the site of the third annual plant sale sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women. As the afternoon wore on and the last of the week's classes ended, business at the tent picked up and customers lined up at the single wooden table to make their purchases. ON THE SECOND-TO-LAST day of the sale, the sizing temperature seemed to be the only hot aspect of the event, unlike last year, when it sparked criticism from a local businessman. Last September, Fred Pence, owner of Pence Garden Centers, charged that the week-long sale was competing unfairly with local plant shops because the women's commission had no overhead or property taxes to pay and had no license to sell plants. Pence took his complaints to former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, the Board of Regents, the Lawrence City Commission and Gov. John Carlin, but he received no official ruling on the matter. Sally Turner, last year's president of the women's commission, sent a letter explaining the group's position to Pence. Dykes, Carlin, the University Journal-World and the University Daily Kansan. THE LETTER SAID that according to local and state officials, the commission was a non-profit organization operating the sale on a short-term basis. The commission is not responsible for property taxes or the need for a vendor's license. The commission did incur overhead costs from renting the tent, advertising and trucking in the produce, but it was still able to the plants at prices comparable to those of the local supermarkets and discount department stores, the letter said. An employee of the store at 15th and New York Streets said Saturday that the sale already had been going on for three weeks, but another one would be coming soon, and the sale probably would continue this week. Jim Freeman, general manager of the store, said Pence's sale corresponded to the women's commission sale only in that 'it was held at the time the students come back. We want to get Pence said Saturday that he had no comment on what Mr. Clinton would do, he would raise the issue of unfair competition and Pence Garden Centers have been running a half-price plant sale that was extended into last week. Dee WARM Weather It should be mostly sunny and hot today with a high around 94. Winds should be from the south at 10-15 mph, according to the KU Weather Service. The chance of tundershowers will continue into Tuesday, with a 40 percent chance of rain. The high should be around 84 with mostly cloudy skies. The extended forecast calls for a gradual warming trend, with highs in the low 80s Wednesday climbing to the upper 80s Friday. The lows should be around 60 Wednesday and in the upper 60s by Friday. There is a 30 percent chance of there showers left tonight with a low near 85. them to buy from us when they're decorating their rooms and apartments," he said. Boaz, Prairie Village junior, said the commission made about $1,300 on this year's sale, which ran from Aug. 31 to Sept. 6. The group's profit last year was about $1,075, she said. Gail Boaz, secretary of the women's commission, said the group had heard nothing from the judge. "I think the final feeling last year was that if your sale was wrong then so were garage sales, (Kansas) Union food sales and any other fundraiser," said. "There was a very fine line between them." THE COMMISSION on the Status of Women receives some Student Senate funding, but holds the plant sale to raise additional money to sponsor speakers, films and the annual Women's Recognition Night, a banquet and awards ceremony held each spring at KU. Boaz said. "Iown all the plants in this tent; it is as simple as that," Nancy Wilson, owner of Anything Grows, said. "As they are sold, the commission makes a percentage of the top of the gross. The biggest role I play is assuming financial responsibility. The commission does the rest." For the first time, the commission had a local grower, Anything Grows, 6, E. Ninth St., supply the crop. Wilson said she thought that having a local dealer supply the sale might minimize complaints from area businessmen because all the complaints are being going in Lawrence, instead of going out of the state. ASIDE FROM ONE case of minor vandalism, this year's sale went smoothly. Boa said. The one incident, she said, occurred last Thursday night while Paul Lewis, another commission member, and a friend were spending the night in the tent to guard the plants. According to Lewis, Schwab sophomore, two men came to the tent about 12:30 a.m. and lifted a ladder. "I called out to them, and they said they were just looking for some other guys," Lewis said. "They put down the flap and then a few minutes later we saw the end of the tent collapsed." LEWIS SAID THE men apparently cut the ropes at the north end of the 40-by-80-foot tent, causing one-third of the tent to collapse and pull out several stakes in the process. See PLANT page 5 Senate has $17,337 available for budget hearings this month By DIANE SWANSON The Student Senate has $17,337 available for supplementary funding of student organizations this fall. Bren Abbott, Student Senate treasurer, said last Friday. Organizations have until 5 p.m. Friday to submit their budget requests. The Senate Finance and Auditing committee will begin reviewing the budget for Sept. 22, and will continue the next three nights. Abbott said he did not foresee a funding shortage but added that the Senate would not burden the budget. Staff Reporter "We're not going to give out money just because it's there. They'll have to justify their own costs." According to Abbott, about 20 forms had been He said he urged organizations to take as much time as possible in filling out the forms, and said he didn't expect many applications to be returned until the deadline. ANY STUDENT organization registered with the institution to participate in activities, is eligible to request funding. Requests are submitted to the Senate treasurer, who reviews and submits the applications to the Finance and Auditing Committee. The committee then submits its recommendations to the Senate, which determines the final allocations. The Senate treasurer designs the budget request applications. Abbott said a few changes had been made on this year's form. picked up but none had been returned as of last Friday. past, each organization must itemize See BUGET page 5 Director of admissions resigns post By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter John Myers, director of admissions and records at the University of Kansas since 1974, submitted his resignation Friday effective Oct. 1. Myers, 40, will be working for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce as director of the convention and visitor's bureau, Glenn West, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said yesterday. West said the bureau was a new division formed to attract convention groups and visitors to the fair. MYERS GRADUATED from KU in 1982 with undergraduate degrees in math and chemistry. He taught advanced placement math and college classes at high schools in Hawitha and Horton. In 1964, Myers returned to the University to work on his masters degree in counseling psychology. During that time he worked in the student personnel and service office. Myers moved into the former dean of men's office in 1968 as the associate dean of men. In that position he worked with scholarship hall programs and Corbin College, a former department of freshman-sophomore programs when the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was broken into junior colleges. He became assistant director of admissions and records in 1868 and in 1898 became associate THE NEXT THREE years, Myers was director of school relations programs. The program worked with alumni and the admissions department at University and establish imprints which publish articles. In 1974, Myers returned to the office of admissions and records to become director. As director, Myers handles admissions to the University and programs for prospective students. He is also on the Student Affairs Research committee, the American College Testing Program research committee and is chairman of Parents' Day activities. He is also adviser to the Alpha Kappa Lambda social fraternity at KU and is active in the Chamber of Commerce and the First Methodist Church. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 8, 1980 0 News Briefs From United Press International Saudi Arabia to increase oil prices BEIRUT, Lebanon—The president of the Arab-dominated Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said yesterday that Saudi Arabia—America's No. 1 foreign oil supplier—intended to increase its prices by $4 a barrel, possibly coupled with a cutback in daily oil production. Saudi Arabia charges $23 for each of the 9.5 million barrels of oil it produces daily as the world's leading petroleum exporter. "I think the Saudia will raise their price to $23 per barrel." Algerian Oil Minister Balakec Balkem, OPCE president, said. A petroleum industry journal, meanwhile, reported that energy consumption in OPEC countries could possibly double in the next 10 years and reduce. An authoritative oil journal, Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, said a newly issued study by OPEC warned both producing and consuming nations to consider energy alternatives to avoid "serious social and political changes of approaching resource depletion." Gas storage explosion injures eight ALBANY, N.Y.—An explosion at a gasoline storage area at the Port of Albany set four large storage tanks on fire yesterday, injuring eight people and forcing the evacuation of about 1,000 residents, officials said. The fire caused at least $1 million damage. caused at least 4.2 million damage. The fires at the Mobil Oil Co. yard, on the west bank of the Hudson River, sent huge clouds of black smoke over downtown Albany and were described as "uncontrollable" shortly after the explosion at 12:30 p.m. cST. Mobil officials said the fires were confined to two tanks, but Albany fire officials said four tanks were involved. Matthew D'Ampo, manager of plant operations at Albany Fire Department, said that the fire was Each of the tanks has a capacity of about 1.5 million gallons of gasoline, but Mobil officials said there were about 6,000 gallons in one tank and about 30,000 gallons in another. It was not known how much gasoline was in the other tanks. "I decided to evacuate the area because there was a good possibility all the other tanks might explode, causing a pyramid effect." John Lynch, "It was remarkable how fast people could run," said Albany Mayor Erasus Corning, who was on the scene. Gunmen kill two Basque separatists HERNAN, Spain - Neo-fascist gunmen topped a week of terrorist violence yesterday by assassinating two young Basque separatists who were killed in an attack in their village. The double killing came at the end of a weekend during which five people died in violence that brought Spain's political death toll this year to 85. Terror the cases have occurred in the past 5 years. Scores of young separatists in the Basque provincial capital of San Sebastian took to the streets in protest after the right-wing Spanish-Basque Battalion claimed responsibility for the killings. Police fired smoke bombs and shot rubber bullets to disperse the rioters after they barricaded streets and began throwing stones. An 11-year-old boy was hit in the head by a rubber bullet and was hospitalized for observation. The bodies of the two latest victims—Miguel Maria Arbelále, a shop owner in Santa Marta, and another by side in a garage. A Hernan street shortly before dawn yesterday police said. Police said each man had been shot twice in the head and they speculated that the men had been ambushed after leaving a pre-wedding party shortly before the shooting. Strikes continue in Polish factories WARSAW, Doctor—Doctors confirmed yesterday that former Polish Communist party leader Edward Gleick had suffered a heart attack but Meanwhile, despite major government concessions granted to shipyard and coal mine workers, factory strikes persisted across Poland yesterday—the second day in office for Gierek's successor, Stanislaw Kania—dissident sources said. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev conveyed his wishes for a speedy recovery to Gierek, the official Soviet news agency Tass reported from Moscow. The message, relayed by the Soviet ambassador in Warsaw, was apparently an attempt to quash speculation that Gierek had fallen from grace with the Soviets because of Poland's recent wave of strikes and that he had been removed on orders from Moscow. Poland's dissident Committee for Social Self-Defense said workers at a number of factories around the country had walked out Friday. Strikers included the personnel at the Royal Waiheke Castle in the ancient city of Krakow—a top tourist attraction—who walked out demanding higher prices. The strike also affected bus drivers in Białystok, a tire plant in Lodz, a bridge-building plant in Siedlęcza, a asoeb factory in Kalszil and all small factories. Striking actors boycott Emmy show None of the other big-name performers appeared to accept their awards. A small band of lesser-known performers filled in for them, keeping the band afloat. Aser's sister, "Lou Grant," won three other Emmys. "Soap." "MASH" and "Taxi" dominated the comedy awards. HOLLYWOOD—The 32nd annual Emmy awards were given last night to performers who were boycoting the ceremony in a labor dispute. Ed Asner, a boycott leader, was chosen best actor in a dramatic series for his portrayal of newspaper editor Lou Grant. Dick Clark and Steve Allen took over as hosts for the awards ceremony. They replaced Bob Newhart, Michael Landon and Lee Remick, who joined the boycott to dramatize the 8-week-old actors' strike against movie and television producers. The award for best actress in a dramatic series went to Barbara Bel Geddes of "Dallas." Allen told the audience that both he and Clark were donating their pay for the appearance to the strike fund. The ceremony had only tapped music because the musicians also were on strike. Poultry price peaks after chicks fry Just as residents in the southern half of the United States wipe the last bands of perspiration from their skin this autumn, the heat wave of 1980 was bringing some people to great distress. The heat and drought that killed millions of chickens in the South this winter have made it difficult for consumers and will mean higher prices on property owners who fall into this category. The heat wave hit hardest in the states that produce much of the country's poultry—Arkansas, Georgia, Alabama, Texas and Mississippi—damaging crops. Most poultry officials are reluctant to guess how much more chickens or eggs will cost. But wholesale prices for dressed birds—those ready for sale—are generally lower than the market price. Most obvious were the millions of chickens that had to be buried rather than sold. Growers in Arkansas, the largest poultry-producing state, Another million or more chickens died in Georgia and thousands more in other states. The monetary losses were estimated at $17 million in Arkansas, $11.2 million in Georgia and $12.3 million in Mississippi. search committees from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Business and the School of Architecture and Urban Design were organized by the office of academic affairs last spring -months before the resignations of the three deans became effective. University combs nation for three new deans Although the University of Kansas' search for a new chancellor has received most of the publicity, KU also crowds nationwide for three new deans. SINCE THEN, the committees have advertised in newspapers, including the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and several minority publications. The only faculty members who cannot be considered for the jobs are the acting deans who were appointed by the college of academic affairs last year, he said. While the committees search for replacements, the three acting deans must be chief administrators, even if they are not in charge, who will expire in less than one year. The searches must be widely publicized to comply with Affirmative Action guidelines, Paludan said, but inquiries nominations also will be accepted. China adopts new plan for economic progress "It certainly is a challenge," said Dennis Domer, acting dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design. THIS YEAR, DOMER is both associate and acting dean of the school, and he also helps to run the department of architectural engineering. PEKING (UPP)—China has scrapped its 10-year economic development plan, which had emphasized development of heavy industry, in favor of a plan aimed at improving the standard of living of the country's one billion people. Outgoing Premier Hua Guofeng made the announcement yesterday in his final state-of-the-union address to the nation. He is a member of Congress, China's official legislature. Hua had resigned as a result of a power play within the Chinese leadership and had handed his job over to economist Zhao Yiang. Instead, the state council, or cabinet, and had started drawing the outline of an emblem. THE OLD 1976-1985 plan was launched with much fanfare in 1975 and actively pushed by Hua as late as 1977. But Hua said the plan's targets were to replace it with a more comprehensive construction was too large and comprehensive balance was lacking." "To revise this outline of the 10-year plan, we must take a more than four years would allow." Hua said the new plan would have as an element of the living standard of China's people. "The fundamental aim of the country's modernization is to satisfy the needs of the material and cultural life of the people," he said. ONCE THE PEOPLE are assured that modernization is for their betterment, "then everybody will work for him," and "there is another soul, knowing it is their own," he said. The new economic plan would emphasize individual initiative and enthusiasm of the people. Private family-run businesses will have a place in the economy as long as they are under the "guidance" of the state, he said. Also in his speech, Hua warned of the social and economic implications of China's booming population explosion. Hua called for a "one-family, one baby" policy in a crash program for the next several decades. The new plan has many similarities to measures implemented by Zhao in Sichuan province in the mid 1970s. Zhao brought about a virtual economic revolution and thus created a populous province with his willingness to experiment to increase production. "If population growth is not controlled, there will be an ultra-high peak, making it virtually impossible for the nation to have social institutions to cope with," he said. Hua insisted the government would use only "publicity and persuasion," but the National People's Congress this week is expected to formally adopt a new law making it compulsory for couples to practice family planning. Hua said China's rapid population growth was the major roadblock to its ambitious economic goals and any increase in the standard of living. --- HOURS 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN COPIES 1/2 € EACH - COMMERCIAL PRINTING - PHOTOTYPESETTING - LAYOUT AND DESIGN - Headquarters for Thesis Copying and Binding Headquarters for Thesis Copying and Binding HOUSE OF USHER 812 3456 7890 BALANCE BAR KEYS ABBEY 812 3456 7890 HAIRCUT, SHAMPOO, & BLOW DRY $1000 SPECIAL Good Mon-Wed. in the month of September. Corn's Studio of Beauty 9th and Vermont 843-4668 open Mon.-Sat. R REDKEN K AVA CARE SKIN CARE HAR GARE HEALTH CARE -NATURAL PRODUCTS- Corn's Robert Hoffman, acting dean of the College, teaches a course in mammalogy, serves as curator for the Museum of Natural History and presides over the College Assembly. The college dean will remain unpaid until July. DOLCE GABBANA Jack Gaummitt, professor of business, said he agreed to step into the dean's position at the School of Business. He could also return to full-time teaching in June. R REDKEN 5% Are Paying 5% Until December 31, 1980 THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES On all Lawrence Campus bookstore receipts (Main Store, Oread Bookshop and Satellite Shop) for periods No. 66 and 67. Receipts may be redeemed at the Customer Service Areas of both the Main Store and the Satellite Shop. In order to fill the dean's offices by the July 1 deadline, the search committees have placed ads in the newspaper. The ad for $7.50 per column inch—providing job descriptions and lists of minimum qualifications. Period 67: All receipts from January 1, 1980 to June 30, 1980 Period 66: All receipts from July 1, 1979 to December 31, 1979 According to the committees' job descriptions, KU deans promote teaching, acquire and allocate funds for their courses, and assist to the public and the administration. Student I.D. is required. THE ADS DO not list possible salaries, but according to the University budget the deans who own the institute are from $41,000 to $47,000 in fiscal 1980. Main Store, Level 2, Kansas Union Oread Bookshop, Level 3, Kansas Union Satellite Shop, Level 2, Satellite Union Because the dears will coordinate graduate and undergraduate programs, all applicants must qualify as tenured professors. "We want someone who has done something," "someone who has done some thing." The dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design will oversee 600 students, and the dean of the School of Architecture will represent about 1,500 students. More than 10,000 students are enrolled in the College, making it the largest segment of the University. The committee's search especially important. THE KING OF ARABIA, NASSAU BOOKSTORE BUY OR SELL SILVER GOLD A COINS Boyds Coin & Antiques Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm "The intellectual tone of the College could set the intellectual tone of the University," he said. THE COLLEGE search committee, composed of 10 professors and two students, spent months writing the dean's job description, Paludan said. The department submitted the final draft to College department chairmen for approval. "This is an important operation," Paladan said, "when we choose a dean, or he she will not just be dean of the college, but of everybody in the College." However, throughout the search the candidates' names will remain contiguous. Nominations for all three positions are due Oct. 15, and the committees will begin to screen applications Nov. 1. By mid-November, the chairman said, each committee's candidate list would be narrowed to about 10 names. Once the new deans are selected by the committees, their appointments will become effective July 1, the start of the University's fiscal year. "We have people who apply for the jobs and don't want everyone in the world to know," Palauan said. "First, because it's nobody's business, and second, because the possibilities of being hired were didn't in the minds of the applicants." 731 New Hampshire Last July, when the resignations of the chancellor and three deans became effective, KU's administration began to resemble a deck of well-shuffled playing cards. But Paludan said that next year also would be unusual—specifically if all the positions were filled with people from outside the University. "I think it will be an interesting year when all those new deans gather under a new chancellor," he said. Footlights Posters,Stationery,etc. Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters/Stationery; Star Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbriar's Del) we're moving! after Sept. 1st our address will be Crewel Cupboard 1029 Massachusetts A Meisner - Milstead Liquor VIN Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza HILLEL High Holiday Services September 10 - Wednesday Rosh Hashana Services 7:30 p.m. Foster Family Center Forum Room-Kansas Union Ooneg following : Lawrence Jewish Community Center September 11 : Thursday Rosh Hashana Services - 9:30 a.m. LJCG Rosh Hashana Services · 7:30 p.m. L.C.G. September 12-Friday Rosh Hashana Services · 9:30 a.m. J. L. C. Shabbat Services - 7:30 p.m. L. L.C. September 19-Friday September 2 - 4 P.M. Pre-fast Dinner - 5:00 p.m. L. J.C.C. Call Hillel for Reservations Forum Room - Kansas Union September 20, Saturday September 20 · Saturday Yom Kippur Services - 9:30 a.m. L. C.C. Yom Kippur Services, Conclusion - 5:00 p.m. L.C.C Break-fast following For further information, call the Hiliel office: 864-3948 O University Daily Kansan, September 8, 1980 Page 3 On Campus UNIVERSITY SENATE Acting Chancellor Del Shankel will address the UNIVERSITY SENATE at 4 today. Shankel will speak on issues related to the University and answer questions. DIABETES SEMINAR TODAY "Home Blood Glucose Monitoring, as an Aid for Better Control," a discussion for diabetic students and interested faculty at KU, will be at 7:30 tonight in the second floor conference room of Watkins Memorial Hospital. A PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM will be at 4:30 p.m. in 332 MALTO Hall, Robert B. Phillips will lecture on "High Resolution Maps of Extragalactic Radio Sources." Refreshments will be served at 4 p.m. in 138 Malto. A FACULTY RECITAL by Richard Angeloet, piano, will be at 8 p.m. in Saworthout Recital Hall, Murphy. TOMORROW BLACK STUDENT UNION CHOIR will practice at 5:30 p.m. in 328 Murphy Hall. STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 209, 232 and 233 Haworth. TAUG SISIA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson. Guest instructor Betty Kelly will teach folk dancing. THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will sponsor a seminar, Introduction to Time-Sharing, "at 7:30 p.m. the computer center's auditorium. A BENTON EXHIBITION LECTURE will be at 8 p.m. in the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. The lecture, by the University of California-Berkley will lecture on "Popular Culture and the Great Depression." Art library opens in Spencer museum The art library opened last week in its new permanent base in the basement of the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art. "The books are here, and they're up, but there are a lot of little things that still need to be attended to," Paul Bobo, art librarian, said. He said the art library's 45,000 books were moved in the last three weeks from Watson Library to the basement of the museum. The library has twice as much space as it had in Watson, Bobo said. The art library's computerized circulation system has not been installed yet, he said, which means that art library books checked out on Watson's circulation system must be returned to Watson. "We're having to sort of do things as we go along," Bobo said. "For us, when we were in Watson, we didn't have to worry about the circulation system." The library is now open for a limited number of hours, Bobo said, but it would be open longer after it gets organized. The library is now open from 8 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Police to charge man in shooting incident Charges of aggravated battery are expected to be filed today against a 39-year-old Lawrence man who was being held yesterday in Douglas County Jail in connection with a shooting at the Flamingo Club, 501 Ninth St., the Douglas County Sheriff's office said yesterday. The man was being held in lieu of $30,000 bond. Jerry Ronald Owens, 39, Lawrence, was shot through the left cheek with a small caliber handgun about 1:30 a.m. yesterday, Lawrence police said. Owens was listed in satisfactory condition yesterday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. RICK'S BIKE SHOP backpacks 1033 VERMONT DREW TORRES/Kansan staff WATERFORD JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6th & Michigan ★ Discount Prices We fill KU student prescriptions and offer ★ Free Delivery Individual patient records Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book OPERATION FRIENDSHIP TONIGHT Join us tonight as we have some fun and foreign students are invited to come as you are, share who you are cross-cultural interaction. American students and expect to "build bridges between cultures". 1629 W. 19th at The Center 841-8001 The autumn sun, already creating shorter days, slips behind a grove of trees. partially funded by Student Senate All 24 women in temporary rooms at Key residence halls signed housing contracts last week, Fred McElhene, director, Mansion Housing Programs, said Friday. All women in temporary housing sign contracts About 50 men are still living in temporary spaces in McCollam, Hashinger and deliverer in McElhene of bishop's room for permanent rooms, but others on the However, anyone can get lucky once or twice. Nice game folks. Last week, there were about 75 students in the activity rooms in the halls and about 50 men on the waiting room to temporary housing. office's waiting list took their temporary places. PUBLIC LECTURE Zen Master Seung Sahn Monday Sept. 8 at 8 pm Some rooms, both temporary and permanent, were emptied as students joined fraternities and sororites, took college courses, dropped out of school, McElhene said. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTELRESERVATIONS CARRENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVELINSURANCE ENCORDED TOURS 900 MASS KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 SAVE UP TO 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNINGS CARDETS Discounts 29th & Iowa • Use Your "People Book". Attention: Thesis Copiers Lawrence Printing... $35.00 Below are the comparative prices for July 1980 making 5 copies of a 100-page thesis onto 25% rag paper-collated. We called and found: Kinko's... $35.00 House of Usher... $35.00 Encore Copy Corps ... $26.25 Why pay more? That's why you'll say Encore (We also feature typing, editing, and binding) "Your One Stop Thesis Shop" Knife City Corp Lawrence Kansas ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa (Holiday Plaza) 842-2001 JOIN US! Tuesday, September 9 6:30 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union - Approval of A.S.K. Membership - Petition to reduce Student Senate from 120 to 60 senators Bills to increase committee powers and improve inventory control AGENDA: STUDENT SENATE Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 8, 1980 Opinion The IDs strike back Those dreaded student identification cards are in the news again, and, this time, they are going to have pictures on them. For the past year, the University of Kansas has been waging an all-out battle to conquer the ID problem once and for all. But winning certainly won't be easy. KU's ID dealings have been a comedy of errors. To this day, there are between 7,000 and 8,000 red, white and blue IDs waiting to be claimed by students. After the latest batch is produced, KU may have enough IDs to build a plastic Mount Oread. In the summer of 1979, KU decided to replace more than 25,000 student IDs for use with KU's computerized library system. A Maryland company was in charge of the project. Students were given temporary IDs at enrollment last year. The IDs were made of filmsy cardboard, but students were told that the IDs would be replaced by mid-September. However, a number of complications at the ID plant caused many delays. In the meantime, most of the temporary IDs were either shriveled in washing machines or just plain lost. Before KU knew it, the University had itself a genuine ID dilemma. The IDs were to be delivered by truck, but in yet another misce, the truck got delayed. Somewhere between Maryland and Lawrence was a truck full of IDs. Not until mid-November were students told to pick up their IDs. By then, most students had forgotten them or did not care to pick them up. The ID situation took a new twist recently when the University announced it would print pictures on future IDs. At enrollment this fall, freshmen were given temporary IDs again. The University wants pictures on the IDs because the IDs did not provide ample identification for students outside the Lawrence area. The current IDs also make it difficult to identify students in large classes and, therefore, cheating is more difficult to stop. The new IDs are being produced to iron out the problems with the current IDs. But if the University's problems with IDs are a good indicator, the ID saga has not seen its last chapter. U.S. needs to wave 'adios' to foreign language ignorance It was at the age of ten while on a trip to Europe that I first made the unsettling discovery that the world wasn't American. No water fountains, no peanut butter, expensive soda pop, narkomine, whine culture with an eye to its inconveniences, white cherishing盼s of an early end to vacation. I was unwavering American, especially in the face of a foreign language. My patience with SUSAN SCHOENMAKER A. H. Europeans generally ran out in the restaurants, where I, militantly ingentil at the unintelligible menus, developed a stubborn palate. I refused to order anything except tomato soup. Tomato soup was reliable. It could be readily identified in any language on any menu, and it promised predictability. Tomato soup with parsley, thick tomato soup, tomato soup with vegetables; I amlyly spooned my way through this dish. This can be to the fickle fate of food in a foreign language. My family tried to discourage my taste for tomatoes in the interest of a more varied diet. After about six tomato soup dinners, I surrendered and reluctantly ordered mushroom soup. The dish was served as a "plize soup" was mushroom soup, although it could not be confirmed by the menu. My worst suspicions concerning the identity of the alleged mushroom soup soon were confirmed. The soup that the waitress served, which consisted of hot water with mushrooms in the bottom of the bowl, certainly bore no imbalance. Campbell's cream of mushroom soup was disgusted by plumped my spoon in the imposter soup and announced the resumption of my tomato diet汤. Today, eleven years later, my embarrassment over my American behavior has faded to a few dull chuckies at family slide shows of Europe. My embarrassment over America has sharpened Tongue-tie in any language but English, Americans overseas disdainfully brush aside other cultures and languages, demanding English tours, English signs and English stores. The arrogance abroad, which at its zenith influenced the language, is reflected by the fact that we are the only major industrialized nation that does not routinely require the study of a foreign language. As long as American demands overseas are backed by the dollar, the English language will continue to suffer. as the oil crisis continues to crack our economy, previously unruaved American power is now unraveling. The future for English as an in- ternational language does not seem so secure. Yet the question of whether English will remain the dominant world language masks a deeper consideration of the benefits of a bilingual America. Although it cannot be locked into statistics, few deny the link between language and culture. A nation's language—its vocabulary, idioms and slang, bear the flag of its culture. Language study, the first step toward command of culture, could prove an invaluable ally as Hispanics at home and Iranians and Russians as well as the thin veneer of American understanding. Consider the fact that only two of the Americans taken hostage in Iran are able to speak Farsi. When trouble broke out in Afghanistan, we had to negotiate through the Russian ambassador because nobody on our staff spoke the language. If the temper of the times demands internationalism, American academia is responding with indifference. A smaller percentage of both high school and college students study foreign languages today than at the turn of the century. According to a study released in 1979 by the Presidential Commission on Foreign Language and International Studies, fewer than one percent of American high school students study a foreign language for four years, and only 15 percent take any language at all. The shadow of those statistics falls heavily over Kansas. In Kansas, only half of the state's high schools even offer a second language. Nationally, 75 percent of public high schools have at least one English course, though only eight out of 50 states require that a second language be offered at all public schools. The University of Kansas language departments have demonstrated a resiliency that defies national and state trends. All of KU's major foreign language departments have registered gains in the past few years, with the most dramatic rise in the French department. From 1974 to 1979, enrollment in French language courses jumped 25.5 percent. But hold the bravs, KU. Our national responsibility doesn't run out with the end of class. Those of us who have taken a second year of study of America to fan enthusiasm for foreign study. As the President's Commission on Foreign Languages summed it up, "The United States' incompetence in foreign language is scandalous. Less is at issue than the nation's security." As Americans, the world will always know us, whether by our bubblegum, politics or tennis shoes. But they needn't and they shouldn't know us by our ignorance. ANYONE SPEAKS AMERIKANO! THE GREAT AMERICAN LANGUAGE GAP WWW.GALLERY.BA AMERICAN MOTORS Bolton '80 Japanese car sale quotas unfair Japan has taken another step toward pre-emination nation in the non-conservative war. Last week, the Japanese moved ahead of the manufacture in production of total automobiles manufactured. In fact, U.S. auto production is at its lowest point in 22 years. The Japanese production total clearly shows that the Japanese automakers, not the deeprooted executives in Detroit, can make cars that are as hard to drive at a price that Americans can afford. Deadwood car companies such as the Chrysler Corporation; which has seen 152 of its dealers fold in 1980, should be allowed to wither away because of their rejection in the marketplace. In this day of mass transcontinental shipping, nations that can produce the best product at the lowest cost should be allowed to market their product unmanacled in other nations. If the Carter administration were to heed calls from Detroit for import quotas on automobiles, one result would be decreased consumer choice. Ordinarily, such quotas would cause alleged free market advocates, such as General Motors, to suffer displeasure. But they quickly change their minds when they see more Datsuns on the streets of Detroit. One-third of all U.S. assembly plants now are shutdown or are operating intermittently, yet General Motors has opened a new plant near Dallas and is building another plant near Kansas City, Kan., or near Olathe. Considering the ability of the Japanese to export their automobiles relatively cheaply and the inability of Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler to sell their products at reasonable prices in their home country, U.S. car buyers should have the choice of driving a Japanese car. the consumers' choices undoubtedly would cost some U.S. auto-workers their jobs. However, TED LICKTEIG PETER ROSS U. S. autoworkers with extended unemployment compensation now can change jobs if they have to without severe loss of income. Perhaps some of the unemployed auto workers could find jobs at foreign-owned assembly plants in the United States, although foreign companies are understandably hesitant about building plants here after they have glanced at the United Auto Workers' high pay scale. A possible way to attract foreign-owned auto companies would be for the auto workers to form an international union with their Japanese counterparts. Even Chrysler President Lee Iacoca's $1-a-year salary is not a sufficient sacrifice to justify spending up to $1.5 billion in loan guarantees to keep the Chrysler ship afloat. UAW President Richard McGee, president of directors, says the U.S. auto industry has suffered permanent damage from the recession. Chrysler's woes are a case of a company in a free-market system that has been victimized by a large mistake—not anticipating consumer needs and car—and the company should pay for its mistakes. The payment must be the dissolution of the Chrysler Corporation. The corporations's managers have been given a message—straight from the consumers' mouths—that poor management decisions are not accepted, and managementagers are required for inptem management policies with their jobs. Tax dollars should not be used to finance Chrysler efforts such as the K car, the company's new product that is intended to compete with the imports. As the world's nations become increasingly dependent on each other for raw materials and manufactured products, the importance of removing all trade barriers increases. This is especially important in regard to the Japanese. The United States cannot afford, particularly when the capability of U.S. defense is in question, to antagonize an important alloy such as Japan. Japan completes a triumvirate with France and Germany, others being North America and Western Europe. Imposing quotas on Japanese cars or raising tariffs on Japanese goods would only weaken the U.S. link to Japan. Even though Japanese tariffs are lower, they can still make Japan more dependent on Japan to make or break their profit margin. The size of a business that fails and the social impact of unemployment should not trigger a stream of cash into Detroit coffers or lead to sympathetic quotas. Letters to the Editor Benefits of 'Equal Rights' are misleading To the editor: Lest anyone get the wrong idea of what the Equal Rights Amendment is all about, I would like to respond to Amy Holloway's Sept. 3 article, "What are You Expecting From Me? What I consider to be misleading information." For those not familiar with it, the ERA simply reads, "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by a state on account of sex." Hollowell mentioned four rights that she implied would be made available to women upon passage of the ERA. First, "equal pay for equal work." Current fair labor laws and legislation such as the Equal Opportunity Act currently provide channels by which all laborers can seek justified positions, salaries, etc., from their employers. Second, "day-care programs for our children." After reading the proposed amendment, I am hard-pressed to see how it would provide for daycare centers. One might be able to make assumptions on the side effects of the ERA, but they do not necessary for funding day-care programs. Third, "equality in athletic funding." Certainly, with all the recent uproar in the KU athletic department, people are aware that Title IX has the ability to hurt, as well as to help, women's athletics. What will happen when six men seeking equal opportunity try out for the women's volleyball team (there being no men's team) and make the first string? Though tended as a boon for women, let's not forget that ERA is for both sexes. Fourth, "to control our own bodies." Score one for your side, Hollowell. I assume your phrase is simply semantics and that you shield away from saying the right to abortions. But with abortion, you not only control your body, but also that of your unborn infant. Who is protecting his or her equal rights? Abortion is a crucial point for both pro- and anti-ERA forces. Proponents fear the strength of the pro-life movement and know that ERA will all but lock abortion-on-demand into the constitution. The fact is, once again, that it is already extremely easy to get an abortion, which is why pro-lifers are still fighting for passage of a Human Life Amendment. So poor has support been over the past few years that an unprecedented court-ruled extension was granted pro-ERA forces to win ratification. Moreover, at least five states have called to rescind their prior approval, another court imposed move currently being battled in the courts. There are a myriad of other points that can be raised regarding the direct and indirect effects an ERA would have on women and men alike. Suffice it to say that of the 35 states now living in the US, more than those passed it in a wave of "Let's-be-for-menners and show-or-support-for-omenitis." Celeste Broytes Long Island, N.Y., graduate student The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 600-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or Delaware. Student subscriptions are $2 each, or $5 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 each, paid through the student activity (ee). Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Editor Business Manager Card Beer Elaine Strasser Managing Editor Jerry Schuster Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Gwerven Assistant Campus Editor Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Wilson Sports Editor Gene Myers Associate Sports Editor Paula Armand Entertainment Editor Kevin Milla Makeup Editor Bob Schaud, Ellen Iwawano, Jennifer Rohner Wear Editor Ted Tenedio, Lois Waldman Copy Chiefs Ellen Iwawano, Gail Eggers Chair Photographer Dary Feld Staff Photographers Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, ScottHook, Kevra Krusa, Dire Trewae Columista Amy Hollowell, Ted Lickeight, Bill Menendez, Brett Conway Carousel Artist Scott Faust, Fred Merak, Susan Schoenmaker, Glake Impegner Staff Artists John Jinks, Michael Wunch, Bret Bolton Staff Writers Dan Torchua, Shawn McKay National Sales Manager Nancy Causon Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Gambling Manager Treynor Court Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wendrodt Staff Artist Brian Salyers Photographer Brian Walshu Tear sheets Manager Barb Speely General Manager and News Advisor Karen Ardine Graphic Designer Chuck Chowin Unaligned editors represent the opinion of the Kawan editorial staff. Signed columnist represent the views of the editors and can only sign the letter if they include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should include the writer's class and homework or faculty or staff position. The Kawan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. They can be delivered personally or mailed to the Kawan newman, 11F Flint 1 University Daily Kansan, September 8, 1980 Page 5 ny in aized by consumer company of the institutions's straight poor and, poor inept finance e com- pete Canoe singly deals andonce of From page 1 the social bigger a lead to residents. They placed fifth with a time of 18 hours, 37 minutes. to the afford, defense int ally overate others. raising ken the tariffs oend on on. Forty-three canoes entered the Blue River at 8 t ft. and finished to the Kaw, but only 27 ft. and finished to the Kaw, but only east few led ex- to win swe have another titted in Broyles student Kreets great, said Gugi Accarun Lawrence sophomore and a member of the Rogues. The first exhausted canoeists stumbled up the bank at River Front Park just before 5 p.m. "I'm exhausted. I have no voice left, but it feels rrest." One K-State canoeist said, "I thought it was fun yesterday, but it got old today." Most canoeists who crossed the imaginary finish line halfway between the turnip and the Massachusetts Street Bridge celebrated by capturing their canoes and diving into the muddy water. "It's dirty, but you don't notice it after a while," said Joy Burson, a member of Oliver Hall's team. Burson she paddled about 20 miles Saturday. "My arms should be sore," she said, "but they are not yet. "And I have a 7:30 class in the morning." 17:30 class in the morning. The member who was groomed as they realized they had placed 18th "Anyway, we should celebrate getting out of it, alive," one member said. Most of the canoeists were wearing swimsuits and were sunbathed by the end of the race. Some were wearing sunglasses. Team members massaged one another's tired shoulders, gave tired congratulations and promised rewards of beer. The teams spent Saturday night on a sandbar near St. Marys, and K-State's food service provided beer and dinner for the canoeists. Most said they were too tired to enjoy it. "The gnats were awful," a K-State student said. Independent teams paid a $30 registration fee, and hall teams paid only $5. Some members of the Rogues are also members of the US Canoeing Association and are experienced canoeists. The Rogues have won the independent division in most of the seven years they have been competing, the team's captain said. Miriam Edelman, social programming chairman for the Association of University Residence Halls, said she was pleased with this year's race. "I'd like to see more participation from KU," she said. Edelman helped to cook the 58 dozen hot dogs provided by KU food service. She also timed the canoes and gave trophies to the five winning teams. its needs under supplies and expenses, capital equipment and library supplies, rent, travel and utilities; and personal services. This year, organizations must itemize needs in more detail. From page 1 Budget AN ORGANIZATION must list the number of pencils and pens it wants and the size and amount of advertising it plans to run in newspapers, for example. Abbott said. Auditing committee, said, "It has to be itemized down to the penny." Gordon said he did not forestall organizations having trouble receiving funds if their requests were not met. There are a number of reasons student organizations request money after spring funding is completed, Gordon said. About a quarter of the groups failed to hear about the spring budget requests or missed the application deadline, he said. ONE POINT that Bushong was important to Kansas schools, and Wichita State University in particular. was an urban university grant program. The program would have paid 90 percent of the cost of university programs that provided urban blight research services. Bill From page 1 An educational outreach program designed to bring more adults into higher education and university programs was part of the report, which with library training and research programs. Bushong said that the House and Senate had passed similar bills and that they differed only in dollar amounts. Those differences were substantial however. The conference committee was convened to discuss and research a compromise, but apparently, Bushong said, "the House is much more adept at rolling the Senate conference committee members." Mikl Gordon, co-chairman of the Finance and "We need a concentration of effort on the House side. Someone must appeal for an early hearing and then cut some of the budget abuse reported by Bush said." The report was just fiscally irresponsible. He said that in the second vote Thursday, when the report was tabled and sent back for possible reconsideration, the entire budget committee, including Kassebaum, voted against the report. However, Busbong and Kassebaum said they were optimistic that action would be taken before the Congress adjourned for the year. THE BILL WAS OVER WHEELMINGLY passed by the House, and Chris Bolten, legislative Plant From page 1 work under the big tent were members of the Men's Coalition and the Lawrence's Applied Technology Center, she said. Boaz said that except for Thursday night's incident, the women's commission has received nothing but support from both the campus and the community. Lewis said that she managed to save all the plants, but that the attack on the tent "was not a joke at all." She said she had suspicions about the pranksters, but she would not elaborate. Lewis and her friend tied the severed ropes to the end of a car and pulled the tent part of the way back up, she said. Then two carnival workers who knew how to put up tents happened to stop and help to help, she said. The men stayed until 4 a.m., driving in the stakes and stretching out the tent. In addition, many Lawrence residents in the nearby area offered to help in any way they could, Boaz said. Bob Timmons, men's track coach, was understanding and arranged for the disuse throwers to work around the tent during practice, she said. Next year, the commission will check with the athletic department in advance to avoid any such conflicts, she said. The tent company hired by the commission set up the tent on the grassy area northeast of the stadium, instead of on the brick street where it was located last year, she said. Unfortunately, the new site was "smack dab in the middle of the discus-throwing area" used by the mens' track and field team, she said. Bolten said that Dole considered higher education, and education overall, to be the most important investment the country could make, and that he did vote in favor of a balanced budget. assistant to Dole, was apprehensive about assessing his chances. But Bolten said Dole did not want to cut corners to save money at the expense of the bill, and he did not want to hurt the integrity of the bill by taking its financial benefits. Local response was quick. A legislative alert from a national lobbying organization, the United States Student Association in Washington, notified the KU Student Senate that the legislation had been defeated after the first session of the KU Student Senate. Schnacke, student body president, immediately started calling the state's congressmen in Washington. "I called all our representatives and both senators' offices to personally ask them to reconsider their votes and stands on the bill," Schnacke said last night. AMONG THE 25 salesmen who volunteered to "Apparently it didn't do any good." "We are following it pretty closely, something is going to happen. They won't leave us with nothing. It is just a matter of how much." "Whittaker seemed very enthusiastic and said he would do everything possible to get the bill passed," Schnacke said, "Winn just didn't seem very cooperative, or very interested in helping, but he said he would do what he could. Shnacke said he talked to Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan, and Rep. Bob Whittaker, R-Kan, and both said they would do what they could to get the bill passed. "We are trying to get the most money we can for education. We have to get them to come up with an equitable compromise." 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The Fienish Plot of Dr. Fumanchu 7:30 & 9:30 PB Record Sale Hwy H North Lake Geneva, Wis., 53147 Jazz Rock BEST PRICES starts at Dusk Ends Sundav Bluegrass Country BEST QUALITY * BEST FRUITS * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Showtunes BOOKSTORES Collections And More BEGINNING The Kansas Union Bookstores Good Music for Less at SEPT.10th Marantha Christian Ministries One of our very special crepes filled with ice cream, crowned with sliced bananas, luscious hot fudge, a special whipped topping and chopped nuts 6175 Desserts From Village Inn We Suggest Our Special . . . Banana-Nut Crepe choice of fruit toppings and crowned whipped topping . . . . . $1.35 bread with strawberries or blueberries $1.25 plain $1.50 with topping $1.50 Dessert Crepe -- choice of fruit toppings and crowned whipped topping . . . . . $ . 95 Cheese Cake -- "European Style" Strawberry Shortcake shortcake topped with strawberries, blueberries, peaches or cherries and whipped topping . . . . . . . . . $1.35 Sundaes Deep Dish Pies — Fruit or Cream filling . . . $1.35 Topped with strawberries or blueberries Carrot Cake . . . . . . . $ . 95 **Strawberry** — Luscious strawberry topping and whipped topping over 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream topped with nuts . . . . . . $1.25 Tuesdays 7:00 pm Union Jayawk Room Fridays 7:00 pm 1144 Rhode Island (Corner of RI and 125th) Chocolate — For those cocoa nuts who say "any flavor as long as it's chocolate." 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream topped with chocolate syrup and whipped topping, and sprinkled with nuts . . . $1.25 Hot Fudge — 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream under thick 'n smooth hot fudge, whipped topping and chopped nuts . . . . . $1.25 For more info call Bob Duvall 841-9254 Ice Cream - Single scoop . . . . $ .55 Village Inn is located at 821 Iowa. Milk Shakes Thick and Creamy, Chocolate, Strawberry or Vanilla. $1.15 Dessert Blintze Jello . . . . . . . . . . . $ . 50 Come and See Us! Veteran of Wattson Library Renovation 1980-1982 Now YOU can have one, too . a Watson Renovation t-shirt. $5.00 A variety of colors. Call Kendall at Circ. 864-4715 --or Contact I.F.C. office, room 120, level 3, Kansas Union 1:00 K.U. Ladies Wednesday Monday Tuesday P. M. Specials Till 6:00 All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 6:15 All Campus Bowling - Billiards 6:30 Dormitory Amusement Machines Fall 1980 Leagues Thursday Friday Sunday Bowlina - Billiards 1:00 K.U. Ladies 8:30 Greek 6:30 All Star Scratch 3 games/person $2.00 6:30 Guys & Dolls Join A Fall League NOW Hours 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) 4:00 TGIF 8:30-11:00 PM BOWLING IS FUN! Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Sat. & Sun. IS FUN! 8:30-11:00 PM 1:00 PM-11:00 PM For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 KANSAS UNION Jay Boul 88 THE FRATERNITY FOR THE 80's ΘX THETA CHI ΘX Now forming at KU Theta Chi offers: Chapter involvement, Brotherhood, alumni support, social interaction and the opportunity to develop your own fraternity programs. Informational-Interest Meetings: Sept. 9, 7:00 p.m. Sept. 10, 2:00 p.m. Sept. 11, 7:00 p.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union For More Information, Call 864-3559 or 864-4861 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 8, 1960 Anti-draft protesters' trial date moved Three members of the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization who are charged with criminal trespassing in an incident at Lawrence High School, April 16, have had their trials rescheduled to 10 a.m. Thursday in Lawrence Municipal Court. The trial originally had been scheduled for Sent. 4. The three, Teddi McCullough, Lawrence junior, Juliet Matamua, Overland Park sophomore, and Doug Bradley, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, junior, were charged after they allegedly refused to leave school property after being told to do so by both the principal and vice principal. Colt Kruntan, city prosecutor, requested the continuance last Thursday because of an extremely heavy case load, he said. The defendants were part of a group of KADO members who were entrusted with leaflets at the school. The leaflets described options to draft registration. The defendants, who face a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and $100 fine or both, contended they received permission to hand out leaflets from Tate, Lawrence High School andipal, about two weeks before the incident. Ron Kuby, 1979 KU graduate and KADO supporter, said he discussed the matter with Tate in late March or early April. He said he agreed to keep the group out of the school building and enter the school or extend to the school. Kuby is now attending law school at Cornell University, Ithaca N.Y. Tate, however, denied giving Kuby permission to distribute leaflets on school grounds, saying it would have been a violation of school board policy. "We discussed distributing literature in the street and on the public sidewalks, not on school property," he said. Tate said he was forced to call police after KADO members refused to leave school. McCulloch, one of the defendants, denied that the group had refused to leave. She charged that the police acted unprofessionally when they joined Tate and Max Rife, vice principal of the school, in a debate with the KADO group. She said the principals and camp's patriotism during the 20-minute exchange, which was witnessed by about 30 students. After the debate ended, police took down the names of the group's memoirs. Jack Klinknett, a Lawrence attorney representing the defendants, requested that the three be tried together. Judge George Catt granted the request Thursday along with the prosecution's request for a continuance. Commission to decide on mall in November By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission said it would be November or December before a decision was made about the future of a proposed downtown mall, --- ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES - Rush Services Available on Black and White Displays. - Rich Comfort Shades (B + W) * Rush Fit W Entrance - Reash B + W Entargements - Black and White Prints from slides in 2 days - 16x20" B + W Prints from color or Black and White film - 4x6" Color Prints from 30mm - 4x6" Color Prints from 35mm * Charges Available * Ready to Display * Charges Available Ta K. U. Department 2741 MASCHAUQUEETTS OVERLAND PHOTO Phone 841-9788 SUA FILMS Monday, Sept. Dr. Zhivago (1965) Boria Pastakern a screen brilliantly by David brought to the screen brilliantly by David and the screen brilliantly by David Sharf, Julie Christie, Tom Courteny, Rod Steiger and Klaus Kinski. Freddy Young's sumptuous cinematography and the award-winning score won Oscar. (197) min.] Color: 7-30 Tuesday, Sept. 9 Nothing Sacred (1937) True Confession (1937) Two screwball comedies starring Carole Lombard, in Nothing Sacred, perhaps her own creation of a rare disease, reporter Frederic March gets her on front page with an interview where she will happen in this hilarious satire. Directed by William Welman, in *True Confession* would happen. With John Barrrymore and Danielle Ruggles (7/90 hour) ColorB 7: W-30. Wednesday, Sept. 10 Accident The second collaboration of Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter (the first was published in 1978), provoking examination of a professor, the student he loves and the others who confront them. Excellent performances by Aaron Levine, Stanley Baker, Jacqueline Sassard (as the student and Michael York make this challenging film, [108 mL]). Color: 7:30 (1967) Thursday, Sept. 11 Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands Dana Fler is prepared to settle down with her husband, who drank and danced himself to death, causes as a ghost. Based on Jorge Amado's eerie novel, this套牌的 Sensation is about Jorge Amado's son, Sienna Bajra as Dona Fler. Directed by Todd Siegel (minority; 7:30). Portugal subtitles. Color: IMDb. (1977) Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Dowdorf Auditorium in the Theatre District. Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Telefilms. Tickets available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th level, Information 684-403-1200, smoking or refreshments allowed. although a development firm has said that without support, it may drop its stock. "They're trying to press for an early decision, and we told them they wouldn't get an appointment on or consider their report," missioner Don Binnis said last Friday. Last week, Don Jones, a spokesman for the Cleveland-based firm of Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs, said if there was no support for the proposal, the firm would drop its downtown mall plans. He also said the firm may reconsider a suburban alternative either at 37th and Iowa Streets or outside the Lawrence city limits. SINCE THE MALL project began two years ago, downtown merchants and others have expressed concern that a large wall would hurt downtown businesses. "Say it with a Song" Flowers by Alexanders ASTA Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Commissioner Barkley Clark said he had sensed from the other Commission members that the city probably would not accept a "corfield" mall proposal. Jones also said the contractors had received negative responses to their mall proposal and that he planned to come to Lawrence later this month to learn what was a possibility that the proposal could be accepted in Lawrence. The plan for a proposed 479,000 square-foot downtown mall at Massachusetts and Rhode Island streets. Ninth街丝景 was announced in July. TOPEKA (UPI)—Like a Sherlock Homes searching for clues, ALF Landon peered through a flapjack-sized magnifying glass at one of a dozen newspapers delivered to his home. Landon still keen on politics On the verge of 93, Alf Landon, 1936 GOP presidential nominee, might have trouble reading newspaper print, but his prowess for reading between the lines remains sharp. "I've been thinking about those strikes in Poland," he begins, thrusting out a torn-out newspaper clipping and plunging headlong into the world events he meticulously follows. He recalls a parlor chat with a journalist of Polish descent at the time Pope John Paul II was visiting his native Poland. Landon boasts that he forecast then that the pope's visit would touch off a further breakdown of the anti-religious Soviet fabric in Poland. Landon's latest prediction is that the Polish strikes for freedom of expression could be the beginning of a new Russian communism as we know it. A visitor to 521 Westchester Road here would do well to sit up and to pay attention. The two-term Kansas governor, who lost in the 1936 landslide election to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was 30 years ahead of a diplomatic recognition of China. He obrethes his 93rd birthday tomorrow. Forty-four years after he last ran for public office, he still keeps his eye on the political scene, at the campaign booth, as his broadcast and oil interests. M. D. Alf Landon Always progressive, Landon is not afraid to admit he thinks the Republican Party is too conservative for its own good. From his favorite stuff arm-chair in the family library, Landon follows the 1000 presidential campaign and takes a stroll down newpaper stacked on his footstool. "That was true in 1936," he said, when he sent three disregarded telegrams to the GOP National Convention asking them to moderate their views on monetary and welfare policies. He even ventures to predict that chances are good the United States will see a woman president by the year 2000. Perhaps his daughter? "For heaven's sake," he scrawls. Landon and his daughter, U.S. Ses. Nancy Kassbeau, keep in touch, with her family, speculating on the other's business. "I have confidence in Ronald Reagan's position from his splendid record as governor of California," Landon said slowly between sips of orange juice. "By and large, I think his foreign policies, as they become unfolded, will be recognized as common sense." Computer center coordinator to leave in spring Paul J. Wolfe, coordinator of the Academic Computer Center, will leave his post next spring to go into private business, he said Friday. moving to distribute computer terminals around campus for more convenient access. He said he hoped that program would continue in that direction. Fantastic Sam's He and his wife, Pat, will move to the Detroit area to manage a concrete corporation that she inherited last January, he said. Hogan said that Wolfe had been instrumental in helping the University bring higher-level technology to KU and that under Wolfe, the University offered advanced" in the versatility and availability of computer technology. BEFORE COMING to the University of Kansas in 1989, Wolfe was associate director of the computer center at the University of Iowa in Ames. S Wolfe, 49, has degrees from St. Ambrose College, Davenport, Iowa, the University of Michigan and Pennsylvania State University. departure, but said it would be between Abril 1 and July 1, 1981. "I feel fortunate to have worked with people who were sensitive to the improvements needed." Wolfe said. William E. Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said that a search committee had been appointed. The committee hoped to choose a replacement within the next four or five months. he said. - perm $40.00 new hours Wolfe praised the University administration for obtaining funds from the Legislature for building the Academic Computer Center. - adult style $12.00 - perm $40.00 • color $26.00 - color $26.00 Mon Fri 9-6 Tues Wed Thurs 9-8 Wolfe did not give a definite date of - Henna Lucent $20.00 He said the computer center was - luminize $20.00 Students: take advantage of the coupon for $2 off any service in the PeopleBook (includes cut) NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY. Lawrence 1422 W. 23rd 841-1877 MAKE EXTRA MONEY SELL AUDIO EQUIPMENT AT YOUR COLLEGE - No Investment! - Provided - Incentive Programs! - No Investment! * Professional Sales Help - Sell over 60 Top Brands! * RE YOUR OWN BOSS! Call or Write Serious inquiries ONLY! AUDIO OUTLET, INC. 10 Commerce Ct. Rm 217 Newark, NJ 07102 | 612-622-2350 Village Inn PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT AUDIO OUTLET, INC All You Can Eat Pancakes $1.79! Served With 2 Link Sausages 4:00 p.m. to Close 821 Iowa Lawrence MAN Thurs. Sept.11 Tues. Sept.9 NEW Perspectives PRESENTS Whatever Happened to the Human Race? (abortion...infanticide...euthanasia.???) 7:00 Wescoe Auditorium -Francis Schaeffer film series $3/series or $2/evening SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts Watch for Presales In Your Living Group MOTOBECANE FRANCE Q MUM'S THE WORD R For Parents Day PRESALES: SEPT. 8-11th ONLY $2.50 DAY OF GAME DAY OF GAME SEPTEMBER 20 $3.00 Sponsored by Lambda Sigma $ \Psi\mathrm{X} $ PSYCH CLUB - FILMS - FIELD TRIPS - GRADUATE SCHOOL INFO. - GUEST SPEAKERS - B.A. JOB INFO. FIRST MEETING SEPT. 9, 1980 4:30 pm Rm. 4 FRAASER FUNDED BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE Pier 1 imports 738 Mass (Downtown) 841-7525 Early Jayhawk Discount Valid for a 10% discount on entire line through Sept. 13th. Total sale with coupon 10% Free Lay-A-Way Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 8.1980 Sports Calendar Page 7 8 p.m. - Dallas Cowboys at Rockingham Bank (Cha) 9:30 p.m. - Kansas City Royals at Angeles Angels 9 9:30 p.m. — Kansas City Royals at California Angels (KMBZ-AM, KKKX-FM) Sports Quiz 10 9:30 p.m.—Kansas City Royals at California Angels (KMB2-A, KKKX-FM) Q Friday's answer— Today's question— Which former KU basketball player to play on an NBA championship team? Karl Salb won the indoor and outdoor shot put titles three times to hold the KU record for most NCAA championships. A | | W | L | Pct | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Buffalo | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | New England | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 17 | | Baltimore | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 14 | | Y Jets | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 14 | | Miami | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 7 | Pittsburgh 1 0 1.000 31 17 Cincinnati 1 0 1.000 17 17 Cleveland 0 1 .000 17 34 Houston 0 1 .000 17 31 AMERICAN CONFERENCE EAST Wests San Diego 0 1 0 1000 34 17 Oakland 1 0 1 000 37 14 Kansas City 0 1 0 000 14 27 Seattle 0 1 1 000 13 34 Professional Football EAST N. J. Giants 1 0 1 000 41 37 Philadelphia 1 0 1 000 26 58 Dallas 1 0 000 000 00 Washington 1 0 000 000 00 St. Louis 1 0 1 000 35 41 NATIONAL CONFERENCE CENTRAL Detroit 1 0 1000 41 26 Green Bay 1 0 1000 41 26 Minnesota 1 0 1000 41 26 Tampa Bay 1 0 1000 17 12 Chicago 0 1 1000 6 12 WEST San Francisco. 1 0 1 000 26 23 Los Angeles. 1 0 1 000 26 41 New Orleans. 1 0 1 000 23 23 Atlanta. 1 0 1 000 26 24 Oakland 27, Kansas City 14 Buffalo 20, Chicago 16 New England 34, Cleveland 17 Milwaukee 13, Atlanta 23 Minnesota 22, Baltimore 17 Buffalo 17, Miami 14 New York Giants 51, Louis 31 Cincinnati 28, New Orleans 23 Tampa Bay 17, Cincinnati 17 Detroit 18, Cleveland 21 Philadelphia 27, Denver 6 Detroit 41, Los Angeles 20 Dallas 20, Philadelphia Weekend Results Nebraku 15, Kanausa 13, game 1 Nebraku 15, Kanausa 7, game 2 Kanausa 15, Nebraku 13, game 3 Kanausa 15, Nebraku 13, game 4 Nebraku netsch match=21. Major-league Baseball EAST W L Pct. GBT New York 85 51 624 - Baltimore 85 73 594 - Denver 71 60 549 - Detroit 71 64 528 - Milwaukee 73 60 525 - Chicago 73 68 428 - Toronto 73 68 313 - N.Y. 73 68 134 - Rugby Johnson County A 19, Kansas A 18 Kansas B 14, Johnson County B 4 AMERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday's Games | | W | L | L | Pet. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 87 | 50 | 50 | .635 | — | | Texas | 68 | 60 | 50 | .490 | 19% | | Indiana | 68 | 60 | 79 | .432 | 19% | | Minnesota | 68 | 79 | 19 | .432 | 20% | | Chicago | 57 | 72 | 82 | .422 | 20% | | Seattle | 50 | 82 | 86 | .388 | 21% | NATIONAL LEAGUE Tennessee 7, Missouri 5 Oakland 5, Baltimore 2 Cincinnati 4, Texas 2 Boston 12, Boston 6 New York 4, California 1 Miami 4, Florida 3 W L W Pts GB Montreal 72 63 .421 Philadelphia 72 63 .421 San Diego 71 63 .421 St. Louis 61 74 .452 New York 61 74 .452 Chicago 61 74 .452 Los Angeles W L Pct GB Houston 79 60 363 Houston 77 60 364 Clintown 74 63 340 Chicago 71 65 282 San Francisco 67 70 349 7% Dallas 65 70 328 1% Atlanta 6, Pittsburgh 5 Chicago 6, Cleveland 4 San Diego 5, New York 2 Houston 2, Houston 1 St. Louis 2, Houston 1 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten ten one two three four五 six seven八九十 ten one two three four五六七八九十 ten one two three四五六七八九十 ten one two三 AD DEADLINES Girls Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Wednesday Thursday Friday Wednesday ERRORS The Kanana will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE or charge a per calendar not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Krainan business office at 864-538 ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Elm Hall 9644 735 DIABETES SEMINAR Monday, Sept. 8, 7-30 Wakins Memorial Hospital "Home blood" monitoring as an aid in better control "A" of diabetes and interested staff at the university, 9-8 INT INTRAMURAL GOLF 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quit and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 632-9579 or 842-4185. tf 9 Need more info? Recreation Services 864-3546 Every Wednesday starting Sept. 10 at 4:00 p.m. at The Orchard's Golf Course. 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplaces. 4 bdm, townhouse with 3 students 2500, 684-733. Will take 1 Warm to learn more about the Bible or fellowship groups. No phone calls, no p.m. partings. B Union. The Salt Lake Church. DIABETES SEMINAR TONIGHT, 7:30 PM 2nd floor conference room Watkins Memorial Hospital Newly remodeled rooms, fire alarm system, $90 per room, plus 1 - bedroom apt. CpL 483-328 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. "Home blood glucose monitoring as an aid in better control." A discussion group for the diabetic student and interested staff at the university One dollar pitcher—Monday, Tuesday, and Friday. 3:00-9:00. We open Friday and Sat- day at 8 a.m. Greens Park. 810 W. 23rd. For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. May work out part of rest if 642 - 815-485. Looking for something on Sunday? THE CLUB LOISIN 508 Locust 842-763-9900 Open from 5 a.m. to 11 a.m. Memberships available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 2. Nib-2bm. furnished apt. close to K.U. $250 /mo. 841-9247. 9-12 ENTERTAINMENT 75e schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. tt BRINGIN' IT ALL, BACK HOME. This week we are featuring highlights from our earliest day. Fast forward to October 13, Roger Bain, Dr. Jack and more Wed. and Thurs., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., September 13, 10 p.m. on Cable 6. 9-12 FOR RENT OPUS presents Berry Bernstein solo合奏 album, "Bring On," with the Arts Center. "Bring on rave" and "Saturday." 2 Bedroom Townhouse Renoting now. 180 sq. ft. You'll like our loft, southern Sunny Parkway and beautiful views! Fleet out at the area I building. 392 square feet. Outer and inner waiting rooms. cecilionist room and 3 inner rooms with bathroom. Outside parking lot. Ideal for ophthalmologist, optometrist, or medical doctor. Can be made private restroom. Call 843-2104 or 843-7077. For Rent Now, large studio, completely tur- nanted. Has desk. Room for conference meetings. $100 deposit. $350 monthly could be used for office Call 843- 2104 or 843-7077. Enjoy West Meadows Condo. A brand new nest of 24 baths, wood burning fireplace, Central Water Supply comp., dishwasher, swimming pool, golf course. Phone number: 841-6033. more information call 841-6033. 9-9 JAYHAWK WEST APARTMENTS Welcomes K.U. Students & Faculty ONE BEDROOM, ONE BEDROOM WITH STUDY and TWO BEDROOM APTS. From $205.00 available JAYHAWK OFFERS: *A) Free Shuttle Bus to Campus B) 24 Hour Service C) 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service D) Indoor & Outdoor Pools E) Indoor & Outdoor Swimming Pools E) Laundry Facilities on Site *F) 10 Month Lease Available D) Fees apply *G) Furnished or Unfurnisher CALL 842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. #2 Beautiful old home in location of Lawrence, Oregon. Family room, family family (4 bdm's), kitchen, dining rm, living rm, kitchen bath, water heater, $162/month to jax. For more info call 8-242-4555 p.m.-9. p.m. to call New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdms, study, kitchen, dining room, etc. Kitchen, dining room. No pet. For more information call 812-4455 8-4 am. p.-3月. Victoria Capri Apartments. Unfurnished 4 & 2 bedroom apartments. Available. Central air wall to wall capelet wall. Call 912-8703 south south on weekdays. Call 912-8703 5:30 th or anytime on weekends. These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downstreet! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ bays, garage with automatic kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4458. a.m.-5.p.m. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing 3 bdmr. basement apt. $300 month. All utili- ties paid. $100 deposit. Call 843-2440 B-5 ask for Julie. Available now, large older four bedroom three-bedroom unit in 1980s 138 Marchmont suisse $360 mon. Call 454-273-3911 or email info@architectures.com lovely, furnished upstairs for a grade school student. The house is not pet-free. No pets. Smoking is permitted. 812-1299. for fall or spring, Naimith Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private bath. It, weekly maid service to clean your room, has a bathroom with much more. If you're looking for a room that will want, stop in or drive us to a NAIMITH Hall 1800, Naimith Drive, 843-8599 *if* you 3 bdmr. apt. $350 month. All utilities paid. $100 deposit. No pets. 843-2440, 8-5 ask for Julie. Room in house. Prefer upperclass.grnd. woman. Many privileges. Close to campus. Call 842-5082. 9-8 Male roommate to kitchen, Apartment, laundry, Pool, a rent. a cent., air-conditioning. Furniture and gird (exe) photo foces table TY, Call Kevin evens. 841-594-3234. W 323 W. B兴站. BRAND NEW FOUR-PLEXI For only $290 per month. You can live close to shop, store or drive distance to K.J. And you'll be the first to see it. Air, refrigerator diaportes. Cali Dick Edmondson Real Estate at 841-7643 or Rob Hickman Real Estate at 893-7628. See www.domrealestate.com. Roommate needed—Apt. near Jayhawk and wage paid. Prefer Senior. 749-173-8 www.jayhawk.com Tennessee Institute of Technology Warren 1 on 1 or 2 Student to appraise 9 m. biathlon 1 on 1 or 2 Student to appraise 9 m. biathlon KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished 2 rooms, new master suite, new beautiful building! Call 913-821-8878. 10-3 phone. Modern, air, conditioned large 3 bdm. apartment. 848-905-1211. Desk 10. Tel 848-905-1224 or 848-905-1299. 864-905-1299. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator speculators. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 830-9600. $500 AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 830-9600. $500 WATERBED MATTRESSES $35.98, 3 year MATTRESSS, WHITE LIGHT, 704. Mass., $16. $1368. New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding. Made of polyester and latex. Ladies' Furniture. 1200 New York Bk 8445. 109. mUSTANG M. 4. spd. 4. cyl. A.C. 27,000 mil. svery w / red. 841-199. 104-90 Lowest prices in town on Houseplants. 440 Florida. 824-0039. 5-Mon-Sat. - 8:49 1977 Datanpickup 4 speed, excellent companion vehicle with self-maintenance.驾铃 843-7693 after 5 hrs of service. 35-Watt Amp. Brushed aluminum, 6-point high-great features. In excel, 6-84 hit; 64-89 glitch. Reel to Reel AKAI 400-D-B8. Top of the Reel to Reel AKAI 300-D-B8. Weekdays 8-weekdays. Leave name and nume Pioneer SX-550 Receiver $125, Marantz 46 Speakers 550 like. New. 843-762-93-8 9-8 Papers coming due? Like new electric typewriter paper, or like old one piece phone, microphones 84-2923, 9-10 Bookcases $30, custom orders taken on 8892 commodities. M. J. Stryker. 9-10 8893. Maranir receive Model 18, 40 watt/wchan, at 0.2% distortion, excellent condition. 15 girls, 10-speed, Raleigh, domper/trip机, good condition, 9-10 Call 841-4675 2 bdmr. bungalow, recent extensive remodel- ment, greenhouse, nice lot, $30.250. Call 843-7945 or Keith Stanley, 843-796 843-7945 eyes or Haffield Real Estate, Mass. 843-3211. Mass. 843-3211. Blue Plumy Fury III—air. Call Alden at 772) 1606 (ecc with people cod canon 1971 Camaro=Beautiful throughout. Must be able to handle inquiries in-room. Call Andy at 843-908-5680. 1974 Kawasaki KZ 400, good condition 841- 4764 9-8 1484 Chevy 4-door, 327-V, 4 V speed man- ufacturer -$850, call 814-4847. 9-10 Drawing Table 30" × 45" and padded stool 1833. Call 845-0250 after 5. 9-11 1835. Call 845-0250 after 5. 9-11 75 Mustang 2, 4 cyl. new radialis, huggage box 18-inch. Tailgate hatch. Call son after 8 a.m. at p84-5138. 9-11 Double Bed. Mattress, Box springs, Frame $100 or offer. Call Oak $945. Mise. DR & LR FURNiture, incl 5 pc. DL, Cabinet and Chair and Blinds. Call an 841-6726. Dolphin Senior 14 ft. Sailboat Good condition Rental. Price is $995-$1,000. Priced to sell. 842-997-3911. 9-11 Small air conditioner, $25 and a 4½ cubic refrigerator; $125 after call 6:00 p.m. - Monday through Friday. 78 Mazda GLC, ex. cond., bost offer. 842- 9-11 Chevrolet Malibu, PS. PB, AC. AT, weekdays 1400. 749-509 those 5 - 10 weekdays WANTED TO BUY - Cameron, any year you contact, Call Rep. after 5:39, 709-3798 or 709-5253. Thank you! Snow skis 195 cm with boots. Must sell. Snow ki-841-8874 or 864-3627. 9-12 1886 Dodge Dart- Automatic Transmission. 1903 Dodge Dart- runs good. $352, *18* 5716 after 3:39 p.m. $452 1926 Dodge Dart- runs good. $352, *18* 1767 Cullass Sup. Salon, 2 Dr. HT, AC. AM- uk i. blue with white hair 2124. 9-12 THE CLEAN is now auditioning to be familiar with new wave. Call 814-2256. 9-9 Matured house man wanted for sorority. Call 843-4472. 9-10 Needed Immediately—School and personal care attendants to assist a young female student in disability or on call. Set hours. Call Dora Wray 842-9381, 841-2972, 843-1011. Study Opportunity—Local Manufacturing baby nappies for local manufacturers, night babynappies for bright, mature 8th grade boy on occasional basis to allow busi- ness. 841-714-717 (Home). 9-9 Light housework three to four hours weekly. Must have transportation. 842-6507. 9-8 The University of Kansas Audio-Reader university program specialist. This person will manage eligible listeners and coordinate community programming. This person will also serve as chairperson of Kansas. Person will also serve as chairperson of development Committee. College drafter requires experience in graphic layout experiences editing and graphic layout experience editing for members of small towns Travel required for position on graphic layout deadline 5-11-90. Position available through Audio-Reader Network, 150 W 11th St., Kansas City, MO 64103. We are an equal opportunity employer. 1 Day care staff needed for extended day care. Send resume to Job ID 8129, Baird Johnah Hammel 841-6721 or Baird Johnah Jack 841-6720 for school age child care with pre-school or school age child care. We are an equal opportunity employer. ATTENTION SKIERS: Part-time, student job at Parkside. Job number 1980-1981 school year. Job involves promoting an office for commission and free travel. Call or email: Parkside Plaza, Columbia, Mo 65201; Inc. Parkside Plaza, Columbia, Mo 65201; Parkside Plaza, Columbia, Mo 65201. Counter girls needed. Work 2-3 nights per week. Minimum wage. Apply at Bum Sceer Bar-B-Que, 2554 Iowa. Satisfaction (male or female) needed at 0529pm. Call Calvert Moore 847-232-6522 satisfaction desired Call Daumr Moore 847-232-6522 BabySitting for our 4-mon. old in our home. Mon, thru Fri 8:45 am - 12:45 pm. 100 month. Must have own transportation to驾车 able to devote this time to baby. 841-7433 9-12 Wanted-Person with artistic ability and automotive knowledge to do cut-and-draw drawing of 29 Ford Roadster Street Rd. Waukee, WI 53591 or 379-8033, Tecumseh, KS 698-9128 LOST PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS. To meet personal needs of handicapped individuals, part time employees assisting with dressing, toiling, bathing, transfers to and from wheel chairs, cleananding and or errands. Independence Kentucky, 841-833. Employer. A 9-12 Wanted: Passport was lost and found by the student who reported gave it back to the student, but no one has been charged. Student reading this ad should call 864-3817 and inform owner of passport to whom she is located. Reward for return of black notebook con- tent research data. Inside blue backpcket taken from Thursday, August 28, 864-3731 or 843-6129 No questions asked NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE SCHOOL YOU WISH TO attend night lights, your membership card gets to you at all night long. Only at your place, THE LOUSE WHERE 'Partying is our business.' Lost: My passport 8-26 between University and Brooklyn. I was at the airport before 8-30 am. Married number 842-9125, 928 DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night at LOUISE'S West, 7th; and Michigan behind McDonalds on 6th. $4=$gms.$3=gmrs—All the cold Coors you can drink. **tt** NOTICE PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821 9-30 Looking for the perfect gift idea We've got it ASTA Singling Telegraphs, 841-619-6980. PULLAAM'S MUSIC DOWNTOWN-LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE music store in Lawrence area. Open daily at 9:30-5:30. T-shirts at 8:30, 9:26, Mass. 843-875. 9-9 FOX HILI SURGERY CLINIC--abortion Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. for appl. call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (913) 621-300 4401 w. 10th St. Overland Park, Kansas tz Headquarters is a community of people who are in the military or just want to talk, call or drop question HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. Every 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 hikings (75% to the club) and the amuseable sphere of The Club loUSE, $98 LoUSE, 842-949. "Fartying is our business." almost anything you might need to talk to someone, but we don't have with someone else who might be able to speak to you. We never close. Headquarters is the office of our CEO, and anytime we are close, LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louis on Wednesday nights). Drinks are served free. Attendance is limited and there no cover charge. Only at The Club Louis. 508 Locust. 842-9429. 9-30 SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB LOUSE, 3 for night. From 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday PART TIME INTERNISHP OPPORTUNITY. willing to explore the opportunities available wilting to observe the company our part-time large system at the company's office. 411. Bound Opportunity employees MJF, Boulder, Colorado 411. Bound Opportunity employees MJF, Boulder, Colorado SUN TRAVEL Weekend Getaways Presents: The Renaissance Festival September 13 $10.00 (includes transportation and admittance) For more info, drop by the SUA office, or call 864-3477. Reservation deadline Sept. 8. SUA will transport you back to a time where wandering minstrels, jugglers, and sword fights are common. See for yourself that chivalry is not a dead. He Start Needs You to volunteer to work with students in need, for one day each week, teach a child, for one day each week. In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for less cash, Louise Moyer will be the guest speaker at DROWN at the CLUB LOUISE. All students at the CLUB LOUISE can you drink-guys only $1; students only $2; girls only $4 a club THE CLUB LOUISE, 508 Locust, LLC, your company available. "Partying is our business." Instruction in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu- Monkey, Preying Mantis 841-7450. 9-8 TIGE AT LOUSES' BAR with $125 pitch- ing and $60 doubles. Friday from 2 till 6 he -- AbAlah | Commuting? From | Kansas City to Law Debbie (816) | 942-6060 (evenings) 9-9 I LOUISIANA WEST CHINESE AND GROWN Tentage after 6 $4 - guys $13 - girls At tavern seating $25 - desk 71 & Michigan Pleasant Aquarius female invited to meet with attractive Libra male) Ca84-26447 LOUSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR Everyday for 12 and 16 pitches, 7 to 11 and 36 pitchers, 7 to 11 and 36 pitchers, Partying with the staff. The Moffitt Berra Bands is now holding quities only. Call 842-508-938, 842-508-939, or 842-508-940. GET PSYCHED-Drink and Drown at the PFT BEETS-MOOF FETTS BEERS Wed. Sept. 16. 9-8 I rather have both bottle of face or a frontal laboology. Greens Tavern, 8th 9-12 Come to THE HARBOUR LITES for the first class departure in front of the tube. Tonight, from 7:10 p.m. all LITE客 60c can/bottles; from 8:30 p.m. all LITE客 90c can/bottles. First-Class Dive. 1031 Massachusetts. 9-8 TENNIS PLAYERS: There's still a lot of good players in tennis. Make sure your strings will have it cut. Call *C.* the number 8054 for great prices on good strings and strings with better tension. Call *K.* the number 810 and K. VARITY Tennis Stringer. 9-18 SERVICES OFFERED Job resumes prepared by a personal pa- sition. Send resume to the campus interviews. 841-6644-9 9-12 Portable Dishwasher. Excellent condition. Portable Dryer. Call 841-793-1920 or 841-8645. Keep trying. Instant color passport photos. Immigration. - B-16 color & E/W Tom 841-7294. - B-16 LEARN TNISM this fall in fun classes with the Niners. Visit www.ninersm.com for a start Monday evening. Sept. 8. Details http://www.ninersm.com/learning/tnism/. Einstein's tutor. It worked for Albert. For expert assistance in mathematics or com- panion, heave, love 841-7638. English grammar, composition, research. Type 9-8 A randy 843-7040. THE BIKE GARAGE -Complete professional garage. Temporary garages scattered by Garage specialties. Pune- s, New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Bengaluru. T.A.N. Ld. offering $12 discount to K.U. sailing on Lake Superior, earning salina in Lawrence. Guaranteed risk. and no dangerous ultraviolet rays. Call for Monday, thursdays at 9:45- 8:32 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-10:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2½ EACH Kegs and Case Beer. Long neck Busch Bottles—85c deposit. Greens Tavern. 810 W. 23rd. HOUSE OF USHE: Barbie and guitar lessons with Chris Bickle, 3rd place winner Nat'l Flipcharting Championship in 1978 and 1979. Call 841-0171. 9-12 TYPING For the finest complete service on most imports—STRIGT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Diatom, Fiat, Honda, Toyota. 843-644-2847. Experienced K. U. typet IBM Correcting Technique. Work with Sandy, Sandy, and weekend weeks. Sandy, Sandy, and weekend weeks. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective. Call Ellen or Jeannan. 841-2172. 12-8 Experienced typifier-typ term papers, thesis. Instructed on various writing styles spelled corrected. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. Typing words discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6897 after 5 and weeks ahead. tf ENCORE COPY CORPS 1970-2014 100,000 RSVPs IRON FENCE TYPEP SERVICE. Fast re- liabilities, accurate, IBM ppi/ite. 842-507-0 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. **tf** Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations term papers, mise. IBM correcting selective. Barb, after 5 p.m. b43-2510. tf I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt Type1, Editor, IBM PC/File, Quality Work, responsible rates. These dissertations w=icome, editing/layout. Call Joan. 98- 92-1917. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tt Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-3203. 9-19 Theses, Dissertations, etc. IBM Selectric or entered on computer via your account. 841-694, after 5:30. 9-12 WANTED GOLD- SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Coin, Sterling etc. we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 542-2868. DRUMMER like for Rock or Funk Band to play with. Call Ken at 749-852. 98- Buying gold. PAYing $50-$100 for men's class rings, less for ladies. R&D Coln Shop. 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza. 942-9628. 9-30 Professional couple w/4 children seek non-commissioned transportation to care for infant and 2-yr-old child. 3 or 4 mornings a week or T & T after breakfast in Rhodydle. 314 interview for appt study. Gain valuable experience while being a leader. Give the opportunity to start needs volunteers to work with 3 and 5 students or work in a position of time or life, or time and love to share, callobby, callebry, bobry, bory. Any schedule can be arranged. Roommate to share 3 bdrm. townhouse at Trailridge $134/mon. + 1/3 utilities. $125 deposit required. 841-0281 after 5:00. 9-9 Person to share new 2 bdm. apt. 5 min. walk to camp. Request. *Anti-smoker, studious and neat. Call Mary 864-4483 or 842-4853. or 1 people to share house. 11 blocks or 2 people to share house. 1/4 vegetation + 1/4 johns. Title 789-2211. 9-8 Male roommate for Jayhawker Towers. $110 mn. For this semester. 749-213-694. Female roommate share nice 2 bdrm. house. $117.50 + ½ utilities. Call Wendy 864-384-8 1 t p.m. 841-2660 after 9 a.m. 1-90 Female roommate to share nice 2 bdrm. apt. $171.50 plus $1 units. Furnished except for 1 bdrm. Call Sara at 749-0496. 9-12 RIDERS: depart Wichita Monday A.M., depart Lawrence for Wichita Wednesday P.M. 316-943-6368 or 316-943-5883. 9-15 Roommate for 2 barm. apt. Jayhawk Wen. 120 + ½ utilities. Call Randy 749-2721 after 6 p.m. Breakfast cook for sorority. Call 843-4472. Non-smoking roommate to share with non-smoking roommate. College graduate. Qualified for Malta, Old English, Apat. Heft $200 dl. Comp. To apply inquiries to www.maltese.com Ridr from Topkea to Lawrence. We arrive 8:30 MWF 8:30 TR Leave 4:30. Call 226- 8379 evenings. 9-10 Female roommate wanted at Jayawk Towers. $9.37 a month. Utilities Pd. Call 768- 2263. 9-11 Room for 2 bdm. apt. Jayhawk West. $120 + ½ utilities. Call Breit. K790-5386. Wet- niture. Nomissing roommate for apt. near campus. All other wives or habits acceptable. Jeanle, 841-6838 or 864-3425. 9-12 Page 8 University Daily Kanzan, September 8, 1980 6 Sports 127 On Feb 28 Jo Jo White played 17 minutes in Kemper Arena for the Golden State Warriors against the Kansas City Kings. He scored a point for each minute he played and handed out eight assists. But now he wants away from the Warriors and he says he is trying to negotiate with a team closer to his Lawrence home. Jo Jo hopes to stay in town when NBA season tips off Jo Jo White, the former KU basketball standout, is looking for an NBA team for the 1980-81 season. Sports Writer Bv MATT SEELEY Speculation has risen that White, 31, will sign with the Kansas City Kings, the nearest profes- tors. WHILE WHITE WOULDN'T say whether the Kings were one of the teams interested in him, Kings General Manager John Begzos denied any attempt by the Kings to retake White. "I'm trying to get with another ball club. I've talked to two or three clubs—but there's nothing definite." White said Friday. "This is home, and I want to be close to it." "As far as I know, Jo. Jo is a member of the Golden State Warriors," Begos said. "We have no talks with him with the Warriors. None whatsoever. It's completely new to me." White spent last season with the hapless Golden State Warriors and publicly criticized the play of the team. At the conclusion of the season, the Warriors released White, who had one year remaining on his two-year contract. Under any agreement, the free is free to talk to any question about his terms. Although he would not comment on the teams or negotiations between himself and the teams, White stressed a desire to remain near Washington. He also said Hillssa sections of the city in the summer of 1789. "This is my home and always will be," he said. "I'm happy here. For that reason I'd like to see my parents." GIVEN THE GUARD攻守 the Kings, White's chances of signing with the team should rate high. Kansas City has one of the NBA's best centers, but Otis Birdson. But the Kings lack depth. Billy McKinney, the third guard on the team last year, was drafted by the Dallas Mavericks. The King's No. 1 college draft choice, guard Whitney, has yet to come to contract terms. White's disenchment at Golden State was because of a lack of playing time and team play. When signed by the Warriors in 1979, White, the oldest member of the squad, thought that he had been given the leadership role. But White spent most of the season playing parttime on a team that won only 24 of its 82 games and finished last in the Pacific Division, 36 games behind the Los Angeles Lakers. "YOU CAN'T LOOK back at what happened the past year." White said. "It's all behind me. I'm ready to start fresh. Nothing was ever wrong," he said. "I never dogged it, and I don't going to dog this." if not signed on by a team before Sept. 12, which is the date basketball camps open for the 1980-41 season. White said he would honor his sons from the Olden State and report to the Warriors' camp. While at KU, White, a two-time All-American, guided the Jawahires to the NCAA regional finals twice, in 1986 and 1987. In 1986, KU, led by White, played second in the National Invitation Tournament. AFTER THE 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, when he was a member of the winning U.S. basketball team, White signed with the Boston Celtics. For 10 seasons he was the driving force of the 1970's most dominant basketball team. Then he asked to be traded. Brett out with injured hand "There were a lot of personal problems there," White said. "stuff that wouldn't work out." CLEVELAND—The Kansas City Royals, playing without injured third baseman George Brett, defeated the Cleveland Indians 6-4 yesterday. From Kansan wire services BRETT'S HAND, which was injured in Saturday night's game with Cleveland, will be X-rayed today in Anaheim. The Royals open a four-game series against the California Angels Willey Mills Akens drove in three runs for the Royals with a two-run home run and a single, and Dan Quisenberry picked up his major-league leading 32nd save. Brett's injury is not thought to be serious, team officials said. Brett said that he hurt it when he was struck by a car. But Kansas City's other major-league leader was on the sidelines. Brett, whose .968 batting average is tops for both leagues, has an injured right hand and is out indefinitely. Without Brett yesterday, the Royals grabbed a 2-1 lead in the first inning on Alisons' 15th homer. The Royals added two more in the fifth and one in the sixth for a 5-1 lead. KANSAS CITY starter and winner Dennis Leonard, 3-14, had a three-hitter in the seventh inning. Run-scoring singles by Gary Alexander and Miguel Dilone finished Leonard. Reliever Kevit Brett was brought in and he walked Orge Jarta to the bases and Mike Hargrove to force in a run. Quisherbine then struck out rookie Joe Charboneau to end the threat. The victory kept the Royals 18-1/2 games ahead of second-place Texas. The Rangers beat Milwaukee 7-2 in the final game for resigning Brewers' manager George Bamberger. the royals' magic number is eight. The magic number is the combination of Kansas City victories and Texas losses that will clinch the Western Division title for the Royals. Budget cuts force Washington to cut Taiwan game Now a cut has been made at the expense of international competition. By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor The dollar crunch in the KU athletic department caused most coaches of non-revenue producing sports to cut scheduling expenses for players who would have been made at the expense of national competition. The Amateur Basketball Association offered Marian Washington, KU women's basketball coach, a chance to play the Republic of China's national women's team in Lawrence this December. An open date was found, but the money was not. THE TEAM FROM Taiwan has a 14-game tour scheduled in November and December. Washington said that her budget could not cover costs, but that she wanted to arrange for Lawrence merchants to pay the expenses for the Taiwan team. And, according to Washington, the interest was there. But KU Athletic Director Bob Marcum denied request stating that the money had to be put "upfront." "It was the only reason we could come up with," Marcum said. "You have to put that money up front. Regardless of the gate receipts, that money has to be paid." THE INVITATION was extended to Kansas primarily because of one person, Lynette So Washington was told not to pursue the game. Woodard, a senior forward for the Jayhawks and a three-time Kodak All-American, was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team. She also helped the U.S. team to win the gold medal in the 1979 Pan American Games in Mexico City. The 1980 Olympic team toured Europe to influence the case President Carter lifted the U.S. budget. Because of Woodard's international experience, KU was extended Taiwan's invitation, according to Bill Wall, executive director of the ABA. ACCORDING TO Susan Wachter, business manager for the athletic department, it would cost between $5,500 and $6,500 for KU to play Taiwan. KU would have to foot the bill for the team's food and lodging, plus pay a fee for each player. Washington said. Added to that was the cost of the team's equipment, making the sum too much for Marcum to approve. Marcum also said that he had not received any通知 that there was merchant support for his services. "No one forwarded me a proposal," he said. But he added that he thought the BA dealt out to him. "I don't know if I should." BUT THERE also will not be an exhibition team for the men's sounded either, Marcum said. Two years ago, KU played the Soviet Union national team and lost 87-48 before a packed Allen Field House. Last year, KU lost to a considerably smaller 86. But the crowd was considerably smaller. "The Soviet Union game was very successful." Marcuran said, "But the interest in the year 2016 will be lower." THE TAIWAN women's team will play two-time national champion Old Dominion, Stephen F. Austin, Rutgers and Texas. Several Kansas junior colleges are also on the Taiwan schedule. Washington said she understood the money crunch, but was still disappointed that KU would be given a chance. "I really wanted to do it," she said. "With the team I hope we have this year, it would have been a good game. I would have liked to bring the Republic of China to the University of Kansas." CORBETT Lynette Woodard McEnroe ends grand slam dream NEW YORK - The tennis gods came up with a surprise yesterday when John McEnroe destroyed Bjorn Borg's grand slam dream for another year by beating the top-16 in 64-7, 67-5, 6-4 in a four-hour, 10-minute battle in the U.S. Open Championships. From Kansan wire services The victory enabled McEnroe to keep his title and end Borg's string of 13 consecutive victories in five-set matches. The streak dates back to 1976. McEnroe picked apart Borg's game and broke his service six times in a row early in the season. Borg fongk追击 to win the third and fourth sets but gave McEnroe a break in the seventh, 13-6. Borg lost the next two games. From Kansan wire services Oakland trounces Chiefs in season opener KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Dan Pastorini shredded the Kansas City Chiefs' secondary for 317 yards and two touchdowns yesterday to carry the team to Raiders to a 27-17 season-opening victory. Pastorini, who was acquired in the off-season deal that sent Ken Stabler to Houston, completed his first three seasons. of the scoring strikes, a 16-yarder in the first quarter and a 32-yarder in the third quarter. Chandler, who was acquired in the off-season in a trade with the Buffalo Bills for Al-Pro linebacker Phil Villapiano, caught seven passes for 85 yards. On the Chiefs' first possession, they marched 70 yards in 11 plays. Fullback Ted McKnight, one of the three training camp contract holdouts, took a quick back-up down run. Nick Lowery added the conversion. Oakland, after Mike Williams roughed punter and driver on its first possession to the game, In the third quarter, Pastorini hit Art Wittington on third and 10 with a 55-yard pass to the Kansas City 2-yard line. Mark van Eeghen scored at 11:59 on a 1-yard run. The Raiders then turned two Steve Fuller interceptions into a touchdown and a field goal at the end of the third quarter and start of the fourth. take this ad and shove it... INTO YOUR POCKET and go to Klef's, the Sanctuary or SUA for your tickets to the Johnny Paycheck show also featuring BILLY SPEARS Oct. 25 • 8 p.m. • HOCH TICKETS $7.50 and $6.50 less student discount JOHN WARD, SANCTUARY PRODUCTIONS AND SUA Special Events MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL Come watch the game on our GIANT TV SCREEN! 50c HOT DOGS • DRAWS 25c POPCORN • PEANUTS Register every Monday night at the door for a point-spread contest. Winners will receive two tickets to an upcoming KC Chiefs football game! Starts at 8:00 $1.00 cover 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS SNOW Register every Monday night at the door for a point-spread contest. Winners will receive two tickets to an upcoming KC Chiefs football game! Starts at 8:00 $1.00 cover 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Center Starts at 8:00 $1.00 cover The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Tuesday, September 9, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 12 Shankel requests views on banners By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday he would seek the opinions of student and faculty leaders in forming recommendations to present Board of Regents about KU's banner policy. KU's banner policy has been under fire from free speech groups at the University who opposed the arrest of 12 students at Commencement last May. In a special meeting called for him to voice his concerns and goals for the University, Shankel told the University Senate he would be "pleased to take suggestions from any members of the Senate" concerning changes in the banner policy. Shankel said he had consulted with the University Senate executive committee and the University Faculty executive committee about the recommendations to the Board of Regents and hoped to have further discussion with faculty and student leaders. He said that the Blue Ribbon Committee on Freedom of Speech had made its views known and that he hoped its views would be included in the recommendations. A BANNER POLICY is needed on the KU campus, Shankel said, because the present Regents policy is broadly phrased, deals mainly to the requirements and needs considerable interpretation. Shankel did not say whether changes in the policy were expected to be made by the Regents for the University. Also at the Senate meeting, Shankel expressed concern about the quality of student advising at the University, but said that, in general, students received high-quality advising. However, he said, to guarantee good advising for students and to stress to faculty members the importance of advising, he would like to inquire about how advising into department faculty evaluations. Sankel said he would ask Ralph Christoferson, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and the University governance to "explore ways in which advising and the quality of that advising can be made a part of the ongoing evaluation of each faculty member in such matters as merit salary increases and decisions on promotion and tenure." He said a new advising program in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences was an excellent first step in making needed improvements in advising. SHAKNEI AL50 reaffirmed the University's commitment to affirmative action and said KU would follow affirmative action processes in searches and other actions of the University. He said he had advised University administrative offices to continue to be aware of affirmative action principles and to make a commitment to them. Shankel said KU also would continue to make a commitment to intercollegiate athletics and stress that players were students first and athletes second. He said that he was a strong supporter of intercollegiate athletics and thought they had a rightful place in the University environment, but that there was a real danger in overemphasizing them, a problem that had beset other major universities. HOWEVER, IF students left KU without a degree, or without the education implied by a KU degree, it lowered the value of a KU education and did a disservice to students, he said. "We must work closely with the athletic department to make sure athletes are receiving the academic programs they should receive," Shankel said. He said the University also had an obligation to women athletes. *"Intend to do everything in my power to see equal opportunity for women (women athletes) be realized," he said. Shankel said other concerns for the coming weeks were budget requests inter-campus relations and training issues. TWO UNIVERSITIES usually compared to KU to determine funding had recently received budget cuts—one of 3 percent and the other of 10 percent. Because of this, it would be difficult to get the state legislature to approve the tentative KU budget, he said. "It's not going to be easy to acquire the funding the Board of Regents has approved for us," Sanktel said the inter-campus relationship between the Lawrence campus and the College See SHANKEL page 5 City prosecutor resigns to start private practice Staff Reporter By RAY FORMANEK Colt Knutson, Lawrence city prosecutor since January 1978, said yesterday that he submitted his letter of resignation Friday to Buford Watson, city manager. Knutson, 33, said he would go into private practice in Lawrence after he returns from an extended trip to Australia. New Zealand and South Africa may December. His resignation takes effect Oct. 17. Although the city prosecutor's position is a wheel of the city, Knutson said the job's a whole lot of confining. "I'm not getting any younger," he said. "I don't go into private practice I will have always been able to do." Knutson was graduated from Wichita State University in 1969 with undergraduate degrees in political science and history. He was drafted into the Army in the summer of 1968 and spent most of the next two years as a medical records technician at Fort Dix, N.J. After leaving the Army in 1971, he entered KU's law school and graduated in 1974. He then practiced law in Salma and became the commissionation officer for Douglas County's Juvenile Court. Knutson halted prosecution of 12 protesters who were arrested after displaying banners at last year's commencement May 19. His decision to halt prosecution came after KU officials refused to take action against four members of the Academic Freedom Action Coalition who dislaid a replica of the commencement banner at this semester's convocation Aug. 25. Knutson said he liked Lawrence and chose to stay here because the exposure he has received Knutson, Lawrence's first full-time city client experience would help him attend a conference. "It I make it in private practice. I'll make it it." If he doesn't strictly a one-man office, "it even begins on his own." "As a prosecuting attorney you always try to anticipate what the other side's argument is, but you're not really good at it." "We are sorry to see Colt leave us," he said. "He's been with us for three years and has done a lot of good work." Watson said that the city would advertise for a new prosecutor and that he hoped to hire him. I ROBERT POLEKERMAN star Moto-cross racers concentrate on the first turn as they fight for the inside position and a chance to take the lead in the race. Pedalers compete in bike moto-cross By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Staff Reporter VINLAND—A gray crash helmet and goggles had the toubled blond hair worn by a tennis player and tennis shoes effectively dismayed the 10-year-old girl underneath. The crowd knew her only as 3-H, her racing number, but Kim Landon of Basehor drew special applauses and support as she rounded curve number Kim was one of about 60 area children, ages 5 to 16, who raced at the old one-crook Sunday at the Viburnum fairgrounds. But she was the only one on the crosswalk near the Viburnum fairground. BMX IS A GROWING sport across the country, according to Eldon Young, a founder of BMX. It is a sport discovered by BMX and tracks opening all over the United States, he said. "BMX has really become popular the past couple of years and is really growing." Pickett said, as modcrossers spin their tires and practiced "There is a lot of interest in this area. This is our fourth BMX of the summer and we will have another series of four startning next March," he said. THE RACE WAS sponsored by Wheelspar Motorcycle Club Inc. of International BMX Association, which hosts in Kangaroo City, Mo. and Gorongosa. The interest in BMX, among young men in the area was obvious, as some traveled from Topeka and Kansas City to race in the Vinland BMX. But there was no powderpuff division Sunday, forcing Kiu to compete with the boys. "Yeah, I'm nervous, but I've competed with them before," Kim stated plainly as she prepared for her first race, called a "moto." Points from the three motos are added after the third race and the rider with the lowest total wins. "Racing is fun, I really like it, but this is a rough course," Kim said. "The turns are all pretty bad, and the ramp is scary." THE SECOND MOTO was the roughest of the day for the novice racer. It was Kim's first summer in BMX. one was troubled throughout the second race by a loose helmet, dirt in his eyes, and then a wreck at the end of the race. Her tears flowed as she did. Trophies were given to the first three place winners, and ribbons to the rest. Kim took home a second place trophy. "No, I wasn't hurt, maybe just upset a little," said Kim after her spill. "I'm OK." Colt Knutson ALEXIS ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff PETER B. WILLIAMS Kim Landon, 10, Baseher, won second place in the 9- and 10-year-old competition. She is the daughter of John and Carol Landon. Banks' misgivings mean fewer student loans By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter VET, UNTIL FIVE months ago, students could not get guaranteed student loans from any Staff Reporter Although the federal government has made it easier for students to qualify for guaranteed student loans, it's still tough to get a GSL in Lawrence. Guaranteed student loans have been accessible to more students since the liberalization of student loan requirements by President Obama, the directors, director of KU financial aid, said yesterday. The Middle Income Student Assistance Act, enacted in November 1978, also allowed students to acquire federally-guaranteed loans without the assistance of their parents. commercial bank or savings and loan institution in Lawrence. Anchor Savings Association, Ninth and Ohio streets, announced its student loan program March 31. It is the only financial institution in Lawrence that gives student loans. First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts St., has not participated in any student loan program for four years, said Vickie Randel, assistant vice president. "The demand for guaranteed student loans was so high from Lawrence and Kansas state residents, we couldn't handle the bulk of paper work involved." Randel said. RANDEL SAID THE bank tried to offer loans to all qualified students, but ended the program when government correspondence and government became too much for the bank's staff to handle. "Lots of banks are getting out of the student loan program because of the red tape associated with the program," said Kurt Watson, vice president and Trust Company, 647 Massachusetts St. Government red tape and the heavy burden of administrative tasks forced the company to end "We couldn't afford to expand people to administer the program," he said. Watson said that in the case of default on a loan, it might take years to get repayment from the government and that the whole process was costly. "I recognize the social needs for a student loan program," Watson said, "but what started out to be a very good thing has grown to be less than perfect." See LOANS page 5 Zen Master teaches simplicity in thinking By GREG RICHARDS Staff Reporter If you want to avoid problems, simplify the way you think. "Zen is a way of perceiving your correct situation and acting accordingly," said Jady Roltman, Zen teacher and assistant professor of English at Stanford, husband, Stanley Lombardo, associate professor of classics, are both students of Saeng Sakn and helped coordinate the meeting. That was Korean Zen Master Searn Sahur's message to about 100 listeners at the Kansas Union last night at a program sponsored by the Lawrence Zen Group. Saintaines at ten Zen centers in the United States, Carasde and Poland, and taught at a tertiary school. THE ZEN MASTER, who came to the United States from Korea eight years ago, teaches the Chogyé school of Zen, which originated in China in the seventh century. Related closely to Buddhist principles, Zen trains its followers in the ways of achieving enlightenment—the wisdom that Buddhism expands. It can be said that the subconscious mind and must be awakened. Sahn made a distinction between the conscious and the unconscious minds and how they respond. He said that it was only when people were exposed to real life situations with the conscious mind that a problem arose. COMBINING UNDERSTANDING with action at the moment of a challenge is one key to Zen, according to Sahn, and people must resist intellectualizing and overloading themselves with sensory information. Then response is rapid and appropriate. "When you are driving, and suddenly you must brake, that is no thinking." Sahn said. "That is the truth." "Hunger? Give food. Thirst? Give drink," said, referring to the simplicity of Saskatoon. Using techniques of meditation, Zen Buddhists clear their minds of irrelevant distractions, said Ramirez. The purpose is to respond simply and appraise immediate situations, one moment at a time. Weather TURTLE It should be cloudy, windy and cooler today with a good chance of rain and thundershowers, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be from the north at 15 to miles an hour and the high will be 18. Tonight, the skies will clear with minishing winds and cooler diminishing winds and course temperatures. The low will be near 56 and winds will be from the north at 5 miles an hour. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and mild with a high of 80. In the extended outlook, if will be mostly sunny and mild through Friday, with highs in the 80s and lows in the 60s. No rain is expected. 1 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Poles ask for cash; pact threatened WARSAW, Poland—Poland's communist regime yesterday called for foreign aid to help implement the sweeping reforms granted to workers but warned that continuing scattered strikes threatened to ruin the historic agreement between the workers and the government. Official reports said Kania also would travel today to the southern industrial city of Katowice, another center of labor unrest. Deputy Premier and Planning Commission Chief Henryk Kisiel said the government intended "to implement all the points" of the historic agreement it signed with strikers last week, which gave them political and economic reforms unheard of in a Soviet-bloc nation. Poland's new Communist party boss Stanislaw Knain held what was described as a "hosted" closed-door meeting with local officials in Dzankar, After Kisiel's news conference, Mieczyslaw Rakowski, of the nation's most respected news commentators, read a statement on state-run television that called for an end to the scattered strikes, some of which involved white collar workers. Libyans. Syrians discuss unity plan Clapping, stomping and shouting their support, 500,000 Libyan gathered near Tripoli's airport to hear Khadabal and Assad praise Arab unity and lay the groundwork for the merger of Syria and Libya, the state-run Libyan news agency JANA reported. Khadady proposed the merger on Sept. 1, the 11th anniversary of his rise to power. Assad, who has become seriously isolated both domestically and regionally, quickly embraced the proposal and called for an immediate merger. "Unity would be a health potion for us and the death knell for our enemies." Assad told the crowd. Immediately after their speeches, the two leaders and their aides began discussions on various technical aspects of unifying their nations. There was no indication how long Assad would remain in Tripoli, but Arab press reports in Beirut presumed that when the talks were completed, Assad would have been released. More troopers sent to refugee camp FORT MCOUY, Wis.—The White House has agreed to send 400 more Army troopers to the troubled Cuban refugee center where rampaging inmates tore down a fence and injured eight people, Gov. Lee Dreyfus said yesterday. About 300 Cubans were involved in the disturbance Sunday, an apparent "demonstration against confinement." It was not known what caused the latest outburst in which men tore down about two-thirds of the chain link fence surrounding their compound. Joseph LaFleur, a Drevys fusel, said there was frustration among Cubans who have been transferred to Fort Chafee. Ark The disturbance began about 4 p.m. and was under control by 7 p.m. LaFleur said that the additional troopers would bring the Army contingent at the fort to about 1,000. About 4,800 Cubans still remain, but they are scheduled to be transferred to Fort Chaffee later this month when Fort McCov closes for the winter. Dreyfus asked the White House for help last week after a Spanish-speaking fact-finding commission verified sexual attacks on juveniles, bestings and restraints in 2013. Oswald's brother fights exhumation FORT WORTH, Texas—A legal battle over opening the grave of alleged presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was further confused yesterday when lawyers representing Oswald's brother failed to produce a deed for the cemetery plot. Oswald's older brother, Robert, opposes the opening of Lot 259 in Rose Hill Burial Park so the body, if there is one, can be identified. He contends that he purchased the grave and that an exhumation would violate his property rights and is seeking a temporary injunction to block the exhumation. Attorneys for British author Michael Eddowes, who says a Soviet spy was buried in Oswald's grave, subpoenaed cemetery manager Neal Wretberg. He produced documents indicating the deed had been mailed to Oswald's mother in 1961—two years before the 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy. Eddowes says that there is "powerful and persuasive evidence" that a Soviet secret agent assumed Oswald's identity when Oswald defected to Russia in 1969 and returned to the United States in 1962 as a "sleeper" assassin. A ruling on the case is expected next week. TAMPA, Fla. — A Spanish-spoken man threatening to detonate a Molotov cocktail yesterday forced a New York-to-Florida Eastern Airlines jettier to leave the building. Latest hijacking is third in a month The plane, a Boeing 727 carrying 82 passengers and six crew members, departed from PHOENIX airport in m. e.IPT. It was scheduled to complete its flight to Tampa later in the day. The Federal Aviation Administration said the hijacker was arrested by Cuban authorities soon after the plane landed in Havana. Previous hijackers have been caught and sentenced to death. It was the 11th hijacking of a U.S. passenger plane to Cuba this year and the third suffered by Eastern Airlines in less than a month. No one has been injured in any of the hijackings. Most hijackings have been blamed on Cuban refugees who came to this country during the Freedom Sealift. Missourian sentenced to gas chamber HARRISONVILLE, Mo.—A judge yesterday granted Patrick E. Trimble's request and sentenced him to death, rather than in prison, for strangling Cass County Circuit Judge Robert G. Russell was following a jury's recommendation. The judge could have reduced the penalty to life in prison without parole for 50 years. Before sentencing Trimble, Russell asked him if he wanted the death sentence. Trimble said he did. Trimble, 21, already is facing a 110-year prism term for kidnapping and sexually abusing two 9-year-old girls in June 1979. He was convicted of capital murder July 31 in the death of Jerry James Everett. 20. of Jackson. Tenn. Trible was in the St. Charles County jail awaiting trial on the other day when he was stranded Everett with a towel after making him write a shonny suicide note. Trimble is the sixth man in Missouri to be sentenced to die in the gas chamber since the state's new capital murder law went into effect in 1977. Death sentences are appealed automatically to the Missouri Supreme Court. Shelton challenges party's nomination TOPEKA- Secretary of State Jack Brier was asked yesterday to arbitrate in a battle for the American Party's presidential nomination. Frank Shelton, a Cherryryan rancher, has challenged the national American Party's nomination of Percy Greaves, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. for Shelton, the American Party's 1978 candidate for Kansas governor, contends the nomination is invalid because Wives Greaves' nomination rejected him. A state American Party convention in Topeka last weekend selected Shelton as its presidential candidate. The American Party of the United States last week filed the names of Greaves and his running mate, Frank Varnum, to replace Illinois Congressman Philip Crane, who withdrew his name as the party's nominee. The party had filed Crane's name without his knowledge. Reagan stumps for more blue-collar votes By United Press International Independent candidate John Anderson concentrated on college campuses where he believes his student constituency is to do much of the work that the more affluent major party campaigns pay a staff to do. The latest Time magazine poll, which showed Carter and Reagan tied at 39 percent each, indicated Reagan was 10 percentage points behind Carter among blue-collar workers. Ronald Reagan courted blue-collar workers in the Midwest yesterday while President Carter assured Jewish leaders at a White House meeting that Israel's security and survival were always on his mind. SO IN KOKOMO, Ind., yesterday Reagan accused the president of betraying the unemployed workers and refused to let up on his contention that the nation is in a Carter-caused depression. Apparently determined to avoid the controversies that have followed his campaign in recent weeks, Reagan kept closely to his texts and has kept In Washington, Howard Squadron, spokesman for the heads of 34 Jewish organizations who meet with Carter at the White House yesterday, said the question of how the Jewish vote will go in this election was "still up in the air." reporters several yards away during the current trip. In the past it has been solidly in the Democratic column, but Squadron said this year, "I have no idea how Jewish voters will vote." Squadron said Carter assured the group, of捷取 the security and group, of捷取 volunteers at the campuses of the University of Rochester and the State University of New York at Albany, and at Rutgers, the state university of New Jersey yesterday, acknowledging that young people were needed to perform such chores as mailings and clerical work. ANDERSON RECRUITED student He predicted that if Carter refused to join a three-way debate with Reagan and himself it "could become one of the major issues of the 1980 campaign." Veteran of Wartson Library Renovation 1980 - 2022 Now YOU can have one, too Now YOU can have one, too a Watson Renovation t-shirt. $5.00 A variety of colors. Call Kendall at Circ. "What is at stake is more than the election of Jimmy Carter," he said. "What is at stake is the electoral process." 864-4715 PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND PEOPLE BOOK USE THEM OVERLAND PHOTO phones 841-0780 THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL PROUDLY WELCOMES THETA CHI ΘX Founded 1856 We Encourage You To Find Out More About KU's Newest Fraternity. Please Contact The I.F.C. Office At 864-3559, Or Attend One Of The Following Information Sessions: Kansas Union September 9,7:00 p.m.Walnut Room September 10,2:00 p.m.Walnut Room September 11,7:00 p.m.Walnut Room C By Al Staff Refreshments Served The tonigh York University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Page 3 City to publicize funding plan By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter In conjunction with the sixth anniversary of its community development program, the Lawrence Community Development department has opened a series of four public hearings this month to raise public awareness of the program. The first hearing will be at 7:30 to at New York School, 938 New York St. Since it began receiving funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development in 1975, the Lawrence CD program has undergone some changes that have allowed it to receive more money during the last three years, according to Lynn Goodell, CD director for Lawrence. "The first three years we were classified as a small city with an urban renewal program," he said. "The fourth year we went over 50,000 in population and became a large, or entitlement, city." HUD HAS TWO programs, one for small cities and one for large. Lawrence has been in both, Goodell said yesterday. Goodell said cities were classified by HUD on criteria which include population, extent of poverty, and the unemployment rate. The amount of the grants differ yearly, he said. The first three years, when classified as a "small" city, revenue received $529,000. In 1793 and 1794, the amounts rose to $738,000 and $788,000. The 1980 budget calls for $839,000. IN THE PAST, the majority of Lawrence's CD funds have been spent on the improvement of low- and middle-income housing in six areas targeted by the City Commission, said Linda Bray, a member of the CD citizens' advisory board. The target areas are East Lawrence, Far East Lawrence, North Lawrence, Old West Lawrence, Oread and Pinckney. "HUD's block grant put the main emphasis on housing," Lubenski said. "We have since perpetuated it because it's an area we feel is in need of improvement. We have had particular difficulty with blight." According to Goodell, the CD program also is providing grants for areas other than housing. Funds also have been spent for water and sewer lines, sidewalks, park improvements and a senior citizens' center, he said. The final approval of each year's budget is made by the City Commission upon the recommendations of the city staff and the citizens' advisory board, Lubsenski said. Goodell can, however, grant grants of less than $2,000. THE ADVISORY BOARD includes volunteers from each target neighborhood. That system seems to work very well, she said, because it allows for viewpoints from outside the six target areas. "We want more people to participate in the program," she said. "We try to bend over backward to get people involved." On the Record in satisfactory condition yesterday afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Charges of aggrassed battery were filed yesterday against Billy Kelch, 34, 1514 Lindenwood Lane, for the Sunday morning shooting of a 39-year-old Lawrence man, a Douglas County Sheriff's Deputy said yesterday. Jerry Ronald Owens of Lawrence was shot in the incident and was listed A sheriff's deputy said Kelch allegedly shot Owens with a 32 caliber revolver after an argument between Owens and Kelch's wife.. COMPUTER SEMINAR "Introduction to Time-Sharing," a beginner's guide to Computer USE. will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Academic Computer Center's auditorium. The center will sponsor the seminar. On Campus ART LECTURE TODAY "POPULAR CULTURE AND THE GREAT DEPRESSION" will be discussed at 8 tonight in the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art auditorium, by Lawrence W. Levine of the University of California at Berkeley. BLACK STUDENT CHOIR will practice at 5:30 p.m. in 328 Murphy STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. TU AISGMIA DANCE CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson. Guest instructor Betty Kelly will teach folk dancing. A BIBLICAL SEMINAR will be held at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. Liberal and radical discussions of the Bible will be discussed. A NEW LIFE FELLOWSHIP FILM will be shown at 6:30 p.m. in 3139 Wescow. THE COALITION TO KEEP KANSAS FREE OF THE DEATH PENALTY will sponsor a film, "The Question of Respect for Life," at 7 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. TOMORROW A THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR will be held at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, Philip Berrigan, Vinoba Bhave, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer will discuss non-violence and religious faith. THE SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7:30 pm. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas City Metropolitan Museum. 1 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Marantho Christian Ministries Tuesdays 7:00 pm Union Jayhawk Room Fridays 7:00 pm 1144 Rhode Island (Center of RI and 12th S) For more info call Bob Dwall 841-9254 STUDENT SENATE SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARINGS The supplemental budget hearings request forms are now available in the Student Senate Office. B-105 Kansas Union. The forms are due by 5:00 p.m. September 12. Paid for by the Student Activity Fee BIG BLUE RALLY September 11 7:00 Satellite Union Free Beer to all class card holders HILLEL High Holiday Services September 10 - Wednesday Rosh Hashana Services - 7:30 p.m. Farmers Market Forum Room - Kansas Union Rosh Hashana Services - 7:30 p.m. L C G Rosh Hashana Services - 9:30 a.m. L. J. C. Oneg following - Lawrence Jewish Community Center September 11 - Thursday September 12 - Friday Shabbat Services - 7:30 p.m. L L C G September 19 - Friday Rosh Hashana Services - 9:30 a.m. Pre-fast Dinner - 5:00 p.m. L, C, C Yom Kippur Services - 9:30 a.m. L. L.C Forum Room - Kansas Union Kol Nidre - 7:30 p.m. L.J.C.C. Shabbat Services - 7:30 p.m. Yom Kippur Services, Conclusion - 5:00 p.m. September 20 - Saturday Call Hillel for Reservations L. J.C.C. Break-fast following For further information, call the Hillel office 864-3948 Perspectives PRESENTS: Whatever Happened to the Human Race? (abortion...infanticide...euthanasia..???) $2/evening or $3/series -Francis Schaeffer film series 7:00 Wescoe Auditorium Tues. Sept.9 Thurs. Sept.11 MAN IT'S STANDING UP AND YELLING FOR THE BLUE. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! K. U. Football gives you five great home games! Sept.20 Pittsburgh Sept. 27 Louisville Oct. 11 Nebraska Oct. 18 Iowa State Nov. 8 Oklahoma ATTENTION STUDENTS! Season Football Tickets Still Available Sept. 9-21 - K.U. Ticket Office, Allen Field House u s! TS! ts - SUA Office - Allen Field House - Satellite Union KU Also, for your convenience, Sept. 9-12 from 10-4 p.m., a table will be set up in front of Wescoe. JOIN US! Tuesday, September 9 6:30 p.m. Forum Room Kansas Union - Approval of A.S.K. Membership - Petition to reduce Student Senate from 120 to 60 senators - Bills to increase committee powers and improve inventory control - Committee Officer reports AGENDA: STUDENT SENATE Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 9; 1980 Opinion Attorney dawdles a bit A Kansas Bureau of Investigation report concerning alleged police brutality at KU's Commencement May 19 continues to demand that on district attorney Mike Malone's desk. The KBI handed down the report more than two weeks ago, but its contents have not been made public. It appears the report may not have positive things to say about the ways in which KU police handled protesters at the Commencement. A number of protesters displayed banners at the Commencement, defying a vague Regents policy. After an ugly scene with police, 12 people were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct or criminal trespassing or both. Ron Kuby, a students' rights activist, then filed a complaint with Malone against KU police alleging that police used unnecessary force when leading him away from the ceremony. Although Kuby was not arrested, he suffered a hairline fracture in his left wrist. The KB's investigation is to provide a report on the handling of the incident by KU police. To be sure, there are some questionable circumstances surrounding the arrests. Kuby perhaps struggled with police more than any other protester. Yet the 12 protesters who were arrested received no bodily harm and they certainly couldn't have been more uncooperative than Kuby during the protest. Kuby has certainly pressed serious charges against KU police. Malone asked the KBI to investigate, but he has been slow to determine whether Kuby's charges are valid. In the interests of KU and the community, Malone should make his decision soon as to whether action should be taken against KU police. Granted, Malone needs time to seriously consider the report. But he must not hedge, lest the Commencement fiasco take too long to resolve. After all, it would serve everyone's best interests to expedite the matter. KU honors program breeds boredom, not academic pride I really believed that the honors program would live up to its promise and provide classes For several years I have thought that it was not much of an honor to be in the KU Honors Program. I didn't always think this way, and as I back look now, I realize that my first disapp point with the honors program was making the mistake of believing what I read about the program. BRETT CONLEY that would challenge and develop my abilities, and that being in class with other honors students would provide mutual intellectual benefits. Because I believed the honors program's promises, I entered the Summer Honors Institute two weeks after graduating from high school. The institute supposedly was designed to provide outstanding high school graduates with a competitive atmosphere in the grazing atmosphere of honors work. over several weeks in the institute, I began to realize that I was not receiving the benefits promised. My alleged reward for pursuing honors studies would be an enhanced intellectual competence and self-esteem in academic abilities. But in truth, the only lesson I learned that summer was perseverance. I suffered through an English course taught by a professor who became outraged at the honors students only because they could not write as well as college upperclassman. I also survived a science class taught by a professor who could not present a well-organized, coherent lecture. Although he knew his field well, he could not effectively communicate the subject matter. Finally, there was a more nebulous class dealing with the philosophical aspects of what makes a good education. Plato's Republic and John Stuart Mill's autobiography were the texts that we were supposed to read and draw ideas from. But the class actually became a sort of indoctrination of the professor's ideas about elitist education. The professor tried to impress upon us that honors students were above the average college student and that they were an intellectual elite within the University. We should recognize our place and try to associate only with other honors students, he told us, and eventually we would become the intellectual leaders of the University community while raising a ton of top education. At the end of the summer I was confused. I did not have a broad enough perspective to realize that my bad experience was the fault of the institute and the honors program and not me. I had learned, illimited and bounded, educated, enlightened and intellectually broadened. But I did not give up on the honors program entirely, even though I had plenty of reasons to do so. I learned that with careful choosing it is possible to take some outstanding courses taught by competent professors. But the students in my honors program do not come close to outweighing the negative aspects, and I believe the program is in need of great change and revamping. David M. Katzman, professor of history, is the author of *The Spectacle of Hope*. I hope that those characters are a sorrow. The biggest problem with the program is that there are too many mediocre or incompetent professors teaching honors courses. The honors program does not have any means of evaluating the courses that are offered, and because of this, professors who cannot effectively teach honors courses keep teaching them semester after semester. Also, the honors program is less a program than it is an assortment on classes that can be taken. Individual departments offer whatever honors courses they want and students pick from the list. Students who have said to have completed a program. The honors tutorial, a one-hour seminar, can be a good introduction to the program, but there needs to be a more defined progression of classes that challenge, stimulate and educate students on a variety of subjects. There also needs to be a class that will pull together an honors student's intellectual experiences at the end of the program. Finally, the honors program needs to disassociate itself with the idea that it is here to build an elite intellectual circle at the University. There is no doubt that honors students can benefit from a university-wide honors students should not be aggregated from other students and other University experiences. Katzman has a difficult job ahead of him if he hopes to transform the honors program into something more viable and worthwhile. The task cannot be done in six months or even one year, but it is worth the time because the honors program and its classes provide more intellectual disappointment than academic stimulation. Video space games screen victim I've never been much of a fan of the "gifts" modern technology has given us. All those contraptions with miniature computer brains, digital displays and push button controls designed to speed everything up, more than often seem to slow things down. The only advantage, for instance, I ever saw in touch-tone telephones was that they gave you an advantage in radio station call-in contests. But I've always been too clumsy and usually Space Wars JOE BARTOS KANINI BLAKE GUMPRECHT P have ended up dialing the wrong number and missed the call. mother rather than winning any free tickets. And I wonder whether I'll ever get through one of those "high-tech" supermarket checkouts without being delayed for several minutes while the checker repeatedly moves the items around in the store over the electronic eye in an attempt to get the electronically coded price to register. Digital watches, though, epitomize the products of modern technology. I've never seen the point of having to push a button to find the address, or being in a dark, bright, good luck昌ing to make out the numbers. But I must admit that technology's contribution to arcades and bar rooms is worthy of Space Invaders and Asteroids, on the other hand, are almost totally skill. I went to bars only twice in my first two years in Lawrence. There was never any reason to go. I've never been much for mingling or putting moves on women I didn't know. I'd play pinball occasionally, but it wasn't reason enough to make a special trip. In Space invaders, descending rows of multi-colored aliens advance closer to the player's tank every two second on a video screen. The player tries to knock them off with laser-like player tries to knock them off with laser-like space Invaders" and, more recently, "Asteroidis" chaned that. I now regularly go to the Beer Garden or the Crossing to play. My infatuation with the games—just ask anyone who has seen me at the bars—at times borders on madness. When I see you, I buttons I forget Law of Communications, Italian verb conjugations and everything else. Oh, pinball's OK. But I have trouble getting excited when I shoot a ball in play and watch it fall cleanly between the flipping fippers and the shakers. There's nothing done with skill. It's simple bad luck. The real reason for my craziness over video games, while pinball has never been anything more than an occasional diversion, is that success on the pulsing, colorful machines is nearly completely dependent upon skill. It's trivial but it's fun. Pinball lovers tell me that the games are about 80 percent skill. I have trouble believing that. Even when I have a good game, I can't help but think I was just lucky. After all, the ball only hits a flipper every 15 seconds or so. The rest of the time the game plays with itself. shots. Every 23 shots, a pulsating spaceship whisks above the field of aliens, giving the player a chance for bonus points if he can hit the ship. A throbbing heat that speeds up as the game progresses compounds the tension. The real goal in Space Invaders, at least to me, is not so much how many points you can ring up, but how many screens of aliens you can clear. That's what makes it addictive. Each time you get closer to clearing another screen, there's the drive to play until you clear it. Before you know it, you've used up $15 in quarters. No wonder video games account for 60 percent of the $200 million annual arcade business. I've become a bit bored with Space Invaders laterly, thouh. It's gotten to the stage where clearing three screens is easy, but clearing four screens seems almost impossible. With each new screen, the field of aliens begins close to the window. After you've cleared a few screens, the aliens are almost on top of your tank at the start. That's where Asteroids, Atart's contribution to the video boom, comes in. I started playing regularly this summer. The goal in Asteroids is to learn how to use it because it's not hard to clear a screen of asteroids. You get points by destroying the oddly shaped asteroids, which constantly move at various speeds from various directions across the screen. Bonus points are available for hil- ting the beeping, rapidly firing spaceships that whirac across the screen periodically. The challenge is to avoid the asteroids and rocks from the space ships while clearing the scrub. There are five buttons in all. Two are for rotating the player's ship, another fires the laser and one thrusts the ship forward. A fifth is something of a futuristic ejection seat. When destruction is unavoidable, you punch "hyperspace" and the machine randomly flips up or down to the screen. But the move can often be suicidal if it places you in the path of an oncoming asteroid. Asteroids also has an egistical attraction. This is particularly a machine that helps it put together on the screen. Still, video games haven't transformed me into a science fantasy freak. I didn't hurry out to see "The Empire Strikes Back" the first week it hit the theaters. In fact, I still haven't changed my audience and Asteroids haven't even changed my views about the products of modern technology. But Atari and Bally, the biggies of the video game industry, say that new model video games are on the way. Space Invaders mania has been so widespread that 60,000 games have been produced in the last 24 months. They're the rave all over the world—even in Tel Aviv. In Japan, there are entire arcades with nothing but Space Invaders. You can bet that when the new models start popping up in the local bars, I'll be there. Cabbies' murders difficult to understand By ROBERT WHITAKER New York Times Special Features NEW YORK—Ever since I started driving a cab at night, the way I read the paper has changed. I used to turn to the sports first. Not anymore. Now I turn to the police notice. One recent night, the news was worse than usual. Two cabbies went down the previous night. One cab driver, who was 24 years old, was stabbed to death in Long Island City. The other. POLISH WORKERS CORNELI 1980 MAMAI NEWS Salvatore Torres, who was 50, was shot three times. Luckily he is still alive. So how many does that make this year—10, 15, 20? Who knows? I’ve lost count. I think about the murder of Paul Van Wyk, the 24-year-old victim. I don't imagine he was unwilling to give up the money. Think about it: $100 or so vs. 50 years of life. And yet how did he die. Stabbed to death, he was not the victim of a crime, but someone to death is a much more willful act. I used to be the coordinator of a literacy living program at Attica prison. There I saw the few children in the classroom. The men I taught to read were friendly, witty, kind even—at least with me. The witier wilt was especially disarming. It is hard to dislike someone who has a finely tuned sense of humor. And what most of the men wanted out of life seemed fair enough: a woman to care about, a decent home, enough money to have a good time now and then. Several times when I worked at Atikka I had to give speeches to outsiders. Each time my speech was the same—most of the men in here are good speakers. But a few of them still think that persecution is basically a correct one. Another thought. I knew a young man in prison, he was 22 years old, who grew up in what is now the Bronx. He was a "cabinet" etc—of Buffalo, N.Y. It's a particularly rough part of town, and one day he told me he was afraid to go back out on the street. Look at my life, he said. Now I have plenty to eat, a roof over my head and my wife comes to see me every week. I get to spend a couple of nights with her every four or five months. I'm getting paid 25 cents an hour to go to school, pretty soon I'll get my high school diploma and then I can go to college. I get better grades every day. At night I smoke a joint and go to sleep. So what's the big deal? It's easier in here than out on the street. Sl An old-timer who'd been in prison for years put it even more succinctly. Most of the people in Attica, he said, are not being punished; they're being rescued. of H stren to en What did I read the other day? How in Iran they buried certain "criminals" up to their waists and then stoned them to death. Barbaric, to be sure, and not to be emulated. Still, I wont ask if they were, if such punishment might not cut down on the number of Paul Van Wykes who die needlessly. KU educa Doug theas progr decli stude I do not know how to reconcile these thoughts. When I worked in prison, I liked most of the men I met. I became good friends with two or three of them. Now, though, I am a potential victim. And I would like to share my experience with about another cabbage's death, I become more willing—may, eager—to take stone in hand. He increa Unive possil Robert Whitaker has been driving a cab in New York City since June 1979. "I' year, The University Daily KANSAN [USPS 65048] Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except at Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid for delivery, Kansas Postmaster. Send addresses to the Student Subscriptions office or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Editor Carol Beier Business Manager Elaine Strabler Managing Editor Cydi Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Spyre Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Don Monday, Cindy Whitcome Retail Sales Manager ... Kevin Koster National Sales Manager ... Nancy Clauson Campus Sales Manager ... Darla Light Classified Manager ... Treya Coin 4-advertising Makeup Manager ... Jane Wendrobert General Manager and News Adviser ... Rick Mussel Kansan Adviser ... Chuck Chowins University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Page 5 Shankel From page 1 of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., had strengthened both campuses and would continue to encourage the joint relationship. BU KALSO IS RESPOWNABLE for off-campus education in Leavenworth, Johnson, Wyandotte, Douglas and several other counties in northern Kansas, Shankel said, and these students will be offered theened decline in KU enrollment as well as allow students to enroll who normally would not. He said that although enrollment at KU had increased by 162 students this semester, the University still had to be concerned with the possibility of future decreases. "I'm especially delighted it didn't happen this year," Shankel said. FACULTY MEMBERS at the meeting expressed concern not only about decreasing enrollment, but also faculty salaries, the creeping administrative bureaucracy, acquisition of funding for research projects and library purchases and charges that the University was not being run in an economical and businesslike fashion. Ernest Angino, SenEx member and geology professor, said the University should evaluate the effect of state statutes on business affairs of the University. He said it seemed as if the "accounting and business affairs were there to trip us up." Shankel said the problems were not intentional and raised the possibility of a study group to look into the bureaucracy to see whether improvements could be made. George Worth, SenEx chairman, said he was generally pleased with the acting chancellor's performance. "I would have been happier about a somewhat stronger statement about the freedom of expression." He said he thought Shankel did not make a stronger statement because he was still formulating thoughts about the issue. SHANKEL SAID HE had devised "Nine Commandments" or "great expectations" for the University administration for the coming and presented them to administrators at a retreat. The expectations include having an "open administration" in which administrators can share ideas, administrators always acting in the best interests of the University, continuing policies and procedures established by former chancellors, and responding to requests for information or advice thoroughly and thoughtfully. Attendance at the special session of the University Senate was the highest since the 1989-74 meetings called by former chancellor E. Larsen, during the unrest at the University, Schalkel said. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT has taken steps to make the student loan program more attractive to banks, Watson said, but he did not think his bank to become involved in the program. From page 1 Loans The Douglas County Bank, Ninth and Kentucky streets, ended its student loan program because the loans tied up bank assets for long periods of time, said Jean Baker, assistant vice president. This diminished the bank's ability to extend loans to the community, she said. With the prime lending rate wavering at 12 percent, Victor Johnson, vice president of the University State Bank, 955 Iowa St., said there would be a "slow business on 7 percent guaranteed student loans." A guaranteed loan is a long-term loan and has a fixed yearly interest rate Rogers said. The federal government also pays a bonus interest rate to bring the total interest rate of the student loan near the prime interest rate, he said. EVEN WITH THE bonus interest rate, banks have on student loans, Johnson said. The combined bonus interest rate and standard 7 interest rate are both the same. An is still below the prime interest rate, he said. Contrary to what is happening in Lawrence, the guaranteed student loan program is ex- periendo a surge in popularity in other parts of Kansas and across the nation, said Dyce Bonham, regional director for the Higher Education Assistant Foundation. The foundation is a not-for-profit organization that makes federally guaranteed loans available to students through the Higher Education Loan Program, he said. "Three hundred and seventy-four banks in Kansas are in the student loan program," Bonham said. Bonham said the foundation signed Anchor Savings Association to fill the void in student loan services in Lawrence. "I'm sorry other Lawrence banks haven't responded to the need in their area," he said. THE NEED IN Lawrence, so far, is close to 4,000, according to Rogers. That many KU students have received guaranteed student loans, he said. Last year, 60 percent of KU students obtained their loans through HELP after failing to find a lending institution or being turned down by inference and participating in the GSL program. Rogers said. HELP is a "bender of last resort," Rogers said. Because HELP does not want to compete with banks, a student must get a written denial from a leading institution before applying to HELP, he said. The University State Bank services students in this manner. The bank regularly denies students guaranteed loans so that they may apply to HELP, Johnson said. BONHAM ALSO SAID that more financial institutions are getting in the HELP guaranteed loan program. "The national trend is way up," he said. "Banks in Ohio increased their student loans two-and-half to three times over last year." Boham said that the Manhattan Bank had extended loan loans to Kansas and Oklahoma students this academic year. "The yield on student loans is comparable to other consumer bank loans," he said. Bonham said that student loans did not burden staffs with administrative tasks. BONHAM SAID another incentive for lending institutions to join the loan program was that the loan program provided a means of serving the community directly. However, even though Lawrence banks are not involved in the guaranteed student loan program, all accept loan applications from students. Loans are considered on an individual basis, but the ability of the student to repay the loan is a major consideration, Johnson said. $ \Psi\mathrm{X} $ $\Psi$ X PSYCH CLUB - FILMS - FIELD TRIPS - GRADUATE SCHOOL INFO. - GUEST SPEAKERS - B.A. JOB INFO. FIRST MEETING SEPT. 9, 1980 4:30 pm Rm. 4 FRAser FUNDED BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE G&R Foreign Car Specialists 9MPORTS 1545 N 3 1545 N 3 45 N 3 Welcome Back KU Students For quality import car repair, talk to Pat, our certified mechanic about your foreign car needs. (ask about our weekly specials) 1 3/4 miles north of the Kansas River Bridge 843-8322 Spirit Squad and Mike Person AUDITIONS Informational Meeting Monday, Sept.15, 5 p.m. Allen Field House Clinics Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Sept. 15, 16, 17, 5 p.m. Tryouts Thursday, Sept. 18 All requirements for the spirit squad, mike person will be explained at the meeting September 15. No previous experience necessary. Minorities encouraged to participate. SUA iR indoor recreation Beginner's Night September 11 6-9 p.m. Satellite Union Backgammon, Bridge, Chess, and Scrabble COME AND LEARN TO PLAY OR TEACH OTHERS TO PLAY!! P.M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 Bowling - Billiards Amusement Machines Cold Beer Join A Full Fall 1980 Leagues Monday 6:30 Dormitory Tuesday 6:30 All Star Scratch Wednesday 1:00 K.U. Ladies 6:15 All Campus All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 Join A Fall League NOW 8:30 Greek Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Friday 4:00 TGIF Sunday 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) Hours Sat. & Sun Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Sat. & Sun. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 BOWLING IS FUN! Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION TRUTH IN ADVERTISING ATTENTION: THESIS COPIERS BEWARE OF FALSE AND MISLEADING CLAIMS COMPARE FOR YOURSELF Copy Center "E" will make Thesis Copies for you for 6¢ each, *but* those copies are, according to their representative, made on a "Shiny-Surfaced" paper. In other words, made on a coated paper copier. Needless to say, "Most People want the real 25% Uncoated Rag Bond which is 7€ a copy," not 6¢. Copy Center "E" will allow another 10% discount if your order totals over 50 copies. Since it's been brought in, we invite your comparison of the following (we called and found): Since it's been brought-up, we invite your comparison of the following (we called and found): COPY CTR *E* HOUSE OF USHER Thesis Copying, cost per copy on White, Uncoated, 25% Rag Bond (You don't pay for gathering at House of Usher unless you want it — it adds 1% per copy) 7¢ **5¢** Cost to make 5-Copies of a 100-page Thesis on 25% Uncoated Rag Bond, including all quantity discounts $31.50 **$25.00** **HOW ABOUT THEIS BINDING?** Let's Compare Again! COST $66.00* **$30.00** Hard-Bind 4-Copies with a 3-Line Title & Your Name Gold Stamped on Front TIME 10-days **2-3 days** *To be fair, the above is Copy Center "E's" *Rush Service* — their regular service would be "Only" 51.00, but would take 4-6 weeks. And while we're at it 200 copies 8½ x 11 White 20# Bond (including all so-called discounts) ... $8.50 ... $5.00 ... 1000 copies each of 2 originals 8½ x 11 20# ... $55.00 ... $42.00 ... - COMPARE OUR PRICES * * COMPARE OUR QUALITY * * COMPARE OUR EXPERIENCE * * COMPARE OUR SERVICE * And We Think You Will Agree, The House of Usher is. Headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying in Lawrence HOUSE OF USHER BAT 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE (913) 842-3610 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 O Exhibit shows role of female writers By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter "Bluestockings, Chatealines, and Other Working Women," an exhibit on women's careers from the Middle Ages to the present, will be on display in the Spencer Research Library through Sept. 12. The exhibit contains original manuscripts of letters, diaries, legal documents and published materials of 23 women, ranging from a 13th century Welsh woman to a Greenwich Village poet of the 1960s. ANN HYDE, manuscripts librarian for the department of special collections in Spencer Library, said yesterday that she decided to put up the display when she discovered that many people did not realize the role of women in the past. in the past. "They feel that everything before 10 years ago was very Victorian and repressed," Hyde said. She said that as she looked through historical writings, she realized that people had a false view of women's lives. "I began to realize that women crop up with reasonable frequency in these accounts," Hyde said, "not as often as she curries, but they are certainly present." THE WRITTINGS ON exhibit are from the library's department of special collections. The items displayed include the recipe book of a 17th century housewife, a Scottish historical novel that was once banned by Napoleon because it approved of revolts against the government. The recipe book of King Felipe IV of Spain and a Spanish nun who was his adviser and an account book of an 18th century charwoman. Hyde said the recipe book of Elizabeth Dyke, daked 1668, was an example of the responsibilities women faced in running a household. In addition to recipes, the book contains directions for brewing and distilling, advice for removing stains, making household charms, as well as remedies for scurvy, sterility, colic and kidney stones. "The woman was responsible for the lives and economic survival of the people in her household," Hyde said. It was essentially a case of the house coming home and taking off his boots once he was in the castle walls." HYDE SAID THAT a number of women scholars were represented in the collection. Elizabeth Elstob, the first female Anglo-Saxon scholar, is an example of an educated woman from the past, Hyde said. Elstob was an Oxford scholar who published a manuscript in Saxon and English in 1709. "There were no protests that I know of. 'Hydde said.' I think she was considered." Douglas County officials locked the gates to Lake Star Lake this weekend, forcing area residents to climb over haven from the late暑热夏 heat. A faulty floodgate and cracks in the gate's cement housing structure have forced officials to drain the lake so repairs can be made. The 200-acre lake is 12 miles southwest of Lawrence. According to Mike Dooley, director of the county Department of Public Works, the floodgate has been inoperable since the lake was constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1934. BECAUSE OVERFLOW from the lake could be channeled to the spillway, the broken gate posed no flooding problems—until two years two years ago, expansion caused by freezing water caused cracks in the structure housing the gate. The County closes, drains Lone Star for repairs cracks worsened last winter; causing uncontrollable leakage of the lake's water reserve. Dooley said yesterday that repairs were needed last year but that disagreement between county and state officials about repair bill responsibilities caused them to be delayed until now. Fifty percent of the $80,000 repair bill will be paid with county funds. The other half will be paid through a Environmental Protection Agency. PUBLIC WORKS employees hastened draining of the lake two weeks ago by prying open the jammed floodgate to allow the lake's reserves to rush into adoining Washington Creek. The Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission is in charge of disposition of the fish in the lake. Steve Hawks, district fisheries biologist for the commission, said he was trying to save most of the fish, but some would die if they were not removed before the water drained completely. COMMISSION WORKERS are using nets to gather up the fish, which will be moved to other city and county lakes. As water levels fall later this fall, the public also will be allowed to join in the fish-saving efforts. Hawks may use these methods to use any method to get the fish. Repairs to the gate will be completed by early next spring, Dooley said, but he is not sure when the lake will be reopened. "Mother Nature is in charge of that one," he said. we don't pipe any water into the lake; it all comes from the sky," he said. "Opening day really depends on how much rain we get next spring." footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 Plaza de los Hermanos Dalila SAVE UP TO 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices (across from Greenbrier Dell) bud JENNINGS AND SONS CARPETS 29th & Iowa Use Your "People Book" Sun-Thurs 6AM-1AM Fri & Sat 6AM-2AM JB's BIG BOY FAMILY RESTAURANTS 740 IOWA September Special Buy a Big Boy Combo $2.50 includes fries and salad from kitchen or a Big Boy $3.10 includes fries and salad bar with either purchase you get a slice of apple pie for only a penny! Call in - Walk in - Drive - Jog - Any w Sponsored by: Horizons Inc & KY-102 1st Annual Moped Poker Run $4.00 entry fee: Every one who completes the ride will receive a special 'Poker Run' T-shirt. Riders meeting: 12:30 P.M. 1) Alvamar Nautilus Club (start 12:30) West 23rd Clinton Parkway *5 Nautilus club memberships Limited to Mopeds only 3) Pizza Hut, 1606 West 23rd * $25.00 gift certificates ♦ ♣ 4) Lawrence Opera House----642 Mass. * 2 V.I.P. season passes * 5 runner up prizes 2) Kiefs Holiday Plaza, 2100 West 25th *Yamaha YH2 Headphones ♠ ♥ Time: 1:00PM Date: Sat., September 13 Stops and Prizes 5) Horizons Inc., 1811 West 6th *1980 Honda Express II All traffic and safety rules must be observed. This is not a race, but rather a scenic tour of Lawrence. At each of the five stops entrants will receive a sealed playing card. At the last stop Horizons, the envelopes will be opened. The best poker hand wins a 1980 Honda Express II. Your hand is void if any envelope has been prematurely opened. i wwwwwwwwww All entries must be in by September 11,1980. To Enter Return this form with $4.00 entry fee to: Horizons Inc. 1811 West 6th Lawrence, Kansas Name___ Address___ City___ Phone___ Moped Model___ For more information contact Roger Davis, 843-3333, Horizons Inc. Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL LASSSES TREVEL INSURANCE SCORTED TOURS 'LL TODAY! 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1511 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843 KINKO'S That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4< a page. And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. No brag. just fact. 904 Vermont 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sun 843-8019 EVERYTHING YOUR COLLEGE RING SHOULD BE, AT A PRICE FAR LESS THAN GOLD. BRAINY BIRD UNITED STATES OF AMERICA LUSTRIUM RING Take Advantage of Our Ring Days! Special Price—$78.00 September 10 and 11 High School Ring Trade-ins Accepted! KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store Level 2 Main Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union BEAUTY QUALITY & BEST PRICES & BEAUTIFUL YOUR KANSAS JUNION BOOKSTORES We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students. First runs, re-runs or TV? A First runs, re-runs or TV? Watching Star Trek on a black-and-white 12-inch screen may not be fun. But neither is scraping up money for a ticket to a current flick. There is a way out. A part-time job that pays more. As a Provident Mutual campus insurance agent, you must average $5 to $6 an hour; it depends on you. Call our campus office and let's discuss how we can help you get the most of life. Terry Webster Cameron Sherman Maryland Agency Suite 711 Commercial Bank Bldg City, Mason Bay, Md 64078 Get the most out of life with Home Office: 4601 Market St., Phila., Pa. 19101 PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA S 4. SUA iR indoor recreation Organizational Meeting Foosball, Table Tennis, Pool, and Bowling. September 11, 7-8 p.m. Regionalist Room Kansas Union SNA FILMS (1937) True Confession Tuesday, Sept. 9 Nothing Sacred Two screwball comedies starring Carole Lombard. In Nothing Sacred, perhaps her most famous film, she believes she is dying of a rare disease, reporter Frederick Rester. Her character will discover . . . you can imagine what happen in this hilarious satire. Directed by William Wellman. In True Confession she confesses to murder just to see what happens to her. Directed by Fred MacMurphy, directed by Wesley Ruggles, (7/50) 9 color/BWG 7:30. Wednesday, Sept. 10 Accident (1967) The second collaboration of Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter (the first was a collaboration with the provoking examination of a professor, the student he loves and the others who confront them, Excelent), Benjamin Seyrig, Gophine Seyrig, Stanley Baker, Jacqueline Cassard (as the student) and Michael York make this exhibition, challenging him (105 min). Color 7:30. Thursday, Sept. 11 Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands Dona Flor is prepared to settle down with her calm second husband until her first wife, a former dancer, dies, to death, back as a ghost. Based on Jorge Amado's autobiotic novel, this sevvy tale of an American ballerina named Siona Barga as Dona Flora. Directed by Bruno Barrett (106 min.) Portuguese director. Friday, Sept. 12 Manhattan When was the last time you saw a movie like *The Good Old Girl*? Woody Allen's depiction of the neurotic, narcissistic Manhattan lifestyle is both one of his most revealing movies and also his most ingway. Diane Keaton, Michael Murphy, and Kristen Stewart all play *Nicoel Now.* @ 8222 min. BWB: 3-40. TW: 1-2. The Grateful Dead Movie (1977) Supervised by Jerry Garcia, the Grateful Superior also includes a unique tune of a Dead concert as part of 20 of their greatest numbers; the film also features a stunning animation set, based on a work by Garcia and Leon G. Sam." Directed Saturday, Sept. 13 Manhattan 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 The Grateful Dead Movie 12:00 Midnight. Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woolfurd Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00. Additional information can be found at Union, 4th level, information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. --- 0 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a big chunk of 'buck soup' in Saturday's season opening. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. they're a good team,"said KU head coach Don Fambridge. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "The they a lot more options and a lot of 'spirt-outs'," Fambrough said. "we use a six-man front, not a five-man, but we don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dickey Robertson on charges of sodomy and coercion in an assault, where he was held captive, the ducks are one of five Fae-10 teams inelegible for park season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart, Fambridge said in summing them up. "They have drawn them closer together. They've made that everybody is picking on them." equal For the Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is double-player Smith. Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 941.4488 Saturday 9-3 Perhap the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kallmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scritber fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Habach. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last week, are still a top-flight team. Royals George Brett "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." He added that his defense was hitting hard last week." One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon Linebacker Seellars Young, who is expected to leave the season, is out with a sprained ankle. 841-4488 RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes ph.841-66 ph.841-6642 1033 VERMONT THE ISLAND IS COMING!!! ATTENTION The first general meeting of the MINORITY STUDENTS BUSINESS COUNCIL will be held on TUESDAY, Sept. 9, 1980 at 6:00 P.M. in Room 406 Summerfield Tall All These Interested Please Attend! Buy now and get FREE Solid State Software Libraries. TI Programmable 59 — $300* $40 or more value 1 FREE module† with purchase of a TI-58C $98 or more value 2 FREE modules† & PPX Membership with purchase of a TI-59 TI Programmable 58C — $130* Choose from these. APPLER SYNTHESIS MODULE R.I. INVESTMENT MODULE SURVEYING MODULE MARINE NAVIGATION MODULE AVIATION MODULE LEISURE LIBRARY MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS DECISION MODULE MOTIV STATES MODULE ELECTrical INSTRUMENT MODULE FARMING MODULE 80% SIMULATOR MODULE POOL WATER ANALYSIS MODULE LEGACIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS DECISIONS MODULE NETT DEBTLES MODULE ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MODULE FARMING MODULE RFN SIMULATOR MODULE POOL ANALYSIS MODULE... TI Programmables lead the field in performance, quality and value. You don't have to know how to program to get all the benefits available with a TI Programmable. These solid state library modules are preprogrammed to help solve problems in: Engineering. Business. Finance. And other math oriented courses. With up to 5,000 program steps in each module you can save your own personal programming for those classes which need it most. The TI-59 has up to 960 program steps or up to 100 memories. Magnetic card read/write capability lets you record your own custom programs or those received from PPX (Professional Program Exchange.) The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has ITS Constant Memory $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ fea ture that retains data and program information even when the calculator is turned off. Visit your college bookstore or other Tl retailer for more information, and let him help you select the Tl Programmable and free software that's right for you. And free modules now give you that edge you need to succeed. From August 15 to October 31, 1980 is your special opportunity to purchase one of the world's most advanced programmable calculators. And get a minimum of $40 worth of free software modules with a TI-58C. Or, when you buy a TI-59, get a minimum of $80 worth of software modules and an $18 one-year membership in PFX. This will allow you to select up to 3 programs (from over 2,500) written by professionals in your field of study. my first choice and an alternate I *bought* a 11-98 and my my two free modules and an alternate with the same programs from the source catalog at no charge. Here are my module choices and an alternate □ I've brought a T1-5BC. send me my free module. Here is Send Jo, TI Library Offer, P.O. Box 1884, Lubbock, TX 79468 Reuse this coupon (1) with customer information card (padded in box) (2) a stained copy of proof of purchase between Aug 15 and Oct 31. 1980 — items must be post-market on Nov 7, 1980. City Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. Calculator Serial Number (from back of unit) Please leave 30 days for delivery. Offer void where prohibited. Offer good in U.S only Address This表表明我们将出售 $15 桶水。 Lsu suggests pairing all for Lau. $40, except Farming, $55, and Pool Water Analysis, $45. "US suggested retail price." * Fifty Years of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week 45732 ANAHEIM, Calif.—Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last season. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. By United Press International one loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. Brett was hitting .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm THE BEST HOME FOR WEDDING COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5780 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 P1 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 1/24 8 30 8 also midnight Fri & Sat 'Night Games' Hillcrest 918-275-4434 . The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3. Airplane 7:30 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 Xanadu 7. The Fiendish Plot of Dr 1. The Fiedish Plot of Dr. Fumuchu 7.30 & 9.30 PI Sunset 2360 West Balm St. 843-8172 Urban Cowboy & Grease Dusk starts at Dusk Eends Sunday said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Keyas as the team's leader. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belted four and threw three in their attack against Larry Gura, 18-6, and Marty Pattin. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wilie Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Wilie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ase came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. K. U.WEEK In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore swept a double-header from Detroit 9-2 and 8-6. The Orioles moved one-half game closer to the Yankees, on top of the Eastern Division by four games. KU K. U. WEEK AT THE OPERA HOUSE Ladies Night General Adm. $2.00 Ladies Adm. $1.00 (and first draw free) All G.S.P. and Corbin Residents get in free with their darm I.D. WEDNESDAY WESTWORLD Contemporary Rock from K.C. Ladies Night FRIDAY KELLEY HUNT & THE KINETICS K.U.I.D. NIGHT SATURDAY Double Feature THE CLOCKS From Witchita and FRED'S WALLET Buck Night—Adm. $1 **Opinion** 14 JON PAUL 28 JOHN HARTFORD 19 LIMOUSINE 28 RIVERROCK 20 UTRANOX Coming Events Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Jawrence Opera House ViN THE Meisner Milstead Liquor SWEDISH SHOP Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town we have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza Scandinavian Imports 25th and Iowa Holiday Plaza UNIQUE SCANDINAVIAN GIFTS Genuine Swedish Clogs for Women © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 m-Sat. closed Sun. The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650/640 --- Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate Bv DIANE SWANSON By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 85. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchietta, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. New OFF-THE WALL Section The Unknown Comic Unmasked WIN A Limited Edition ELVIS RECORD! Plus Morrison, Blondie & Dylan Books; Marley & Stones Records Tom Waits Scores... New Coppola Film & Ambersand VOL.IV.NO.1 SEPTEMBER 1980 • LADI VON JANSSK The Music, Arts & Entertainment Magazine for College Newspapers Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipur services. HOWEVER, YOM KKIPP falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as Parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the University of Pittsburgh, and many living growth units sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Archie R. Dykes, Myers said The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for the Parents' Day was October 21. Hilile made another appeal to Del Shankel after he was named acting chancellor, Kort said. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling problem." Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myrs said. "It's a problem you run into when you're in an emergency room in advance. We just hope it won't happen again." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council, which will then make a decision. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Some people send kosh Hammann cards, which can be more or less new year's greeting cards of your choice. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by bundun services; she said. Hillel is sponsoring a Roeh Hashanah service at 7:30 on tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held every day at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark for HOLIDAYS期盼 If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political access and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue Koch's membership in the statewide student lobby. ncing system "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison系会 by $10 million a year." stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the rooftop, the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAA. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing circumstances and should choose between a sentencing or rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KA4 parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $2 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 to the victim." The defendant bably reinforced unresponsibility in that person. But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you use with violent offenders?" Should a Class A felon use this technique? See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness into the afternoon. Winds will be late from the north at 18 mph. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fait to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers. It will become most clear by late afternoon, with a bighurst at 84. 8 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a soup 'back' in Saturday's season opener. the Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opener against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. they're a good team" said KU head coach Don Fambrough. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. the offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Baughman said. "Defensively, they use a six-man front, not a five-man back, so you don't see much ground." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and incest in two years ago, the Ducks are also one of five Pac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Farnbrough said in summing Oregon's woes. "It has drawn them closer to the truth." "It's like 'thing that everybody is picking on me.'" More than just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a **free** blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo **free** with all servi 14th and Massachusetts M-1 Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scribner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." The team's defensive arm and our defense was hitting hard last week." Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last season, have been one of the best. One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon Linebacker Seclairs Young, who last season, was a left ankle, with a sprained ankle. For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is doubtful that the Hawks' Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. Royals George Brett* RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes Brett was hitting. 396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. 841-4488 ph.841-6642 Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week the loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. By United Press International ANAHLM, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and the Cleveland Cavaliers runs last week. Carney of Cleveland Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Ampersand Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angles 12 last night. The Angels belted four home runs and three RBIs to Larry Gurge, 18-6, and Marty Pettitt. It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Freya as to when Brett will return to the lineup Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Willey Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willey Alken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ause came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore swept a double-header from Detroit 9-2 THE ISLAND IS COMING September,1980 Buy now and $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmable 58C- The TI-59 has up to 96 steps or up to 100 memo netic card read/write cap cap you record your own cu TI Programmables lead in performance, quality a You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Prog These solid state library are preprogrammed to 1 problems in: Engineering Finance. And other oriented courses. With u program steps in each m can save your own per gramming for those class need it most. SAMPLELS SNAPSTICS MODULE SAMPLELS ANALYSIS MODULE BUILT DESIGN METHODS That's the Jensen Coax I. That's the thrill of being there. Pure Energy. A 6" woofer reproduced the bass with the intensity and power of real life. Yet distortion is virtually non-existent. Treble? The separate tweeter's high tones are not just accurate. They're precise. Get it all. With the new 61/2" Coax I car stereo speaker from Jensen. Every note. Every breath. Every last ounce of energy he put into the original performance. Don't worry about installation, either...no sweat. The 6½" Coax is at home in either your car's rear deck or up in the front doors. And with its remarkably shallow $1^{1/4}$" depth, this speaker fits in narrow sub-compact car doors that other speakers wouldn't even think about. Get it all. Easy installation and foot-stomping musical realism in your car. I grams or those received from PPX (Professional Program Exchange). That's the Jensen $6 \frac{1}{2}$" Coax I. That's the thrill of being there. JENSEN SOUND LABORATORIES AN ENSMARK COMPANY The TI-58C features up to program steps or 60 memories. And it has ITS Constant Memory™ fea JENSEN To transmit the right sign models, use I.U.S. retail suggested for all L.I. ammunition, $55, and Pool Water Analysis, $45. *US suggested retail price. *US suggested retail price. Visit your college bookstore or other TI retailer for more information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Fifty Years of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated 45732 for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat.closed Sun. The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650/640 Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 65. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by September,1980 Ampersand Radiance Series. Start out in high fidelity where most people end up. JBL You want your music to sound great. And it will, if you start out with Radiance speakers by JBL Radiance speakers are modestly priced—starting at just $139.95 —but their technology is far from modest. All three models are highly accurate, handle high power" and yet they're efficient. Their time/phase accuracy superb stereo imaging and computer-assisted design can easily be accomplished by speakers costing much more. Choose from the model 902, a three-way system with a 12" woofer, the 702, a three-way with a 10" woofer, or the 502, a two-way with an 8" woofer Each speaker is crafted in the USA at our Northridge, California facility. And each enclosure is built with 4¼" high-density compressed wood covered with walnut wood-grain vinyl. With any Radiance model, you'll be starting out with the brand most music and recording professionals end up with JBL. James B. Lansing Sound, Inc. 8500 Balboa Blvd, Northridge, CA 91329 *Recommended with amplifiers up to 200 watts for the 902; 150 watts for the 702; and 80 watts for the 502 JBL First with the pros. SAMSUNG --- © 1984 Larson Loring Sound Inc. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipur services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR furs this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the University of Pittsburgh, and many living there will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Archie R. Dvkes. Mvers said. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for Parents' Day was Monday. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling problem." Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City Journal. Hillel made another appeal to Del Shankel offen he was named acting chancellor. Kurt said AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when people have bad news in advance. We urge it hone it won't happen again." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, cards or less new year's greeting cards, to Grandsons. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sunday services, she said. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark See HOLIDAYS page 5 Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 tonight in the Room of Forum the Karsaa Union. Morning and evening services will be held daily at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." A move was made to table the petition, but it was veted. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Machiettio, graduate student senator, called for a ouorum. Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition be submitted to the University Council, which will review it. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control by Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political access and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue a membership in the statewide student lobby. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. SOLBACH RECOMUNTEED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "Opponents of prescriptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the cloaked, dripping, glued eyes that needed with them. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $12 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw 18,250 dollars." He added that the badly reinforced irresponsibility in that person. But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you with violon officers? Should a Class A felon have an officer?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAA. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing incarceration for a time, suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each innate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to low. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers on Friday. In afternoon, with a high near 85. . Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a soup called 'soup' in Saturday's season opener. The Jawayhs, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opener against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team," said KU head coach Don Fambridge. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambrigha said. "Defensively, they use a six-man front, but you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Ridled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coercion in an incident where he was playing football, the Ducks are also one of five Pac-10 teams eligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart." Farnambach said in summing up the damage. "They have a feeling that everybody is picking on them." For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. it is doubtful they'll get to the Kerrin Bell will get the starting nod. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kallmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scriner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. Defensively, the "Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. "I have been pleased with all of our young players." Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there. The defense is getting better, our defense was hitting hard last week." Rouals One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon and Ninebacker Scellars Young, who played last season, is out with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free dry blow with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M. George Brett RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes AHAIME, Calif.—Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last season. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. ph.841-6642 Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. By United Press International Brett was hitting .398 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such. team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 841-4488 It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Frees as when Brett will return to the lineup. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belled four home runs and three homeruns at the ballpark during Larry Gura, 18-6, and Marty Pattin. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lanford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Willie Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run单队. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ase came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING Buy now and $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmables lead them in performance, quality and You don't have to know I program to get all the available with a TI Program These solid state library is are preprogrammed to help problems in: Engineering ness. Finance. And other oriented courses. With up t program steps in each mod can save your own person grammming for those classes need it most. TI Programmable 58C- APPLYED SANITIZES MODULE ECONOMICS ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS DECKS MODULE The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memorietic card read/write capybara you record your own custom grams or those received from Professional Program Exe- Ampersand Publisher DURAND W. ACHIEE Advertising Director JEFFREY A. DICKBY Editor in Chief JUDITH SUNS Music Editor BIRDON LAWSEN Design Director CLOEINE LAMPTON Production Manager CHIP JOES Art Assistants NEIL MUSKOWITZ, MELI RICE Typography AMC COMPONENT Contributing Editors COMAN ANDERSS, JACOB ARLAT, MATTIN CLIFFORD ED CRAG, LEN FELDMAN, DAWIN Office Manager JOAN SHOW Advertising Officer Los Angeles/New York JEFF DRAKE 1080 NorthVine Suite 201 Bhollywood, CA 90328 215/462-715* Chicago TORIN KRIETMANG ASSOCIATE C75 North Broadway Chicago II 610-640 312/568-9354 © 1998 Alan W. Wilson Publishing 1609 Nove Street Suite 210, Hollywood, CA 90385 All rights reserved. Licenses become the property of the publisher and may be used by Publisher at its own expense. Subscription fees are $29.00. Publication monthly except January; Publication monthly except June; July and August. Annual subscription rate is $19.00. To order subscriptions or order of address of change to Amperement at the above hfield warehouse, click on the online publication circulation rate reporting at St Louis, Missouri. I $ ^{\mathrm{N}} $ H $ ^{ \mathrm{E R E}} $ FEATURES Four Modern Essays Didion, McPhee, Hoagland & Flamer advance the tradition 8 In One Ear Letters 4 ¢ Out the Obstet Neus ¢ rumors 7 Following Tom Walls Marathon inter web erds in Francis F. Coppaola's film studio 10 DEPARTMENTS Off the Wall (debus) Comedy, awareness, sickness — this month, the Britnicum Comic, Marries lagooning 12 In Print 14 Morrison, Dylan, Jazz & Blondie September, 1980 On Disc Marley, Stones, etc. 16 On Tour Richman, Bandgen, etc. 16 Tom Waits and his tattoos were photographed at ZooDrive Studios in Hollywood by Ladi tie jen jansky On Screen Hunter, Tiantic, No Nukes, etc. 18 PROFESSIONAL TAG GENERATOR The TI-58I6 features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has ITS Constant Memory™ fea OUR COVER $ \mathrm{I}^{ \mathrm{N}} \, \mathrm{O}^{ \mathrm{N E}} \, \mathrm{E}^{ \mathrm{A R}} $ Envied Drain Sealy a cover story on Jeff Bridges in the May June *Ampersand*. Disappointed to learn hes into EST just to share a thought I b畏 ever since the Urban Cowboy *Eguest* article was sold as a movie property. Why John Travolta and music push? Jeff Bridges would ve been perfect along with a foo Elo soundtrack. Marty Lange Iota City, LA I confused in your May June '7 Out the Other section you indicated there was a Lisa Eichhorn feature I looked all through the issue and couldn't find one. What happened to fat Lisa Iave had a crush on her since I saw her in *yanks* Dale Martin San Diego, CA geoff, Lisa didn't make it. Maybe this year. We apologize. Well, this is slightly embarrassing. The vce was a Live featurebound, very nice indeed, but reit with the cushitudes of the economy, advertising, scheduling and general pre-summer All right, folks, the summer's over. Get the sand out of your toes, dust off the old typewriter and write to us How can we have a fascinating letter column if you don't hold up your end of it? We want mail, lots of it. We're patheticely grateful for insults, complaints, suggestions, even compliments. Send your peaks of wisdom to the stare at Amper sand, 1680 N. Vine, Suite 201, Hollywood, CA 90028 Ransacking the old Ampersand archives, we discovered this elegant figure by Joyce Lukey of Dibuque. Joyce is now $25 richer. Memble, any other artistically inclined money-bunny folks are encouraged to submit their own original membies. Membies may be executed in black ink on sturdy white September, 1980 paper. Neatness counts. Mail your gifts to Amphersand of the Month, 1680 N. Vine Street, Suite 210, Hollywood, CA 90028. You don't bear from us for two years. IRA Records sent this photo along to prove that he had to get tough when shipping Eileas Aron Presley, their latest Elvis release, an 8-book set of mostly unreleased material. Hi-jackers, IRA claimed on silver-coated (expensive) paper, were too tempted otherwise. Well, maybe so. But we think Ampsider readers call guys what's really going on, what these four suspicious people are saving and/or doing. That's why we're declaring a caption contest! Think up, write it down, send it to off-Tru Consultant, Ampsider, 1680 Who are these people & why are they having such a good time? N. Vine, Suite 201, Hollywood, California, 90028. Entries must be postmarked by October 15, 1980. po5thMk Go True! Consultant will pick the best five and will print em The absolute best, according to TC, will win a copy of *Elis Aris Presley* — an expensive little conversation piece including 87 performances by EI and a 20-page booklet of historical info and rare photographs — courtesy of RCA Records and *Ampersand Remember...*, you read it here recently. A65242 351 C other TI retailer who has the information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. % to the average of all subscriber rates U.S. suggested retail retail price for $5, Farming, $5, and Pool Water Analysis, $45. *US suggested retail price.* Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. Fifty Years of Innovation INCORPORATED © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated dellhome Swedish Clogs for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat. closed Sun. 45732 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 UPSS 650-640 Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, creates the number of occupied sites from 90 to 120. In explaining why the seats he had been omitted, Davis said living grounds would be rerepresented by September,1980 Ampersand CITIZEN Sex and Society Available on OVATION Records ovation RECORDS HOWEVER, YOM KIPUR falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as Parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the university of Pittsburgh, and many living games will feature special activities for students and their parents. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipour services. Archie R. Dykes. Mvers said. The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for Parents' Day Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Hillel made another appeal to Del Shankle after he was named acting chancellor, Kort said. In his letter to the editor, Shankard said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling system." He added, "I just want to be happy." Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City Gazette. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when people have to deal with an issue in advance. We just loathe it won't happen again." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, to friends, and we'll send cards, to friends, and we'll send Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 tonight in the Formal Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held every day at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark SEE HOLIDAYS page 5. keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchiette, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council, which will review it. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political success and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue the senate membership in the statewide student lobby meeting. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the evidence of the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "this person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $12 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 to this person." The state also bally reinforced irresponsibility in that person. But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAa. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing circumstances and should choose between a corrective or immediate action to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you do with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon do it?" Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each innate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. *Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances* Wait, the prompt says "Maintain original document structure." So I'll just use standard indentation. Final Markdown: *Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances* See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to lowest. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers in the early morning. It will become more clear by late afternoon. @ University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a soup 'black soup' in Saturday's season opener. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent in the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team." said KU head coach Don Fambrough. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambrough said. Defensively, they use a six-man front, and you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coerption in the 1990s, years ago, the Ducks are also one of five Pac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambourd said in summing up Oregon's woes. "It has drawn them closer together. They have a feeling that everybody is picking on them." Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scribner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will proably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is doubtful that Kevin Kwerin will get the starting nod. Defensively, the "Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. KC Royals George Brett More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambridge said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." The defensive team has the defense was hitting hard last week." One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon Linebacker Scellars Young, who played last season, is with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to **free** blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a hairstcut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all servic RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week the loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. NAHEM, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last season. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. By United Press International Brett was hitting .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials ph 841-6642 BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Frey as to when Brett will return to the lineup. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angles last 12 night. The Angels belted four home runs and three homers on the matte Larry Gura, 18-6, and Marty Patten. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Willie Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ace came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York best Toronto 7-4, while Baliamite THE ISLAND IS COMING Ampersand TI Programmables lead in performance, quality an art. You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI ProgRA. These solid state library are preprogrammed to he problems in: Engineeringness. Finance. And other oriented courses. With up program steps in each mo can save your own perse grammring for those classe need it most. The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memori netic card read/write capaI you record your own cust grams or those received from rTA (Professional Program Exchange.) The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has TI's Constant Memory "fea TI Programmable 58C APPLIED SYNCHRONICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUILT DECISION MODE $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C September,1980 At last. A new Supertuner with FM reception so advanced,you simply have to hear it to believe it. 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After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, BIV senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the amount of compensation. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by September,1980 & OUT THE OTHER E AR High Noon in Hollywood HOLLYWOOD IS STILL CRIPPED by the Screen Actors Guild and AFTRA (American Federation of Radio and Television Artists) strike, which affects almost all film and TV production except news, game and entertainment. The industry an estimated $40 million per week this means that for most TV series, this fall will not be a new season – it will be more returns. All predictions indicate a long strike, not because the actors are making unreasonable demands — they want more participation in revenues from cable TV and the streaming industry. This things — but because film producers and studios must negotiate contracts with the Writers and Directors Guilds later this year. These two guilds are much stronger than SAG and AFTRA combined; if the actors win concessions, the writers and directors will it is believed, take all the marbles. And tacked away in the middle of this crisis — the end of the decade — in the strike against studio and producers. This town is real quiet these days. URBAN COWBOY and China Syndrome dj reactor James Bridges' next project is In a Shallow Grave, which he's adapting from the Gothic novel by James Pudrey, a writer dear to the hearts of English instructors but not necessarily English students. Movie Plots RUGHARD GERE may star in *Eye of the Storm*, a love story set in the Spanish-American war, with Judy Davis, the wonderful star of *My Brilliant Career*. Gere is also considering *Trouble Customers*, about the numbers rackets in Harlem, with Diana Ross. He's set to recreate his stage role in *Troubleshooting*. A director's German Fassbinder couldn't agree on terms, and now Costa Gavras (Z. State of State) is mulling the offer. Teleplots STEVE MARTIN has reportedly agreed to make Pennies from Heaven, a film based on the ward BBCCT show aned PBS stations in recent years. "the one where the players occasionally burst into vaudeville song numbers in the middle of marital crises. Martin was planning to make Depresstion," he said in collaboration. The jerk, was such a laughia bleu success, but Depresstion proved not to their liking. THE CIA is coming to TV—and with offi cial endorsement. Like the old FBI series, this one (still in the planning stages) would follow an agent-hero and his opera hays. Not since I spy in the early Sixies has any TV network felt comfortable with the CIA as good guys. A strange sign of the times GOOD MORNING AMERICA's Hollywood reporter Rana Barrett and Happy Days star Ron Howard have something in common — they've both left ABC to join NBC, each in pursuit of more participation on more levels — Barrett in news and speeches, Howard in *Amateur show* with Tom Snider), Movies in developing series and TV movies. THE DESTINY OF Saturday Night Live was still uncertain at press time, new producer Todd Lieberman said. Woody Allen accompanying her on a comedic talent search on both coasts. Although none of last year's cast had re-signed, it's still possible that Murray, Newman, Morris and Shearer may return. Meanwhile, Harry Shearer, *Amparand's* favorite (whose inspired companion is a hip-hop superstar) guard was one of last year's late-night high lights) is working on a film script with Michael McKean (of *Laurence & Shirley*) Chris Guest (one of the weird Ford brothers in *The Long Riders*) and Rob Reiner. Reiner will direct and also play the role of the director as the three aforementioned will also star in the new choreographer called Rock'n' Roll Nightmare. College Plots THE COMEDY STORE, famous in los Angeles for its free (and sometimes even funny) show of known and unknown comedians, is now reportedly offering 'Night at the Comedy Store' to colleges and concert halls across the country. JODIE FOSTER, star of CATRINE, FOXES, TEXT ROWER, et al., is now a student at Yale. From Hollywood to Broadway Linda RONSTAPT, appearing last month in New York's Central Park in Gilbert & Sullivan's *Pirates of Penzance*, may or may not go with the show to Broadway this fall and there may or may not be an album of the show. Nobody's promising anything — except a Ronstadt concert tour, hitting mostly the south and midwest, in October From Broadway to Hollywood keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." ANNIE PRODUCER Ray Stark wants Bitte Mädler to play the nasty orphanage woman, but so far Bette is in buying it. All the kids, Daddy Wardhack, John Huston will direct. Dancing to a Different Tune XINTIES RECORDING mavens Nilsson and Van Dyke Parks are both working on the music for Robert Altman's Popeye (starring Robin "Mick" Williams and Shelley Duvall) Nilsson is writing, Van Dyke arranging. And Ry Coeder is doing the music for Hammett. And Tom Waits...is featured prominently elsewhere in this issue. THE NEXT FETRO TULL album, *Aid, due* this month, has a new group lineup; drummer Barrimore Barlow, keyboardist John Evan and multi-instrumentalist David Palmer were dismissed by leader Ian Anderson, who hired in their places Edie Johnson, former keyboard player with U.K. and Los Angeles drummer Mr Craney Guitarists Martin Barre and Dave Pegg are still with the band. ROD AND ALINA STWART are expecting their second child. Donna Summer and her new husband, Bruce Sudoane, are has one child from a previous marriage). NOT TRUE," says his publicist, but rumors are spreading that Bob Dylan is trying to have his newest album, *surel*, recalled. A spokesman for the artist said, "I don't like the way it sounds on the radio It also alleged that Dylan has offered to pay Columbia Records. Whatever it costs to do so, he would accept. OMEDIAN RICHARD REPORTE reportedly showed up at a party for Latina jackson sister to the all-bishop singing group Chorale, and Chorgi, trot mace — l.p. in Smoke. Wax on the Way RTHETHA FRANKLIN, the undisputed Queen of Soal "Chain of Fools," *Respect* and the best part of the Blues Brothers Movie, has signed with Aria Record after a long association with Atlantic. Franklin is currently in the studio with veteran producer Arif Martin. Recent revitalization of the Heavy Metal scene in England leads to Deepest Portle, a greatest hits compilation by early sonic overkill outfielde Purple. Inits the Music, Nan Morrison's last LP reflected the lilting gaps and reels of his own Ireland. Common One, due in the stores any day now, will go on a jazz dance. Nick Lowen who won the nickel for Best New Song in arrangement techique (Cash it down and tilt it up) has produced Medical Shapes for his recent bride, Carlene Carter, the daughter of John Cash and descendant of the famous Carter family. Steve Martin's What I Believe arrives in early October, preceding anLP by fellow comedian Chevy Chase. Also hitting the stores on AU ("The Year of the Cat") Stewart with an album titled 24 Carriors. The B-52, with Wild Planet formerly tilted Ugenitismo and featuring a track called *Idaho* which, the band assures us, is about a state of mind: a new Dire Straits produced this time by Jimmy Iovine, who wrote the song and created a comeback attempt by Shaun Cassidy, produced by the everwig Tundrgund Röden Waxing in Washington BILLY JOEL played a number of secret小 club dates in July recorded by Columbia Records for an upcoming live album. His visit to Washington, D.C. was anounced on the local radio only an hour before tickets went on sale at midafternoon; all 400 seats were snapped up by a few his teners in another hour. Some of the fortus nals scaled their tickets for up to $50 per Summer in D.C. can do that to people. BEACH BOYS were also recorded live in *The Nation's Capital* this summer, but their arrangements were a bit more extrasagant a British TV production crew and a Fourth of July movie based on a 25,000air Washington Monument grounds. There were fireworks afterward, naturally the videotape will be released worldwide in 1984 as part of a Beach Boys 20th anniversary celebration, and the Boys have ambitious plans of their own for the Big Bzero Two. Mike Love has told reporters the band will play in Copenhagen, London, Washington Los Angeles and New York, sounds like they'll need a Concorde for transport between shows. Is Sonic boom surfing just around the corner? HELP! HELP! CARICHOGRAFICO TERMPAPER (ASSISTANCE) A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchietto, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. CATALOG Ready access to 10,250 quality research topics — all college subject areas. Save time and improve your grades! Send $1.00 now for your 340-page, mail order catalog. 6702 — MARK & DURKHEIM. Examines the comparative and contrasting elements of Mark's concept of aionization and Durkheim's theory of anomie. Footnotes, bibliography, 11 pages. 7434 — AIR POLLUTION. Worldwide impact. Health hazards; causes, threat to animals and plants; impact of polar ice cascade; zone layer danger; need for international solutions. Each paper listed in the catalog is fully described. Examples: RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. also provides custom research and thesis assistance. Prompt and confidential. Quality guaranteed! Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. MASTER CHARGE & VISA ACCEPTED Research Assistance, 11322 Idaho Ave., #206AM West Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 (213) 477-8226 Please rush my catalog. Enclosed is $1.00 to cover postage. Name Cit --stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipur services. State ___ Zip ___ HOWEVER, YOM KIPUR falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the university of Pittsburgh, and many living groups will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Archie R. Dykes, Myers said. Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for *Parens* Day was November 25. Hillel made another appeal to Del Shankel after he was named acting chancellor. Kort said. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduled service on Friday." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish, Kort said. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when you're stuck in an office or in advance. We just hope it won't happen again." After the Senate makes a decision, the petition be submitted to the University Council, which will accept it. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening events will be held every day at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark See HOW IT ULLS page 5 Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, cards to friends in new year's greeting cards, to friends' liaisons, a gift. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political access and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue KS membership in the statewide student lobby. ncing system "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fare," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. The panel questioned the priser, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the dropsing, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $25 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state pententiary) the state threw 18,250 dollars to a former inmate, and badly reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you do with violent offense? Should a Class A felon do it?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAA. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing a conviction, as the judge suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KA4 parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each innate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north $8 to the low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thundershowers in the early morning. It will become more clear by late afternoon. 6 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup' The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a mock "kick soup" in Saturday's season opening. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team" said KU head coach Dum Fonbach. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 423 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the l-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Bambridge said. "Defensively, they use a six-man front, so you don't see them you don't see much of that around them." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Wrighton on charges of sodomy and coercion in an incident where two ducks were caught. Ducks are one of five Pac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambrough said in summing "Degraean was wooed, and has drawn them close to me." The men then tucked that everybody is picking on them. For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is doubtful that he'll play for Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. Perbaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scriner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. KC Royals George Brett Defensively, the "Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future, I can see a defense out there, but the UCLA team is the one we defense is hitting hard last week." One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon. Linebacker Scellars Young, who led KU in tackles last season, is out with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. M-1 RICK'S BIKE SHOP ph 841-6642 ANAHEIM, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run, and drove in three runs last past the power hit. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week Brett was hitting, 396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. By United Press International The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobbs when he will join Junior Jim Fey as when he will retire. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belled four home runs and three hits on the matte that Larry Gurka, 18, and Marty Pattin. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Ampersand Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Willey Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run单行。Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez。但 then Aseame came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING September,1980 APPLYED STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUILT DECEMBER MO TI Programmables lead in performance, quality as You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Progre These solid state library are preprogrammed to h problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And oth oriented courses. With up program steps in each me can save your own pers grammming for those class need it most. The T15-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memor netic card read/write capa you record your own cus Buy now and $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmable 58C - APPLICATION STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS MODEL The Undisciplined DITCH DIGGERS BY FRED SETTERBERG grams or those received I... L... (Personal Program Exchange. The essay is the ditch-digging occupation of writing. - Ishmael Reed When Michael Hert's *Dis patches* first appeared in 1977, they dared to paint their story of the Viet Nam experience. Giving the dearth of compelling fiction from Viet Nam, they hinted that the novel and short story had finally come to form and sensibility, as evidenced by their inability to capture the immediacy and disjointed folly of this most complex book was something else, and they called it everything imaginable: rock n' roll reporting; a personal journal; a transcript of the "mad-poop-pee" gudge in which Viet Nam was lived. On its own terms, *Dis patches* might best be regarded as a huge and money-growing sensation and sensation, hard facts now and then shifting the balance to viscual impressions and off the cuff (oftenies, off the wall) philosophy patches is "an irregular, undigested piece." Or to borrow a word from the French in referring to the former lair, the *Dis patches* book was oure frank an essay. That the termesse should evoke any negative connotations is probably a factor of our early classroom experience with a stuffy set of notions that formally to style and set a prescriptive pattern for learning. While these principles might apply in an odd way to Montagne and Francis Bacon, it must be remembered that the congenial essay has always been one of our most personal, eccentric and expressive texts, after another. Aidus Huxley called it, “in but a sequence that in some miraculous way develops a central theme and relates it to the rest of human experience.” In fact, in the art of world literature, the unreliable essay (a typical experiment) has always kept courageous and often dangerous company: Plato, Cicero, Carlyle, Swift, Ibanez, and others who have helped our appreciation for clear thought and fresh language. Today the account essays are no less important, and certain varieties varied and appealing. A. K. The Newspaper Connection --- sayist. Since the early 18th century when Joseph Addison and Richard Steele first put together the Tatter — a thrice-weekly newspaper designed to introduce faculties of England's budding middle class — the essayist has enjoyed constant if somewhat ambiguous employment as a member of the working class. He is also a professor of guesses that have ranged from the timeless street scenes of Dickens' *Streches by Boz* to the out-and-out poetics of H.M. Lichen, the essayist known for his interesting interests of his craft with a full larder of whimsical irony immersed in the wage-earning and ephemeral lives of his subjects, the true essayists has had to continually suppress or blunt what BWh White calls "the childish belief that everything he thinks about, everything interests him, to its general interest." Journalism has always been the first and best refuge of the es Sometimes, as in the case of Janet Flanner, this urge to self-censorship makes for a rather opaque style of revelation. Writing for a half-century under the name *Karen Forker*, Flanner generally focused her discrimination eye upon the social and artistic elite of Europe. Her work often recalls the advocacy for taste and manners in New York during the years of Addison and Steelie; at other times, Flanner inserts herself neatly into the tumult of age, observing a bankrupt Berlin of 1931 or reflecting on the horrors of the ghetto upraised. But whether she writes about manner or history, Flanner always manages to construct her point of view in a most effectively hiding watchfulness, an implicit hiding watchfully beneath the subtle implications of her prose. FOUR MODERN ESSAYISTS Clockwise from left JOAN DIDION The White Album JOHN MCCHEE John McPhee Reader (Random House) Garrard Straus Groves JANET PLANNER Janet Planner's World Harrison Brush (Random House) THE EARL Howard Haas Reader (Random House) The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has Its Constant Memory" fea- Not so, of course, for America's foremost contemporary reporter-turned-seller, Joan Didion. When Didion undertakes a character profile — her piece by John Pike, the author — she does not begin with the subject, his family, philosophy, or even a recitation of his favorite food (as did Janet Flanner in a 1956 profile of her mother) to piece the word with a heart about her recollection of Pike's church, and then characteristically proceeds to lace the narrative with what she calls elsewhere, "always, transparently, in the light," the greatest study of Mann is wrote Janet Flanner in a profile of the Nobel Prize-winning German novelist, and likewise, we may note that an equivalence between the two is Didion. As a reporter, she tells us, she is not really interested in issues, but in the "alchemy of issues." And what this seems to mean is that every character, every subject, from Linda Kasabian to Susan Griffin, brushes up against the author and receives its illuminating charge from the quality of that contact. This is, of course, self-indulgence led to an often hand, self-indulgence, coupled with wit, passion, and intelligence, has always been the touchstone of the successful essayist. "Only a person who is willing to learn how to frontline and stamina to write essays advised B.E. White. Didion's collected pieces in The White Album and *Soilcoming Towards Bethlehem* frankly do not paint him, but instead he would be missing the point to regard them as such. Rather we read these meditations upon Bogota and Malibu, John Wayne and Charles Manson to learn how an artist could be a virtual managed to harrow the age Subjectivity is the point in full. A. R. M. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. P. S. R. S. (2) A Strong, High Voice --- Didion is often praised for her fine, precise language, her strong voice speaking in contrast to a physical presence which is as she tells us, "small," "temperamentally unobtrusive," and "perfectly late." In other words, she has had to fight for her language, and each stone cut line marks some small victory. Uni Law Edward Hoagland is another essayist who has earned his style through adversity. A novelist of modest reputation (1908-1924) and the 1906 *The Circle Home* (1960). Hoagland has spent much of his childhood and adult life as a stutterer. "Being in these vocal handcuffs made him feel so different from a dog, like a dog choosing each word." Hoagland's style is consonant with the idea that the essay is a variety of 'conversational writing' Unshackled, an abundance of critical detail and blinding enthusiasm fueling his abrupt transitions from present to past, subject to self, to countryalsy. As he was taught reflective reflection to stylistic glissando, he was, as observed critic Geoffrey Wolf, that "it is impossible to know (but easy to feel) what the essay is about." Hoagland writes that in her sympathetic purveyor of black bears, red wolves, and city rats, he records the lore folk of early settlers in British Columbia and Ontario, the sympathetic penurvey A. J. HARRISON A peripatetic and specifist of sorts, McPhee — like his cohorts — must feel somewhat cheered now that many private concerns have risen to the general interest, and the essay once again enjoys a reasonably wide and diverse reach. The book's focus is the lot of the essayist has probably been most realistically defined, once again, by E.B. White "A writer who has sights his trains on the Nobel Prize or other early triumphs had best write a novel, a poem, or a play," writes in *The Rumble* that rumble about, content with living a free life and enjoying the satisfacations of a somewhat undisciplined existence. In Town & Country As a staff writer for The New Yorker, McPhee has straddled two worlds in scores of articles and more than a year of research. A faculty study of Alaska, *Coming into the Country*, McPhee has also tangled with long, discursive pieces about the higher levels of tennis, the craft of bark canoe builders, missing links in the history of the sport. McPhee is an adventurer of information, a stickler for the facts. He has written a book about oranges, a most studious and exacting survey that examined the origins of fundamental cravings. Typically, McPhee works from the sidelines, bending his style to any angle or knot that might suit his sublime observations. He examines the differences between conservationists and the Federal government are tightly defined when McPhee boards a rubber raft headed down the Colorado along with Friends of the Earth founder Dave DeClementa. "Come on now, Dave; be honest" (the Commissioner) said. "From a conservator's point of view what is the best source of electric power?" "Flashlight batteries, Brower said." Hoagland is hardly the first observer of animals and lars to be between the woods and the city. Since big living there, the American essayist has been torn by the happy agony of deciding whether to leave the city of the country and upon its return to the extension of two homes is stock-in-trade for the essayist, though few display the pericinct ease and delight with acquiredfollows that distinguish both the permanent and Mcheeister. John his McPhee. other I will suggest some information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. suggest a retail for all L. brasiliens $40, except Farming. $5, and Pool Water Analysis. $45. *US suggested retail price.* Instruments technology — bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. Forty Years of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat. closed Sun. 45732 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650-640 --- Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 69 to 85. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by Ampersand TROUBLEMAKERS IS THE NEWEST "LOSS LEADER" FROM WARNER BROS. 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BOX 6868 BURBANK, CALIFORNIA 91510 Enclosed is my $3.00 for "TROUBLEMAKES," a 2-LP COLLECTION Offer valid only in USA. Please allow six to eight weeks for delivery WB Jewish students who have made arrangement with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipur services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR furks this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the University of Pittsburgh, and many living classrooms have special activities for students and their parents. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling problem." A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchietti, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. Archie R, Dykes, Myers said. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend The final decision came from the chancellor's day and the date for Parent's Day was not mentioned, he said. Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when you're in the same job or in advance. We just hate it won't happen again." Hillier made another appeal to Del Shanker after he was named acting chancellor, Kort said. keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sunday services, she said. Some people send Rosh Hushanah cards, which are sent every new year's greeting to friends. Lily said, "I'll send them." Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 to tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held on Monday at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark SEE HOW DAYS MAKE $5 See HOLIDAYS page 5 After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue kbss membership in the statewide student loans committee. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fare," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the evidence for the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three nparties of less than $100. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $12 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 to the person." The governor bably reinforced irresponsibility in that person. But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you ask with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon be punished?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAa. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extenuating circumstances and should choose between a criminal or rehabilitative court to rehabilitate center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to 13 mph. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers in mid-morning. It will be much more clear by afternoon, with a high near 85. O Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a thick mud 'back soup' in Saturday's season opener. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team," said KU head coach Don Fambridge. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they are a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambridge said. "Defensively, they use a six-man front, you don't see you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coersion in an incident where he wielded a knife. The Ducks are also one of five Fac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "the problem hasn't torn them apart." Fambrough said in summing up the situation. "They have chosen together. They have a feeling that everybody is picking on them." More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. George Brett KC Royals For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is double-digit scoring for Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. Defensively, the Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kallmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scribner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambridge said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." The team's coach, Mark Dwyer, the defense was hitting hard last week. One returning defensive star, however, will be missing Saturday inregon to backer Seclairs Young, and KU in its last season, is with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services 14th and Massachusetts M-1 RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes nh 841-6642 Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. ANAHEIM, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in runs last year. He is among the Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. dren was hitting 396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials By United Press International BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Frings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belled four home runs and three at-bats against Larry Gura, 18-6, and Marty Patton. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to lead the lead to 2-1. It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobbler to decide whether Jey will Fey as a wren. Brett will return to the office. Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wilson Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ause came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royals' magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING Buy now and $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmable 58C APPLICATION ANALYSIS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUILT CREATIVITY MAC APPLIED SURVEYING MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE TI Programmables lead in performance, quality at You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Progls These solid state library are preprogrammed to be problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And other oriented courses. With up program steps in each me can save your own pers grammming for those class need it most. The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memoretic card read/write capa record your own cuv The Tom Waits Cross-Country Marathon Interview (Over the Finish Line with Francis Coppola) BY STEPHEN X. REA OS ANGELES OCTOBER 5, 1979 Tom Waits' black 64 Thunderbird parked in a used car lot, up again graffit covered wall. That is, one graffiti covered wall. That’s one imagines the T Bird is black. Caked with an impenetrable layer of L.A. dirt, the bird can barely see anything for all anyone can tell. Inside floats a cluster of unmapped bills, unopened letters, wadded-up Kleenex, a portable AM radio (antenna broken), a cardboard box full of old, yellow Tshirts, and a paperback wedged in the crevice where windshields meet dashboard. Its title, *Inside My Privacy*, is fading fast in the sun. The auto left a rear fender sports an elaborate decal featuring the word FENDER emblazoned on the cover of Waits thus titled 1978 album. As Waits comments later, sitting in manager Hibernate cloisered offices, "I could afford a billboard, so I wrote it on the car." For someone with the demeanor of an itinerant burn, the slowly ambience of some Kerenoa nomad, Waits has immersed himself in a demanding swamp of projects, committing his time and talents to a busy honeymoon and shakers. Apart from his current fall/winter tour and the *Heart Attack and Wine LP* (to be recorded with producer Bones In spring of 79, Waits had commenced work on a record tentatively titled *White Spades*, but he got distracted, caught up in some other things. "I ended up changing the title to *Heart Attack and Wine*, and that's what I'm working on now. I'd say the sound a little more rhythm & blues. Gone a song called 'Breakfast in Jail', another called 'Whose Sportcote Is That? Another, 'Pomona Lisa'. A lot of it I'm going to break in on." "Blue Valentine" has been gathering dust in the "unpaved car lot every afternoon for three weeks in October 79, while inside the faceless, uninviting brick and concrete complex Tom Waits — beatnik balladler, jazz journeyman (the ad might read: "Have gravely robe. Will stand up and sing") — has been reading his band for a tour that will take them across the country, and through the theatre and small halls. "I don't play many beer bars any more," Waits explains. "I used to play exclusively tots that all I wanted to play. But the thing is, you play totes too long and you start get 'a lind on you." This time, Wats is stepping out with a new bunch of musicians, including among its guitarist Terry Eaves, late of many a Little Richard and Roy Charles. Wats disists for the first time, and the dimly lit recesses of a Ventura motel bar. They are rough, Wats mumbles knowingly. I am not going to go anywhere. I want to be here with you. I will be there, and I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. I will be there. Waits also持有一 good portion of 1979 holed up in a Paris loft, collaborating with art Guy Peelarlan (Rock Dreams) on a book of portraits of American heroes, to which Waits has contributed the text. "You know people like Marlene Dietrich, Mohammad Ali, Meyer Lansky, Pearl Bailey, Jimmy Durm, Adam Clayton Powell." "I'll take a white girl about five-two with big tits & bad teeth." Why is he pushing himself so hard? Wants every walking hour (beginning arround 20 minutes) to be the last thing he sees. How in early January), several motion picture forms are under way. One is a script co-written with writer/actor Paul Hampton called Why Is the Dream So Much Sweeter than The Taste? "It abouts a used car dealer in Southern California," he says, "and it easily appeared on screen, as the inebriated, slovenly barron pianist Mumbles in Sylvester Stone's Paradise Alley (unfortunately much of Walt portrayal ended up on the cutting room floor). And, like a lot of pop music figures nowadays, Walt is open to starring in films and TV shows, but he dislains being typecast. "The thing is once you get any kind of image — we've gotten countless calls to play a drunken Irish piano player which is, like, not very challenging (did you play it)? "There's a certain reward all this. But I don't know, sometimes I just want to disappear Poof! Excuse me while I disappear. Deadlines, schedules, obligations, responsibilities sometimes like going to a booth where things come along and boom boom — everything is okay. So what are you going to do? Darry the girl or pay her off?" grams or those received frc... (Professional Program Exchange...) Torn Waits does n't dwell on the loft megaplatinum pirchide of success enjoyed by groups like the Eagles and Fleetwood Mac, or by solo artists like Jackson Browne, but his albums and his frequent tours (on last years, for example), have all been conditioned local stripper) have sold consistently well. His songs have been covered by several million-selling artists (including the Eagles), which means that Waits has been on the receiving end of a few fat royalty checks. A self-described follower of "He on a beer" has been an important part of Waits must have done with his extra cash. He answers: "My name is Morgan, but it isn't J.P., if you receive my meaning." This past fall, rumors circled the Hollywood hot wood milpurselling that Waits had returned from France a changed man. One story went so far as to suggest he had shed his shirt shop threads for Giorgio Amati suits and wore an 'Infinite couture' sitting in one of Herb Gohen's small offices and backdropped by a bouncy and Spanish courard, Waits needn't have inquired "Giorgio who?" to debunk that fiction. One look was enough: pointed black shoes (leather cracked), tight, prickly shoes, plain black pants but bounced off white white shirt, his ghouze more under his chin than on it, and wavy brown hair fitted high on top, seemingly propped upright by a pair of over sized sleeves. S SALINA, KANSAS DECEMBER 7, 1979 En route to Kansas City from Denver, on the last leg of his year-end tour, the one-time pizza maker from suburban San Diego celebrates his thirtieth birthday on his Harbor Day in this wintry, midwestern town. The TI-58C features up to program steps or 60 memories. And it has TI's Constant Memory™ fea- Though he rolls his eyes and clears his throat in mourn despair, Waits insists that the Big Three O's no matter to sweep over. "The big ages are sixteen, thirty-three-and-a-third, forty-five and seventy-eigh," he laughs. "turning thirty — everybody thinks about it, I guess. But it don't bother me, I feel pretty healthy." At that point Wait's lets loose a painful succession of coughs, a peal of mucus swirling in the lungs. And speaking of lungs, Tom Watts, the man who couldn't make a gesture on stage — let alone tell a story — without holding oroking on a Lucky Strike, has given up smoking. "It's a whole other world for me. I just didn't feel good, I felt like I was caving in inside. I lost my breath and out of breath and wheezing and out of breath, so I said, What am I doing killing myself? I don't want to live hard, die young and have a beautiful corpse. I really don't." What about his much ballyhooed bouts with a bottle of Four Roses? "I ration my教会. You know, it is good to discipline yourself in this area. As I turn the corner on thirty I am fast becoming concerned about personal hygiene. Drinkin' and smokin' and smokin' and smoking me down. If these days I will want to have a family, I've gotta think about that." Tom Waits married? Sentelled into a nice子 siblingsplit? Little Toms and Tasminas were married? Sentelled into a nice submarine split? your College Student or other Tl retailer for mon tmnt training you select the TL Programmable and free software that's right for you. Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS IT ensures the right shipment models. U.S. suggested retail price for Farming, $5, and Pool Water Analysis, $4. *US suggested retail price.* Fifty Years of Innovation INCORPORATED © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated 45732 for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat. closed Sun. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650-640 --- Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, if passed, passes 2521L, increasing the senator's vote to 70 percent. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by ersand of 'em. But Wants' idyllic home is still far off, he has yet to stumble starry-eyed upon Mrs. Right, though he's looking. "I'll take a little bit of advice," about five-two with big tits and bad teeth." Wats' pursus of a happy homelife and a woman he can call wife squeches a year of talk about his much-publicized relationship with Rickie Lee Jones. Publications from People to Rolling Stone toured Waits and songstress Jones as an "item," with the British rock mag Melody Maker going so far as to their marriage "immune." Though Waits and Jones are undeniably close friends, although both generally seey underside, sharing a cohere of self-styled low-lifes, whatever romantic interlude the two enjoyed seems to have waned. Rickie Lee Jones was the one subject Waits was intent on not discussing. OLLYWOOD DECEMBER 31, 1979 Tom Waits is sanding by the door, a rented, run-down hall elicite touches smiles from short white eli It is on this eventful night, at the turn of a with big tits. It's New Year's Eve at "Mambo Beat 80," a biracial multi-media "happening in the heart of Hollywood. Various comedy acts (including a pair of blind ladies) performed by Michael Sal Mineo and the Duplicators keep the three hundred parodyers hopping until midnight. Then veteran R&B performer Roy Brown takes the stage with his group of crusty black musicians. Waits moves from the entrance way to the dance floor. This is what he came to play with Fats Domino, Lee Allen used to play with Fats Domino — one of Wails heroes. new decade, that Waits makes a New Year's resolution: "I told myself that I was going a little farer." The signs of restlessness were there. After returning from the road, Waits moved out of his long-time abode at the Tropicana Moel, now the stopover spot for spiky-haired English punk bands. Waits exited the place after one too many magazine articles had mentioned his residence there, resulting in a walk around the house on his door at four in the morning. He moved to an apartment on Crenshaw Boulevard. Then to a house in Silver Lake. From there he slept in a series of seedy mills until the day he headed for the Big Apple. NEW YORK CITY JANUARY 28, 1980 I grew up in Los Angeles and needed a new urban land Wits erglans, sprangled on And what about the Thunderbird, "Blue Valentine?" With his move from the Southland to the concrete terrain of Manhattan, Wais is look to infuse some new blood into his life. No more 2 A.M. cruises down Santa Monica Blvd with his pals. No more late breakfast at restaurants or driving the muters on the crosswash bus or riding the subway at night, exploring the dark underbell of another kind of town. made bed in his room at the Chelsea Hotel on West 23rd Street. "I've always wanted to here, it's a good working atmosphere for me. So I packed up three suitcases and took off Once I get located I'll go back to LA. and get the rest of my stuff" "I lookin' to sell it," Waits grins. "Know anyone who's interested." OLLYWOOD JULY 28, 1980 Not so fast. In late March, Waits H his room key, move out of the Chelsea and into an apartment a few blocks away. Then, out of the blue, a telephone call from filmmaker Bord Coplas he is in with, brief conversation about a nebulous project called 'One from the Heart', recounts Walt "At that time the idea was a little half haked Now, it's starting to materialize." Materialize, indeed. Tom Wats is back in Los Angeles, fixed up in an office on the old Hollywood General lot — now known as Omii Zootrope Studio and owned by Copied. The walls in Wats' suite are made of mahogany. A Yamaha grand piano fills half of one of the rooms. An elaborate tape deck plays the organ, keyboard and scripts. There a David Niven feel to the room which I rather enjoy, he says, his eyes scanning the rich wainsoff. And everything these days is *One from the Heart*. A romantic comedical set in Las Vegas over one Fourth of July weekend, the picture stars Frederic Forrest, Teri Garr and Natalia Kinski, and will be directed by Coppola. The movie's plot will have been written before they shoot, he explains. "So I'm working closely with Francis on the story and on the development of the songs. It's a bastard musical in a way, not in the tradition of Dan Dalley and Scott Jagger. Waits sits there looking almost normal, his face just about clean shaven — sideburns gone, a long, narrow goatee nearly trailing from his lower lip. His hair, showing its first sign of gray, is less unruly. At thirty-a-half, he appears to be in disarray good health and spirits. "I'm very confident right now 1. I appear to be in disarray good health and spirits. "I'm very confident right now 1. I appear to be in disarray good health and spirits. "I'm very confident right now 1. I appear to be in disarray good health and spirits. "I’ Knee deep in sheet music and charts, and surrounded by cinema heavyweights, Waits can envision returning to his self-imposed exile in New York. "It's impossible now One from the Heart is going to keep me a love slave till February." So much for new urban landscapes. Has he abandoned all resolve and returned to his dig at the Tropicunal? "No, I was staying in my apartment," he said. I've found another apartment now. What about "Blue Valentine"? "She went out one night without me and got in a fatal accident," he murmurs, "Luckily, no one was hurt." Instead, befitting his new line of work Walls rolls down the boulevards in the safe anonymity of a rented skyline Monte Carlo. As for Heart Attack and Vine, the songwriter did manage to shape up a few numbers while he was living in Manhattan. And he also took on the role of producers were still underway between his manager and Coppola, to record the LP at the RC4 studios on Ivar, with long-time producer Bones Howe. "Domona Lisa" didn't make it to his seventh album, but tracks like 'Ruby's Arms,' "Jersey Girl" and "Till the Mone Runs Away" are among his favorites. A Watsica original or the Petula Clark classic? "No. It's along drive from Petula Clark's," he grins, and then siting by the piano and planking the ivories absently, his eyes look up. "Actually, I've been thinking about putting out an album called My Favorites. And instead of my cover versions of those tunes, it would be nice to just write them down that I enjoy and in TV commercial voice you can enjoy the same ones that I enjoy, but you'll know that those specifically are the ones that I like." MALT LIQUOR UNDECIDED? VOTE BULL! Don’t follow the old “Beer Party” line. Be Independent — Make “The Bull” Your Party’s Choice. When it comes to campaign charisma, nobody draws crowds like "The Bull". Schlitz Malt Liquor vote-getter at camp This great change of all persuasions Remember, taste, but great! Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Xom Kionur services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR furls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the University of Pittsburgh, and many living special activities for students and their parents. Archie R. Dykes, Myers said. The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for *Parents' Day* Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheming organization." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. Hillel made another appeal to Del Shanker after he was made a acting chancellor. Kurt said "The situation is terribly fortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when you're trying to save an audience in advance. We just hope it won't happen as a result." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, cards to Grandpa, less new year's greeting cards, to Grandma. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 to tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held every day at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." A move was made to table the petition, but it was veted. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchietto, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark SHOW DAYS page 5 Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. See HOLIDAYS page 5 After the Senate makes a decision, the petition be submitted to the University Council, which approves the final decision. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingamara, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingamara said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate is considering whether to continue Kibu's membership in the statewide student lobby. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the camera, then the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. SOLBACH RECounted the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At 'A1 $25 a day' (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $10,250 for each convicted person and that badly reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you owe with violet offenders? Should a Class A felon be punished?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KA. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extenating circumstances and should choose between a probation or a life sentence, rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to 15 mph. The low tonight will be near 83. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunderstorms, with it will become most clearly clear at midafternoon, with a high near 82° O Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a salad with 'soup' in Saturday's season opener. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opener against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team" said KU head coach Don Fambrough. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 423 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambrough said. Definitely, you use a six-man front, center, and rear, as you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coersion in an armed attack in Jacksonville, Florida, who the Ducks are also one of five Fac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambridge said in summing up the reasons why he'd drawn them closer together. They have had that everybody is picking on them." George Brett More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. for the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback aloft still open. It is double-peak and ready. Kerrin Bell will get the starting nod. Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scribner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrigh said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." But as he said, no one else was defending it with hard last week. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. Royals George Brett One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon Ulinebacker Scellars Young, out of a sprained ankle, last season, but with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo with all servi... RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes ph 841-6642 ANAHEIM, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last fall. He was named the Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. Brett was hitting .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week By United Press International The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belted four home runs and three hit six against Larry Gura, 18-6, and Marty Pattin. It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Coble to announce manager Jim Pey as when Brett will run the game. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Willell Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Aesame came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. Lansford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to run the lead to 2-1. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy 841-4400 In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING Ampersand Buy now and $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmable 58C APPLYED SAMILISCHS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUY BEST WHO APPLIED SYNTHESIS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUS DECISION MODE TI Programmables lead in performance, quality at You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Progres These solid state library are preprogrammed to h problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And oth oriented courses. With up program steps in each m can save your own perse grammining for those class need it most. The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memoretic card read/write expa you record your own cus grams or those received fr Professional Program Exc September, 1980 BY BILL BRAUNSTEIN THE UNKNOWN COMIC Brown-Bagging It To Success M Now, some ten minutes later, the broken cup is getting the biggest laugh of the night — for Manchester. Looking at the plastic, she shrugs and tosses it over her shoulder. "Has Murray been drinking again?" The audience, a mob partial to Manchester, finally laughs at the come dan. Melissa Manchester had just finished her first song on opening night of a week-long engagement at the Diploma Hotel Cate's Catering in Hollywood, Fla. when she walked an empty room with her daughter. Langston, downstairs in his dressing room, is oblivious to the joke. In fact, he is drinking. He and his two niece back-up band, the Brown- It had been left by Manchester's opening act, the Unknown Comic, Murray Langston, a man who has taken a simple brown bag and filled it with a career. Before leaving the stage, Langton, his bizarre brand of comedy was too wild, too earthy and too intense for this triumph and tux crowd, had made one last attempt at a joke. Holding the glass high, he shattered it in his hand. Is it live? he chorted, satrilled Manchester's TV commercials, "or is it Memories?" Has he gotten more than a few tinters, Langton must have wondered the same thing about the crowd. After a start seven years ago on Laugh In, a regular stint on The Sonny and Cher In, both as comic actor Murray Langston, and 130 bagged appearances on the Gong Show, the Unknown Comic is on the verge of becoming known. The bag headed comedian has been of interest in the filmed pilot called Scared Sifff. about a bumble private detective. He is also close to doing a syndicated half-hour variety show that would star the Unknown Comic, with the bag. Baggers, are passing around bottles of Heineken. But they are celebrating more than just another opening night; the gig at the Diplomat is Langston's first appearance on the East Coast. all Langston's dressing room at the Diplomat is small but comfortable with one large mirror taking up an entire wall. A large black trunk, the kind you took to sleep away camp, sits on open the dresser, his name in bold letters painted on the front. Inside is an assortment of paper bags, large ones, small ones ("Cictures of me as a child"), some with faces drawn on, and some clothes. The two musicians sit on stools as Langston washes and takes off his sweat-drenched shirt. "There were a lot of logistical problems out there tonight," he says talking about Manchester's continuing stage. "And the road was wet." The comedian pulls a clean taut knit shirt over his head, looks in the mirror, rearranges his hair. He has a light, muscular build, a strong chin and a brown mustache that makes him resemble Sonny Bono. "Half the people seemed confused, not knowing whether to laugh or not. I imagine the older folks came in here, took one look at me and said, 'What the heck is that guy doing?' It's a question not easily answered. On stage, Langston is a hysterically funny bagged bundle of raw adrenaline, frantically moving from one side of the stage to another, arms giggling in all directions like eratic thunderbolts. On top of his head is a simple brown bag, two holes for one, one for a mouth. The pattern is a never ending, nonstop swirl of deliberately bad onesellers. M. JOHNSON "Good evening ladies and gentleman, this is my bag, you can take it or leave it. I just flew in from Los Angeles and got air sick. Trouble was, nobody noticed. . . Can you guess where I buy my cloth's Shoes Fifth Avenue. . . I used to wear a vacuum cleaner bag, but that sucked. And now for a song. 'He amt heavy, he's my baggie.' Much of the nation has. After his first appearance on *The gang* about three years ago, he found an almost phenomenal phenomenon with his He runs around the stage, bangs his head with the microphone, pour beer down his shirt, eat a napkin, and generally goes crazy, punctuating line with a shrill quick laugh, reminiscent of ventriloquist Paul Winston's dummy knucklebade. About halfway through the act, Langton removes the bag to perform as himself. His first words are meant as a joke, but more than the comedian's face is revealed. "I can't believe," he tells the audience, "but you bought all that box crap." The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has ITS Constant Memory $^{*}$ fea ragged buffoonery. Imitators galore popped up: an Unknown Disc Jockey, an Unknown Used Car Salesman, a University of Georgia student who ran for class president (and won) as the Unknown Candidate. In the dressing room, a musician asks Langston to autograph a poster for a friend. The poster is the Unknown Comic's ultimate bag joke. Striking a reclining pose in the nude, Langston wears two bags, one as usual covers his head, the other is positioned a bit more strategically. What makes the picture ludicrous is the bag's size; it looks like it could hold a salami. here you get. They are larger than largeots in the hotel restaurant eating breakfast, two pieces of whole wheat a loaf, and down large swallows of coffee, truly an unknown comic. When he tries to charge the meal to his room, the waitress asks him to prove he is a hotel guest. Two tables down, some other people recognize him and wave. Langson, 34, came to the United States 15 years ago from Canada and joined the service. The only thing close to stage experience was a radio show he had in the Navy. "Music Mural Musical," she wrote. "I called up Rowan and Martin's *laughed-in*, asked to speak to the producer and I wanted to be on the show. He asked me what I did, so I told him I could do it." rays Murray-Go-Round of Music. After a fouryear tour in the NAV board an aircraft carrier that stayed in Europe, Langston moved to Los Angeles where he eventually landed a job as a computer operator. After four years of punching cards, he was ready to expand his horizons. other Tt retailer for more information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. Slowly, though, Langton managed to find work as a comic actor, appearing regularly in skits at Redd Foxx's Club and as a regular on The *Sommy and Cher* Show. When the show was retired, Langton had been pocketing about As beautiful downown Burbank's greatest impressionist, he appeared four times on *Laugh in* during its last season in 1975, doing such套桌 as his fork, a grandfather clock and toothpaste. He was promptly fired from his computer program *From then on*, he remembers. I was a typical follylywood story. I didn't work for him. 114 ming for about a year and a half to open and manage his own los Angeles miublab. Showhz. "I was interesting for a while, and something I always wanted to do. Then when I realized I had to change the toilet paper and buy all the booze, I grew tired of it in a hurry." In 1977, nearly broke, he ditched the club, Enter the Unknown Comic. "I was in the actor's union and I knew if I could get on The Gong Show I could earn the $25 fee they are required to pay. My inspiration was simply money and embarrassment I needed the cash, but was not able to afford it," she said. "I found the simplest and cheapest disguise would be a rubber bag." Langston was what is called a "Curtain Closer," a person who did something utterly ridiculous or insulted host Chuck Barris right before the curtains were closed on him. When Barris asked to him be a semi-regular on the show that features irregulars no one was more surprised than Langston: "I never expected to be on more than once." He started taking the Unknown Comic act to different clubs around Los Angeles, which led to other jobs such as a character on The at the Saturday morning kiddies, and a syndicated variety/talk show called *Everyday*. Though he hasn't yet taken the bag off during his television appearances, he finds that in lengthier live performances he must "the肌球 is really just one joke stump out. After about 15 minutes it starts to get old, he says." Pim also I also start to suffocate. He rises from the coffee shop table and starts to walk. "Till tell you one thing that's really strange. I can go into a restaurant or sit down somewhere and hear people talking about the Unknown Comic. Once, I asked two girls what they thought of him and they said he was awful. Naturally I guess. Another time people were talking about him and I introduced myself and said I was the Unknown Comic. They said, 'Sure buddy.' I did not believe U.S. suggested retail for all Lil- tern libraries is $40, except Farming. $5, and Pool Water Analysis. $4. **"For use with Tl-59 only** *** Langston reacts to those situations the way you would expect; he laughs them off. Comedy is his bag and the bag is his comedy and as his alter ego might put it, sack ceeps is just around the corner. "Let's face it," he says, "right now people are coming to see the Unknown Comic and not Murray Langston, but that should change soon." Then, having given his prediction, Murray Langston walks up a flight of stairs, across the long hotel lobby and seems to disappear in the crowd. Bill Braunsheim is a Gainesville, Florida freelance writer who seeks fame and fortune to赚ugy any legal claim he desires to make. OFF THE WALL Treas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. FIVE JOBS of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 1O-6 M-Sat.closed Sun. INCORPORATED 45732 The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 850-640 Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 65. September,1980 In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by Amnersand MP3L 1022 THE BEATLES "Abbey Road" 1. COME TOGETHER 478 2. SOME THINGS 529 3. I WAS LOVED BY YOU 560 2. MARWELL'S SILVER HARMONIE 224 3. ON DANCING 726 4. FRENCH BOYS 830 5. JACKSON & CO. 940 3. 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You'll find Original Master Recordings $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ (including our 6 latest releases) now at selected audio and record stores. FREE catalog. Write to Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, P.O. Box 919, Chatsworth, California 91311 ORIGINAL MASTER RECORDINGS. mobile fidelity sound lab Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipour services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPUR falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as Parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against and many living groups will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Archie R. Dvkes. Mvers said. The final decision came from the chancellor's office however, and the date for Parents' Day was moved. Hiliel made another appeal to Del Shankel after he was named acting chancellor. Kort said. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling error." Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community which appeared in the Kansas City Citizen. AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. "The situation is terribly fortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about," Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when you're in an emergency department or in advance. We just have it won't happen again." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tisrih, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sunday services, she said. Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, which are or less new year's greeting cards for friends. Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 to tonight in the Froom Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held Monday afternoon at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark See HOLIDAYS page 5 keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. A move was made to table the petition, but it was veted. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchiotto, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council, which will decide. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingamman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingamman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue the senate membership in the statewide student lobby movement. stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. ncing system "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the glover, the dripping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $12 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state pentenitary) the state throne threw $18,250 in the jail and $900 in bably reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you do with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon do it?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAA. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extenuating circumstances, and that he suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each innate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. *Determine (presumptive) sentencing does in the talic into the sentence* surrounding its conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PEAKSANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be strong north at 8 to 15 mph. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers in fairly morning. It will become more clearly afternoon, with a high near 84. 6 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a victorious "duck soup" in Saturday's The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opener against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team" said KU head coach Don Fambrough. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they's a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards of the I-Formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambridge said. "Infinitely, we use a six-man front, and you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Wilson Robertson on charges of sodomy and coercion in 2015. For two years ago, the Ducks are one of five Pac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Farnham said in summing up the situation. He had drawn them closer together. They had told that everybody is picking on them." For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is doubtful that he'll reach Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. KC Royals Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scriner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." He said he was ready for defense was hitting hard last week." One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon. Linebacker Seallers Young, a veteran from Iowa, is season, is out with a sprained ankle. George Brett This coupon entitles you to a *free* blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all servi- RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes ANAHEM, Calif. —Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a double run and drove in three runs last month for the KC Rangers. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. Brett was hitting, .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials ph 841-6642 Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques By United Press International It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Frey as when Brett will return to the lineup. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belted four their second and three thirds, four their attack against Larry Gurka, 18, and Marty Pattin. Lanford's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wille Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Acek came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. 41-100 In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a TI-58C TI Programmable 58C September, 1980 APPLIED SUBCITIES MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUS BEFORE MU TI Programmables lead in performance, quality at You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Prog These solid state library are preprogrammed to he problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And oth oriented courses. With up program steps in each mc can save your own pers grammning for those class need it most. The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memoretic card read/write capita you record your own cus grams or those received fr Professional Program F Blondie LESTER BANGS Simon & Schuster. $6.95 If zombie movies (George Rumers' anyway) can criticize consumer society and comic strips (such as Richard Applegate's *Asphalt*), its only right is that a rock-group fan book can be a meditation on the health of Western culture—such as Lester Bing's *Blonde*. This is not to say that Bing's tense character is not hard to grappify bits that go with the genre. It still lets us know Debbie Harry has such visible dark roots—not through incompetence, certainly—and how much she likes to buy. Harley debits jeans commercials, looking good deal less mock trasky than her wont. There is the uneliminable abundant supply of photographs of the 1950s, with its stylishing degrees of sloveniness and sophistication, or at both once. What's unexpected in all this is Bans' lingerie ples for a return to unaltered displays of 'passion' in music and in art in general; tranny, self-mutilating attire are too much with its these days. Diffused throughout our culture they tend to neutralize any urge to embitter a cry out of the depths unless it is quickly broken by a wristwear. Were you aware of an art that is emotionally neutral? Naomi Lindstrom I most admist I wasn't over by Bung's particular argument on this occasion, have I a liking (a passion? for self-conscious, playfully ironic art and no fiercelyelled opinions concerning Blondie. What attracts me are the subject matter of my writing right out of the biggest garage wavers of mass culture and turn it into a vehicle of cultural criticism. The revitalization of the more stagnant bits of slob culture may be an unreachable Utopia, but Bung is making a good case for it. The rock can biography that passion might he infuse into that unread classic of mass-distributed writing, the Undergraduate Catalogue? The 1980 U.S Census Form? To the overextracible mind Blondie suggests a kind of formal and formulaic forms of writing somehow leave room for intrusions of wit and wildness. IN PRINT A biography of the Door's Jim Morris should make a fascinating book because the charismatic, kind and intelligent such seemingly rich possibilities. But Hopkins and Sugerman provide a sleek, superficial study that merely reinforces the myths surrounding light on the man behind them. No One Here Gets surprising facts about the band's rise to stardom and the startling revelation that Morrison could be an both insistent lout and a real regular Joe. Now how the hell could he fit boxer shorts beneath skin-tight leatherers without looking like a food, or hope to dramatically strip the pants of without taking the shirts with them or wringing around like an idiot for two minutes? Can you even conceive of Jim wearing long sleeve wearing tight Gimme! Gimme! The lour wins out by about a 3-01 margin, presumably the willingness to acknowledge Morrison's unflattering objectivity and his objective, given their close personal ties to the man Hopkins — who interviewed Morrison several times during his career by Blys Presley after Morrison suggested it, Sugerman is the real-life Danny Sulli van, the 13-year-old book in the book series by its fans from fan to confidant. JERRY HOPKINS & DANIEL SUGERMAN Warner Books, $7.95 The writing, occasional lyrical analysis and attempts to place the band in a larger social context will hardly ask Hopkins-Sugman reach conclusions that strain the bounds of credulity. To wit—at the 1969 Miami concert that brought Morrison purportedly wore baggie boxer shorts under his leather stage pants in order to perpetrate a living theater-inspired challenge of public A chronological collection of accession heavy on the sex, drugs and outrageous behavior, No One Details montour *Morrison* or years some, unseen Out Alive Don Snowden Bob Dylan: His PAUL CABLE Schirmer Books, $5.95 Unreleased Recordings Any rock historian, or anyone who just likes to know where everything will, will appreciate this combo of works. It's a collection of Bob Dylan music ever put—unofficially — on tape. While Cable mentions other similar studies, like Grell Marcus' length article in *Bullring* (2016) that discusses his own research's extensive. The book is arranged in chronological order, cross-indexed. It's easy to find the information we want, and except for one obvious omission — not telling us how to purchase these illegal books, I was told about Dylan's music life than most of us wanted to know. Cable has even included song fragments The major drawback inherent in this kind of study is that we have to take the writer's word for the quality of theREE movie. It was one of the most frustrating aspects of film criticism, when some writer would dig up an esejane Jean Renoir film and label it a masterpiece or argue? Who else had ever seen it? snatched from old radio shows or all night jam sessions in friends' cellars Boy Dylan, His Unreleased Recordings is a valuable guide to knowing what the man has written, even when he didn't. The book only with Cable had the lyrice to these unofficial songs, but perhaps that would have taken several volumes. Professional Program E-Learning. The TI-581C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has TI's Constant Memory™ fea- Iazz Lives Jacoba Atlas MICHAEL ULLMAN New Republic $9.95 The basic format is that of the autobiographic interview with facial information and interpretation from a subject. The interview is traditionalist like Tommy Flanagan or a modernist like Braxen Flanagan a broad and diverse career is well known in the field of Brastian's complex and oblique music is made accessible to the layman. the piece on Semy Rollis is masterful in playing the chordes and sharing a sense of perfunctory and uninspired Ulke Winnie Baller's *New York collections*, Ullman 'Jazz Lives' doesn't rely on seductive prose descriptions. Objective in dealing with musical genres, Ullman's ecstatic tastes make for an interesting swet of musicians Jove Venit, Dizzy Gillespie, Sam Cooke, Neil Harbison, Neal Heflin, Ralsaan Kirk, Marian McPartland, Anthony Braston and others. One of the books chief assets is the fleshing out of lesser-known (but important) musicians like Doco Cheatam, Raymond and McMinty, as well as the profiles of nonmusicians. Fewazzard artists, who have successfully abolished the world's infamous cabaret card law, making it possible for many musicians to earn a living. Record producers Steve Backer (Aaron) and John Renshaw of *House* offer widely differing views on the duoc in jazzy. There are a few misspellings or names and titles and some misinformed formulas, but on the whole Ullman has written an disingruement of 21 essays that accurately reflects the current state of the current science. *Writing Silk Films* Kirk Silsbee Wonders KAREN SNOW Pengui paperback $6.95, Viking hardcover $11.95 Poetry can be a better story-teller than prose; its author can build scenes and characters out of particles, punctuation and the rhythmic clank of sounds. But we need to block blocks of paragraphs stacked into serial rows of columns; the reader's view of processes, essential population and events is thus made quicker, brighter and more interesting because accelerates — but somehow, tragically without a concurrent blurring of detail. Clumps of words shape into heraldic devices, as it were; speaking volcans of wind, a city at night or the irregular spaces at the ends of lines can be made to go on forever. Snow's Wonders is, in this manner, an astonishingly rich anthology of (figuratively) novellas and short stories. (The work, incidentally, won the prize for best new work at the Academy of American Poets.) Show's narrative gift is great; her evocations of childhood, girlhood, her snarl of later life, are smoldering with atmosphere, full of burning but hopeful fire. The second novel is Wilso (short for Wilhelmina), who very likely short for someone who will not break, and maybe also for the Shakespearean symbol of love turned into hate. Wilso's poem "dainty blonde/ with lullaby-voice and rock a boy' walk" The subject is also Wilso's nightmare Dutche uncle of a mother, her skirtish prows around the edges of water, her eyes filled with tears, water; her life with family and all too vivid ghosts of family. Snow jumps into her subjects fearlessly, wades through them without tall boats we are suddenly *m* that Model T, *t* that living room. Here elegance and intensity of language in some places exceeds the usual beauty of Dr. of poems, her诗歌, lagged domestic homes recall the best of Grace Palee. Snow has written another work about Wilo, a novel bearing her name, however good it might be, it is difficult to imagine that it could add much value to the Wilo's tale told by these poems. Colman Andrews Ah, Men BURT AVEDON, A&W, $10 95 DARRYL PONICSAN, Delacorte, $9.95 An Unmarried Man T that men (and women, too, noai) are products of their environment is a fact she all know by now, but Burt Aedwon's *d. Mor.* goes into pedantic detail on the subject, using a few of the tools he rather not群招, including Ashes Montagu, Helen Gurley Brown, Sterling Hayden, Gore Vidal, Michael Korda, George Plimpton, et al., in this day, humiless tone. There are chapers on Growing up and the quotes read from the noble (Plimpton Twent to English school in New York where we were taught that the good life was not simply a question of winning, but rather of doing the best you can—and to learn to have it run and thrive." (to the ludicrously Korda Un LA One man's attitude is explored in Pontius's novel *An Unmarried Man* Ben Pleasants, a woodsman who has a smiden of fame due to his profile in the newspaper. He wants to really fall in love at least once before he dies. So he moves on to spouse and daughter, 8, and sure enough, Lupe, the woman he's been with, leaves. The man returns to the apartment over his new abode. This infuriates his ex wife, who then demands almost everything they own, down to his last unworked phone. He copies of his phalarope before he surrenders it to her. The book's few strengths (the father daughter conversations are well handled, the scenes with the diaries are drawn to him) are mined by the seemingly endless harage of cliched dialogue and borrily explicit sexuality with none of the grit of Pontius's earlier work like *Clover* in the late Detail. In the end, *Unmarried Man* is tressured, worse, unimportant. That is the nature of the Human Animal, right I mean your own father, if he could find a way of cheating you in business, probably would. That's the way that Mr. Allen would be that! Dull as it is, *Mr. Men* is especially informative, especially in the area of men attitudes toward relationship ships. Zan Stewart BOID DIS AGIN. ENG 2016 Proof Fusion ANNUER, SEMESTER OF LECTURES, TESTS, PAPERS, AND BOOK REPORTS... 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KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 850-640 --- Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. September,1980 When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 65. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by Ampersand A CAR IS NO PLACE FOR MOST CAR STEREOS. In a showroom, any car stereo sounds good. But, as you probably know, cars move And for most car stereos, that spells trouble. The engineers at Craig carefully balanced the sensitivity, RF intermodulation. Buildings. Mountains. Bridges. Tunnels. Telephone wires. There's danger lurking everywhere and your music suffers the consequences. A whole chorus of fuzzz, fading and overlapping stations. 43 1987 Well, you don't have When you drive through this kind of jungle, you need a Craig Road-Rated Receiver. to take it anymore. Now there's a car stereo built for the hazards of the road. Not just the comforts of a showroom. alternate channel rejection and capture ratio. Which means the Road-Rated Receiver sifts through the clutter, so what you hear is music to your ears. It's called the Road-Rated Receiver. It's built by Craig.And it was made to move. To give your ears another treat, add a pair of Craig speakers. They're incredibly accurate. And combined with a Road-Rated Receiver, you'll have clear, clean sound on almost any road you drive. That's not something you hear every day. CRAIG ROAD-RATED RECEIVERS FCHEERAV CRAIG R3 ST CO2 CRAIG FM 80 90 94 96 100 104 108 ST 130 160 FADER Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kinnur services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPUR fails this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as Parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the Browns and many living groups will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for Parens' Day was February 15. Archie R. Dykes, Myers said. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling system." Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. Hillel made another appeal to Del Shakel after he was named acting chancellor. Kurt said AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish. Kort said. "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when you're in business, and it has to advance. We hope it won't happen again." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tisheri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. signing on October The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, which are more or less new year's greeting cards. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. Hillel is sponsoring a Rooh Hashanah service at 7:30 tonight in the Room Forum of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held every day at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark See HOLIDAYS page 5 keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." 王文亮 2019年1月15日 2019年1月16日 A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Machiotti, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council, which has the jurisdiction (the Uniprogram). Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingamman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingamman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue KKU membership in the statewide student lobby committee. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." SOLBACH RECONTENDED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the evidence of the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. "This person had no previous convictions." Sobach said. "At $2 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 to that person, and $250 to bably reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you use with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon receive punishment?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAa. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing a crime, so he suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each innate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to 10. The low tonight will be near 32. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers or early morning. It will be most clearly on Saturday afternoon, with a high near 85. --- 4 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it wipes to stir into a salad and cooks 'boup' in Saturday's oven opener. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Riders classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opener against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "they're a good team" said KU head coach Don Fambrough. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 424 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "The they a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Bambrough said. "Definitely, they use a six-man front, or the team you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coarserion in 2013, two years ago, the Ducks are also one of five Fac-10 teams ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambrough said in summing Oregon's woes. "It has drawn them closer, and that's what makes everybody is picked on them." More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is double that, and the Mavens Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. Royals George Brett Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kallmyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scribner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrigh said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." Mr. Fambrigh said that the defense was hung hard last week. One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in the team's first Sealers Young, who led KU in tackles last season, is out with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all servic RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. NAHEIM, Calif. —Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last season. Angelis Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. Brett was hitting .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. ph 841-6642 The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week By United Press International Boyds Coin & Antiques BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture 841-4408 Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belts four home runs and attacks against Larry Gura, 18, and Marty Pattin. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wilson Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. Willem Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Aase came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Freay as to when Brett will return to the lineup. Gura surrendered a two-homer run to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lamport's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royal's magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore THE ISLAND IS COMING Buy now an $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a T1-58C TI Programmable 58C APPLYER: STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUILT ELEKTRONIC APPLIED STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BIO DEC M The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memoretic card read/write capaic you record your own cus grams or those received f (Professional Program Ex TI Programmables lead in performance, quality a You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Progri These solid state library are preprogrammed to h problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And oth oriented courses. With up program steps in each me can save your own pers grammming for those class need it most. THE ROLLING STONES Emotional Rescue (Rolling Stones) Whether one views the Stones as the reigning defenders of rock & roll incarnate or as faded women who have been coated on past mistakes, some Girls proved there were still some excellent songs and killer rallies in the Stones bones. But only a hopelessly dhard "The Rock" album would fail to recognize that Emotional Rescue falls far short of that standard. The Stones have favored a no-frills, ramshackle sound recently — one that is infinitely preferable to the sort of 50 take sterility popular these days — but the songs here sound skiffy, unfinished and, most crucially, unfinished. The music is an problem in the facad, lackluster work of Richards and Wood. The material ranges from typical Stones rocking fare through disco, reggae and jazz excursions that allow jager to slip into several of his vocal persona to sing in the band's alchemy — it sounds like the voice of Cheech and Chong's 'Basketball Jones' — for the title track in the Jack Nastiegs' Indian Girl he sounds a bellava lot like Willy DeLorean -- despite an excerpt of Spanish Harlem (transplanted to Laredo in this instance) street travelogue. Let Me Go' effectively creates an aura of underestimated men but the tump guitar lead leaves it a bit too harsh. A string instrument is a rocker stones in the grand tradition that sports jugger's best vocal on the album but simply doesn't go anywhere 'Summer Romance' per se. The sound of the music problems — we can hear Graham Parker's 'Soul Shoes', Nick Lowes 'Heart of the City' and the Stones own 'Respectable' in the riff but the song doesn't come close to matching any of them. Emotional Rescue sounds like a collection of faster track filters and outtakes rather than the question of two years labor. It raises the question of what happens to bones in areas producing loud music without a direct challenge. Don Snowden september, 1980 JACKSON BROWNE Hold Out (Asymtum) Here it comes — another, Statement on Our Times by Jackson Browne, the voice of modern America that he grew up in. But someone but someone has to look at this artist's work with less than half the reverence Certainly Browne himself is not willing Browne has long been touted as the crème de la creme of contemporary songwriters, but his talents may have be considerably exaggerated. True to his prestigious and shown him to be concise and craftsmanship like a composer — but they also reveal that he is adept at an unmarkable approach and an unremarkable melodic sense. "Rock Me on the Water," "Fountain of Sorrow," "The Preender" and so many of Browne's other songs are top-heavy with their own impor rance, offering social and religious in sights that are intended to be grandiose but now rather ordinary. Barry Alfonso *Hold Out* is little better or worse in this regard than previous Browne at bums. Again he offers sigatures of everyday alienation and attention. Give up your heart and you find yourself/Living for something in somebody else, he intones in *Hold On Hold* on people watch the time go by/They do everything but live in mundane Disco Apocalypse. Such pearls of mundane wisdom wouldn’t be objectionable except for the stiff solemnity of Browne’s singing and production. These observations are set to the same trite folk chord progressions Browne has been writing for years. Supposedly tough-sounding rockers like Toad and who what whom such as *Hold Out* can incubate and a bit numbing. The LPs arrangements deserve a little more praise than its material. Considering the session men involved in the album (David Lindley, Bill Payne, Craig Doveger and A.L. Mellow Maloff), it is not surprising that *Hold Out* is smooth and restrained in sound, with plenty of depth and moody organ work here and there to add dramatic color to otherwise underlined songs. Richard Levinson (Richard sentence, long-time Ampen contributor) a freelance writer best known for his composition "Let's go to school" and "Superficial. Make that four copies." Some artists challenge their audien- ces with new musical approaches and freshly ideal ideas. On Hold Out, Jackson Browne tells his fans what he's been saying about the music. Before playing it thoroughly safe in the name of sincerity. O $ ^{N} $ D $ ^{I S C} $ SMOKEY & THE BANDIT-II Soundtrack (MCA) Enough's already been said that John Haiti attends the Elvis Costello-angry young man sance. The comparisons of Haiti to Costello on Slag Lina, his debit, went especially well with the movie. Young (note the bald spot) and not all that angry either; he just likes to mouth off a bit. (*MCA Records*) Man, what an album! Not only do you get line performances from the likes of Bill Don Williams, Tanya McKay and many others, there a special treat as well. Burk Reynolds, in his album singing deburwatches an enchanting little dint entailed. Let's Do Something Cheap and make two copies that three copies JOHN HIATT Two Bit Monsters Unfortunately, Hats will follow up, two *Bit Monsters*, won't be the band to extinguish those lame comparisons. Hats's forte is b妖, a wise and wit aced. The music of both sets looks identical. Both men strive for maximum mileage out of a well-structured phrase. Hiat hits the mark exception ally well on Two Bit Monsters "Trace the Nation is his agitated discourse on the news program of the same name, now two times more visually lively; ten times more of excuses. Not talk non-lim, not only chatter! Little chipmunk words don't get away," said Dylan Pink Bedroom. His hirte of惊喜 "Sharon's Got a Drugstore" from *Stug Tine*, but "Bedroom is badly weakened by a hokey, back-and-forth character." World features a promising music intro which promptly bounders at the first vocal utterance and then an awkward one that flawed on *Stug Tine*. Various numbers exhibit some interesting influences, particularly the organ riffs and rock steady beat of "Tspy (for the FBI)" which unexpectedly echoes the Mount sound (at least it is Motown as anyone has gotten on MCA) Hiatts's record and chance but the company should be glad that they did John Hattis is proving to be a tenuous original and special talent. oers and the slower paced 'Back to the War,' a wonderful exercise in which Haiti creates warfare analogies to a bitter personal relationship But Hatt is usually right on top of things. The arrangements are fully developed and, for the most part, equal the energy and bite of the vocal performance. Occasionally reminiscent of songster Dag Hamilton, Hatt possesses an unusual nasal whammy but is well-suited to the urgency of his raw, emotional visions. Hatt achieves strong impact with musical subtilies on New *Num* Vicki Arkoff BOB MARLEY & THE WAILERS Uprising *(Island)* it is always difficult for an artist — whether in music or cinema — to succeed. Although Bob Martin and the Walters last release *surri* O$^N$T$^{OUR}$ Jonathan Richman THE ROXY, LOS ANGELES Rock and roll has many self-proclaimed singers, but Jonathan Richman may be its one bona fide saint. The ex leader of the Modern Lovers qualities for the title in the music industry are his sweet and pure, his innocence so extreme as to be otherworldly. The main obstacle to his canonization is the off beat way he expresses his love for rock and roll, a population by Martian bakers, talking airplanes, fatherly mosquitos and other fabulous characters who act out his ideas on life and love. Alternately whimical, heart-ringging and just plain fun, these ambitious situations have so far proven useful for mass acceptance. Eleshwing most of his earlier punkish material (except for the now classic " Roadrunner" ), Richman rapidly ran through the best of his recent songs. Such are " Bloody Heads," " Braillechains," " Ice Cream Man," and " I a Little Dinosaur" were served with froth some rockyblade flavor, accentuated by Richman's rhythmic hand clips and a few fins on the back. Brand new tunes were included in the sets, most notably " Stop This Car, I'm Getting Out," a saddly account of the evils of smoking dope while driving. The audience laughed along due to the elusive moments, intertwined with Richman's tumultuous serious An example of the latter was 'Affection', a personal confession on the subject that Richman recited with a life and death earnestness. "People all over the world are starving for all kinds of food," he sob in his voice, and the pathos of the lyric came through powerfully. Like a rock and roll Charlie Rich, Pinch If Richman was at times excessively cute this Maurece Cherlain invitation during "Morning of Our Lives" was a reminder of how radiant he fun biased he made one will love to forgive him anything. Richman is at once utterly professional and winningly charming, with a sense of usering and posting, a little saintiness is most appreciated. man stood before the crowd as a forlorn wail pleading for love, blending the comic and the tragic maserfully Barry Alfonso Besides his own compositions, Richman performed an assortment of cover tunes, recasting each as a gentle dance tune. Sam Cooke's "shake provided him with writing and awkward but appealing fruit." A Latin-singer guitar interlude segued into a spirited if somewhat incoherent "la Bambia" given the songwriter's subject was subjected to Richman's decidedly personal interpretation. Todd Rundgren's Utopia & Ambrosia MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION, COLUMBIA, MARYLAND "Coming in from the Cold" is another depiction of the struggle against the system. Marley's said it many times before, and a lot better "Real Situation," on the Christian basis. The man famous for standing up for your rights here says the only solution to its deprivation "Ant么no one, no canse was probably too polished by regime standards. Marley's lyrical commitment and intensity were quite common in the world of political situation at the time Ambrosia kicked off this hot night in the big tent with a charming curiosity "Nice, Nice, Very Nice, very Nice," to the poem with many a wist and turn of dynamics. Neither their snappiest rocker nor their most recognizable ballad, it signalled that the band was performing four album career, and not just their overplayed Top 40 soundlike successes. Believe it or not, they can rock with the best, even when burdened with an immense green heat and no opportunity for a sound check. The initially indifferent audience of Todd Rundgren fans It is now 1980. The world is still a political internexbox. We would seem logical that Marley would follow up last year's critical success with more of the same *prising* does have the same smooth flowing reggae, again almost too polished for comfort, but Marley displays more power and confidence as he decides a decidedly mixed bag - a number of highs, but also a couple of lows. The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has ITS Constant Memory"fea VIRGIN COLLEGE Jonathan Richman came in from the ice cream stand and frisbee on the tree to listen, found the intelligence and variety of Ambrosia's sound to be qualities they like in Todd's material, and stayed for an earful. Utopia had its ups and downs this evening. They opened with "Road to Utopia" and the power failed twice in the first thirty seconds. The monitors were blacked out, and the squad never worked to his satisfaction, and he spent perhaps a third of every song talking to his techie about that. He also relied on a portability suit, which allows his shoulders for most of the evening, which allowed the audience to see that he wan't actually playing much of anything. On the louder numbers they sang from the keyboard dazzee to countersaint Tout heavy-metal guitar. time around, however, Utopia brought along some home movies, the first product out of Ludd's recent work with video. Shown on a backdrop behind the hilarious video, Willow Wilcox, the images ranged from an abstract for a Roger Pewlson to a very literal interpretation of "You Make Me Crazy" featuring Wilcox as the love on the brink. In concert other T1 retainer for more information, and let him help you select the T1 Programmable and free software that's right for you. !U.S. suggested retail for all Ll- braries is $40, except Farming., $45, except Clothing, and $45. *US suggested retail price. *For use with TU-59 only Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. of Innovation TEXAS INSTRUMENTS $ \textcircled{1} $ 1960 Texas Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED 45732 for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat.closed Sun. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650-640 Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient votine assembly. September, 1980 When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." 1478 3 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, proposed in 1986, amended the number of opposed cases from 60 to 68. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by people in the same community. them now, he exclaims; his helplessness contrasts the infectious, hypnotic beat. It's a strange feeling, dancing to one's own demise. "We and Dem" is another cynica thought—he can't imagine how "we and dem a go work it out" Thanks impure considerably on the flip side. Malley rears familiar Tamaratarian to Zion then, from ceaseless life in "Pimp's Paradise." The latter song is a killer sweet, an irresistible melody highlighted by the lifting of her guitar and the life-styl The price of resistance is 'Redemption Song, where Marley transforms into Sixteen Dylan. Using only an acoustic guitar with his raw passionate vocal delivery, Marley demands "Emmerdale" as the name but also ourselves free our minds. Such songs are above mere politicking The challenge is timeless Although *Upsprising* may not have the raw, aggressive musical feeling of the classic Walter efforts, Bob Maloney once again prows the process he won't mellow with his. His convictions continue to ring true. Jeff Silberman MAX ROACH Freedom Now Suite BETTY CARTER Social Call (*Columbia*) Columbia's Contemporary Masters series, an annual event, isues unavailable classic performances and previously unissued material of genuine merit. These two releases amplify the best of a great new batch. Social Call a rite of passage of Curtis's life as a leader from 1955 and a lifelong member of the Quinn Jones year later. Quinn Jones arranged the first and material the most ballast on his phone calls. these flicks are a welcome change of pace, but its difficulty to believe that we all expected to pay money for it is down the road. At least Todd and his Utopia will have those few experiences to paint their visuals. Jobn Kront Gidon Kremer MANN MUSIC CENTER, PHILA A few years ago, one of the worst disasters imaginable belfell the Latvian born violinist Gidon Kremer. a great musician (Herbert von Karan) declared publicly that Kremer was the world's greatest violist. As if it weren't bad enough being a musician (1970), Kremer had to put up with the pressure of living up to that remark. His appearance with the Philadelphi orchestra in its outdoor summer series was a case in point. Long hours on stage, he dressed in a white overcoat, the tall, lean 35-year-old Kremer looked more like one of the street musicians who pathlandhe in the center city district of Philadelphia. Moreover, he took a work that auditions, and summer audiences in particular, seldom listen to carefully — they always turn to him and made everyone sit up and take notice. Though most music lovers know this well-worn concerto by heart, Kremer refused to take a single moment to appreciate a painstakingly shaped, even accent observed, every sudden contrast in speed and dynamics emphasized, even exaggerated, revealing the rhapsody. A s strange choice for an encore: a Grave and Toccata by one Bazkauskas, a contemporary Lithuanian. The Sol Louis Siegel younger members of the audience are it up. The older ones wondered what was taking Kremer so long to return. Clifton Chenier & His Red Hot Louisiana Band VERBUM DEI HIGH SCHOOL CAFETERIA, LOS ANGELES A night with Clifton Chenier and his band turned out to be the most fun I've ever had fully closed and an public Four straight hours the band performed himself — recently out of the hospital from serious medical business — in charge for the latter three. Chenier proclaimed himself. King of the Academy, a velvet crown and proved by playing the rhythm and blues devil out of his instrument. He was flanked by a band of ten members soundly well in a Freddie King inspired style, plus a more stone color guitarist, two saxophonists, a vigorous drummer, a bass man and, of course, a metal washboard. Zydeco, Chenier's musical style, sounds initially like rhythm and blues, mostly New Orleans with a pinch of primitive Chicago. Some of the lyrics are sometimes loose, sometimes they lay in one foghorn like riff through an entire song. But the real musical underlay is Cajun, a musical cross from Louisiana driven from Nova Scotia by the British and Africans brought to rural Louisiana by slavery. Which explains both Zydeco's compelling rhythmic patterns and the fact that several of the numbers are songs in Cajun French. more adventurous and points to the mature Carter that we know oudy) she stretches and ripples the vowels like a fiddle. She stands around in the dark, warm lower regulators and shoot up to the clear higher ones, spending as little time as posing. The second date is backed by Gigi Grice's big band and the setting brings out the hornlike phrasing at the root of her work. The instrument she material even back then, though not as radically, to fit her bellow learnings. *Treness* is turned into an exquisite tone with its completely reworked yet still retains a seductive quality As Cater is presentment today in her style of jazz singing. It also serves as the element of an often poorly recorded legend. The Reach album, a legion in its own right. Unavailable in the country, it has sold more than 10 million. State pioneered black political statements in jazz and explored African literature. Byron Laursen Ablieve Lincoln sang with her greatest purpose and clarity on these dates. Her birthed rendition of *Driva Man*, portraying a white overseer, is hosted in contemp Coleman Hawkins takes the tour sinu that composes Lincoln's song Booch must have taken special delight at the funeral of the composer in a setting of young tulips like trumpet. Booker Little and trombonist Julian Priesier "Tears for Johannesburg" presages Roach's later work with percussion ensembles. Odd time signatures are overused, but the band's music has摇 Ram Mandala's hand drums and the African Olatunju's congas. Roach's compositions go right to the heart of jazzy African heritage; this music is contemporary now as it was 20 years ago. *(Warner Brothers) Troublemakers is the latest entry in the Brothers Warner annual line of low-priced sampler JIS models. It features a model house on punch/wire per formers and their early Seventies antecedents and it is a typically uneven collection of bona idee images, collection photos and the old product passing hose. TROUBLE MAKERS Various Artists The LP can be obtained by sending $3 to Troublemakers, Box 6868, Bur bank, California, 91510. The sublime tracks come courtesy of Public Image (including their classic, previously unreleased in America, debut single "Public Image 2"), two funk dissections of cultural contours and a new exploration of part selections from the new, hard bartain Mariane Faithful Collections include a pair of live cuts from the Sex Pistols. San Francisco swansong (distinguished chiefly by John Rotten/Adolphson a long-time player with the whole band) and DEO digs LP era), John Cale and Jonathan Richman, and the Modern Lovers. Corporate product plugging accouns for the presence of such medica bands as the Urban Yeths Pearl Harbor and Robin Lane, all of which demonstrate the derivative and well utile tame comparison to their earlier counterparts. Don Snowden THIRSTY EAR Presents LIVE RADIO CONCERTS Bi-Weekly Programs Starting WEEK OF SEPTEMBER 8th MUSE SPECIAL featuring: Words and Music of Jackson Browne Graham Nash Bonnie Raitt John Hall and others!!! Gary Numan RECORDED IN LONDON, ENGLAND! THIRSTY EAR ON YOUR LOCAL FM RADIO STATION --keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." SPONSORED DANNON BY YOGURT IS PRODUCED BY THIRSTY EAR PRODUCTIONS 43 ROUTE 6 PINE BROOK JN. N7.0758 (201) 575-7820 In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also am as distressed as you are. I have been indeed recommended that Parent Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. Archie R, Dykes, Myers said. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services. Hilile made another appeal to Del Shakel after he was named acting chancellor, Kort said. The final decision came from the chancellor's day, the date for his Parents' day was not moved in a week. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the North Carolina and many living groups will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish, Kort said. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend "The situation is terribly fortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about," she said. "I don't want you schedule games seven or eight years in advance. We just hope it won't happen again." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, which are more or less new year's greeting cards. Hillel is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 to tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held Friday night only at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark SEHOLDAYS page 5 A move was made to table the petition, but it was veted. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Machietti, graduate student senator, called for a ourrum. Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition be submitted to the University Council, which will review it. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingamman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingamman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political issues and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue KJ membership in the statewide student lobby group. ncing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the fact that he dropped, glanced eyes that pleaded with them. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." SOLBACH RECONTENED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $2 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 for each inmate convicted of bribery and badly reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you do with violent offenders?" Should a Class A felon be prosecuted? Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAEL. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing incarcerated prisoners by suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KAA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. *Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstance that the defendant was guilty.* See COMMITTEE page 5 Weather PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be north at 18 to 15 mph. The low tonight will be near 36. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers and light rain that will become mostly clear by late afternoon, with a high after 25. University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Jayhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a soup of 'back cook' in Saturday's season organizer. The Jayhawk, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team" said KU head coach Don Fambridge. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they're a well-coached team." Oregon, beaten by 15th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lo; more and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambrough said. "Defensively, they use a six-man front, you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coercion in an incident where he assaulted a coach. The duck are also one of five Fac-106 ineligible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambrough said in summing up the situation. "They've been closer together. They have a feeling that everybody is picking on them." For the 'Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the tailback slot still open. It is doubtful that Kerrin Kerwin. Kerwin Bell will get the starting nod. Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scriner fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last year, will be counting on youth. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. Royals "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." The team's offense and its defense was hitting hard last week." George Brett One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon. Linebacker Scellars Young, who led KU in tackles last season, is out with a sprained ankle. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo with all servi... RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week ph 841-6642 By United Press International The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. ANAHEM, Calif.—Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and drove in three runs last season. Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. Brett was hitting .396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. releges batting team officials The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 14th and Massachusetts It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Frey as to when Brett will return to the lineup. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belted four their shots and three their fourths in the battle against Larry Gura, 18-4, and Marty Pattin. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otca came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lanstard's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wille Wilson in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run-single. Willie Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Ase came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royals' magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore September,1980 Amnersand THE ISLAND IS COMING APPLYED STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS MUSEUM TI Programmables lead in performance, quality at You don't have to know program to get all the available with a TI Progres These solid state library are preprogrammed to h problems in: Engineerinness. Finance. And oth oriented courses. With up program steps in each me can save your own perse grannning for those class need it most. Buy now an $40 or more value 1 FREE module with purchase of a T1-58C T1 Programmable 58C APPLICATED STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE The TI-59 has up to 960 steps or up to 100 memoretic card read/write capita you record your own cus grams or those received in *Professional Program Ex* O $ ^{N} $ SCREEN No Nukes surring Jackson Brownie, Crispy, Sills and Nash, the Double Bobees, John Hall, Grahm Naah, Bonnie Raiti, Grant Scott Heron, Carly Bruce. Springtime James, Taylor Jesse Colin Young, by Julian Schlossberg,丹妮 Goldberg and Anthony Potenza. a solar energy can be made to work as well as this film does, the future looks terrific. First, as propaganda, *No Nukes* is the film record of New York's 1979 concerns to benefit anti-nuclear power organizations — is terribly clever. It makes America seem like one big high school, with our government as the autocratic principal, our Army as the sadistic vice-principal and Jackson Browne, *et al.*, as the clear eyed popular kids. Most everybody is going to want on to be the side of the stars. Funnest of several comic touches is the inclusion of some Fifties Army pro-nuke propaganda, in which a Chaplin from the Douglas Fir school of acting assures two questioning dogfaces that the Army wants to expose them; it wouldn't expose them to radiation if there are *any* chance of harm. Besides, he continues, the nuclear test explosion they'll soon witness will flash "every color of the rainbow" Immediately we cut to the death bed ties or the first nuclear testing, a nuclear testing in the Fifites, one of an ex travagant number dying of leukemia. Second, as film documented rock & roll performance, *No Nukes* ranks among the best. At times its seems to be the best, thanks to the dynamic cinematography of veteran Haskell Wexler. Acts I expected to just tolerable were, at points, engaging Jackson Browne 1980 Byron Laursen most important, the performance of Bruce Springsteen—which promised to be great—was instead fully awesome. So what if half his songs break down to nirvana melodias under close inspection? In all popular arts, and especially rock® *e* roll, delective means more than content. Spring steen, gitted with humor and drive, proves himself the standard of excellence among rock performers. Anyone who witnesses his three-song segment will know why he is called "The Boss." Third, for those stars who ran out of musical fuel several albums ago (now I amn't namin' names), *No Nikes* serves as a nationwide screen test. There's a hooks on the cover that says "I've seen certain people and "loves" Springsteen and Browne are definitely in the second group. Unfortunately, we don't know how the camera feels about either Byrly Cogorer or Petty — to name two worries who ought to have been included in the selection of its potential by lingering overlapping on personalities to sell the issue. Even so, it's first rate merchandise. The Final Countdown starring Kirk Dingle, Martin Sheen & James Farenetti, written by David Ambrose, Gerry Davis, Thomas Hamer & Peter Powell; produced by Peter Douglas, directed by Don Taylor The Final Countdown is not about people, it's about Machines, and its unabashed stars are the nuclear-powered USS Nimitz and its dazzling squadron of swooping, screaming F-14s. This is no time to quibble about nuclear power, the U.S. defense posture, or the militarism of China, and those planes are well sexy. Director Don Taylor and cinematographer Kc Nemker have used them as an exercise in visual and auditory thrills, pushing all the right buttons for people who get turned on by hardware. The dramatic premise of the film seems almost an afterthought. Kirk Douglas (whose son Beer produced the film), plays the captain of the *Wimitz*, who finds himself and his ship transported back in time to Dec. 6, 1941, facing the imminent attack on Pearl Harbor. Presented with the intriguing notion of whether or not to tamper with history (and the philosophical arguments become silly at times), Douglas is influenced by fellow officers James Faeuser and Ron O'Neill and David Dunning and attorney Martin Sheen is for the ride as an efficiency expert on to舟 the Defense Department from a mysterious employer. Sheen appears the most uncomfortable of the actors, perhaps remembering his power and intensity in *Apocalypse Now*, and choosing instead the bewildered expression he wore as host of Saturday Night Live. The most sympathetic character is a diminutive collei named Charlie who survives all kinds of chaos, including a major timeworm "warp" that looks more like rings around the collar than serious cosmic disturbance. Ah, but those planes. Shooting off catapults, catching cables, refuelling in mid-air or, implausibly, dogfighting. Japanese Zeros, they are enough to give anyone exhilarated by the notion of flight a grand dose of thrills. Kaiberger Orliff starring Steve McQueen, Ilar Burton, Elli Wallack and Harriet Burry, written by Ted Leighton and Peter Hymes, produced by Mort Engelberg, directed by Buzz Kalik. The Hunter Based on the true-life adventures of real-life bounty hunter Ralph R忠恩 The Hunter is certainly full of adventure . . . but nothing seems real. McQueen is, as ever, a pleasure to watch, and any entjourn derived from this confused mishmash of domestic conflict and shoot-em-up action is solely to his credit. He doesn't do much except walk through it almost enough. Not quite enough, however, to compensate for a loose script and stereotyped, uninteresting characters. For humor we have McQueen in mind, but McQueen unable to parallel park), living with a woman about to have a baby he's not sure he wants (yes, he fights when it arrives), living in a house full of apparent derelishes (this own dog grows at him). It's all so *cute*, except when McQueen is chasing down bail jumpers, which he does every two minutes (why does he live in such a damp when he's making thousands of dollars bringing em back alive?). At one point he mounts a threshing machine to chase crazed dynamiters; he runs into Chicago chasing a crazer he wants; he stumbles on a crazy pain. Only LeVar Burton is allowed to be uncraezed, his just cure. And throughout the film, it's all too much, and yet not enough. If the rumors are true, that McQueen is dying of cancer, this may be his last film. It was, in fact, his first. Juditb Sims Raise the Titanic starring Jasco Robbins, Richard Jordan and David Selby, written by Adam Kennedy, produced by William Pryor, directed by Jerry Jameson. This bloated, waddling turkey of a movie allegedly cost $23 million, why, then didn’t they think to buy a knowledgeable technical director? Someone who, for instance, would know that any ship lying 12,000 feet underwater for 68 years would probably not have some of its windows and floors still intact, someone the three-year-old kid) who would know that a gigantic ocean liner (nay, a rowboat) cannot be towed with a slack line, someone who may have remembered that the North Atlantic does not look like the Pacific or the Mediterranean. And I’d like to know what could have cost $32 million, certainly not the little models of New York city, with the little toy Goodyard Booby sitting in the silky underwater scenes with diving ships that looked like bug-eyed monkeys. Maybe it was the three or four real ships that sat around doing nothing. All these mistakes wouldn't have mattered quite so much if the film had engaged an motion or two, but we weren't even allowed the minimal pleasure of a tight action flick. The dialogue is dreadful, the absmal, the plot incredible (the *Tianic* raised so the S.U. government can get its hands on a "little known" element sup (Professional Program Exchang. DONALD C. KENDRICK Steve McQueen padded tucked away in the ship's cargo, said element essential to the development of a "laser fence" around our country; the Russians find out there a surprise ending Yawn. Robards and Jordan look embarrassed by their presence in this flasco, and rightly so. Oh it hapned that day. He had to learn the technical flights — bad to do something to occupy my mind. This movie deserves to take its place alongside the *Titanic* - 12,000 feet under water. **Idith Sims** The TI-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 memories. And it has its Static Memory **fea** Practice Makes Perfect starring Jean Rockebur, Nicole Garcia, Amme Girardao and Lila Kadrao, written by Philippe de Broca and Alexandre Mnouchebine, directed by de Broca. cases of practice haven't brought Edouard Choisel (Jean Rochefort), a professional pianist, closer to perfecting the one art that is his true passion – womanizing. As his exwife (Annie Girardot) explains to him, he has sleep with his wife's best friends and his best friend's wives and no one trusts him any longer. At first a facial, light hearted portraital of an overextended, frantic womanizer, the film becomes a dramatic often poignant probing of Edouard's moral and psychological dilemma. Practice is a comedy-romance-farce-drama, a stringing together (better for pearls but for movies) that looks like a bargain but amounts to thinness in all departments (hyphenated genre films typically for multiple effects and end up delivery none). but de Brouca (King of Hearts, Dear Inspector) overcomes this structural weakness by focusing on impairment, fear of aging, jealousy, hypochusia, sexual morality, and the value of love and family. The somewhat contrived plot is ultimately less important than the mood, which is wonderfully wistful and lyrical. R伯特 L. Lieghman other TPC retailer or more information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. T.U.S. suggested retail for all l-libraries is $40, except Farming, which is $45. *US suggested retail price *Used for with T-19-99 of INNOVATION TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat.closed Sun. 45732 KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650-640 Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." The petition also would eliminate Senate seats representing living groups. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 65. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by people who could speak English. September.1980 Ampersand Technics SU-V8 amplifier with New Class A circuitry eliminates switching distortion. The ST-S7 quartz synthesizer tuner eliminates FM drift. And as you'll discover, the more we eliminate, the more we add. Take the SU-V8. You won't hear any switching distortion because, unlike most of today's amplifiers, its output transistors don't switch on and off as the input waveform goes from positive to negative. The reason Technics synchro-bias circuitry. What it does is employ high-speed diodes that constantly send minute amounts of current to the transistor not in use. And since the transistors are always on, switching distortion is eliminated. And there's nothing minute about the SU-V8's power output. 110 watts per channel from 20 Hz to 20 kHz into 8 ohms with no more than 0.005% THD. The results Music that's rich, crisp and bursting with dynamic range. In concert with the SU-V8 is the ST-S7. With its quartz-crystal oscillator, only the broadcast frequencies you select can be received. And since both frequencies are quartz-synthesized, the tuner can't drift. That means any station you tune is perfectly in tune. And the ST-S7's microprocessor allows you to preset eight AM and eight FM stations and even turn the power on and tune three stations all by itself. Discover Technics new amps and tuners. When it comes to New Class A and quartz, Technics gets an A plus. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Vom Klimur services. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR falls this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as Parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the university of Pittsburgh, and many living groups will sponsor special activities for students and their parents. Archie R. Dvkes. Mvers said. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish community, which appeared in the Kansas City newspaper. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling system." Hillel made another appeal to Del Shankel after he was named acting chancellor, Kort said. The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for Parents' Day "The situation is terribly unfortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when someone breaks their phone or gets in advance. We just hope it won't happen again." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish, Kort said. Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishri, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, some of them or less new year's greeting cards; of Friar Tales. The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sunday services, she said. Hille is sponsoring a Rosh Hashanah service at 7:30 tonight in the Room of Forum in the Kansas Union. Morning and evening services will be held on Thursday at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. 1 a o e s e d e h d d t d keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark SEE HOLIDAYS page 5 See HOLIDAYS page 5 A move was made to table the petition, but it was veted. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchiotto, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition to be submit is a University Council, which makes the final decision. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. n - y / a t f i t One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control. Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate is considering whether to continue Kerry's leadership in the statewide student lobbying group. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingamman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingamman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student affairs and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. encing system stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fat," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." SOLBACH RECOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. r i l d e a n t ; g f n s g a f "This person had no previous convictions," Solbach said. "At $2 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 and $13,900 in fines. The badly reinforced irresponsibility in that person." But Solbac admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you do with violon offenders? Should a Class A felon break his promise?" Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAa. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extenuating circumstances, such as the suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KA4 parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determinate (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances surrounding an individual's conviction, or give a See COMMITTEE page 5 PLEASANT Weather Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to 15 mph. The low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder-showers in the early morning. It will become mostly clear by late afternoon, with a high near 85. --- 图 University Daily Kansan, September 9, 1980 Javhawks want "Duck Soup" The KU football team, highly touted and lightly seasoned, began cooking up a recipe this week it hopes to stir into a savory soup* in Saturday's season opener. The Jayhawks, riding on a theme of the Marx Brothers classic movie, "Duck Soup," for their opponent against the Oregon Ducks, got their first taste of the various formations Oregon uses in yesterday's practice. "They're a good team," said KU head coach Don Fambrigh. "They made only two penalties Saturday and that tells us they are a well-coach team." Oregon, beaten by 154th-ranked Stanford Saturday, managed 421 yards with a third-string quarterback. The offense was highlighted by tailback Reggie Brown, who rushed for 128 yards off the I-formation. "They do a lot more options and a lot of sprint-outs," Fambrough said. Defensively, you use a six-man front, behind you, and you don't see much of that around here." While the Oregon offense is the star on the field, the Ducks are finding a need for a special kind of defense off the field. Riddled by a rash of criminal charges, the latest being the arrest of tailback Dwight Robertson on charges of sodomy and coercion in years ago, the Ducks are also one of five Pac-10 teams inelegible for post-season play. "The problem hasn't torn them apart," Fambrough said in summing up Oregon's woes. "It has drawn them closer together. They have a feeling that everybody is picking on them." Perhaps the biggest question mark on the team, the kicking game, has been answered. Freshman Bruce Kalmeyer will handle kicking duties while Bucky Scriber fills the punting vacancy left by Mike Hubach. For the "Hawks, senior Steve Smith will probably start at quarterback, with the halftack at slot still it. is double-down. It would be Kerrin Bell will get the starting nod. Defensively, the 'Hawks, which gave up an average of 32 points a game last season, are among the best teams. KC Rouals George Brett More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all service. "I have been pleased with all of our young players," Fambrough said. "In the future I can see a defense out there." He added that his defense was hitting hard last week." One returning defensive starter, however, will be missing Saturday in Oregon. Linebacker Scallars Young, a former starter, is season out, with a sprained ankle. RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes The loss snapped a four-game winning streak by the Royals, who played without George Brett for the second straight game. Brett was hitting, 396 and needs 55 more at-bats in Kansas City's remaining 24 games to qualify for the league batting championship. Brett, who had his injured right hand x-rayed yesterday in California, was given permission to take batting practice before the game and could return to the lineup this week, club officials said. AHAMEH, Calif. — Carney Lansford had three hits, including a double and a home run and two California runs last past the California the California Angels past the Kansas City Royals 7-4. The injury is similar to tendinitis and will be treated as such, team officials ph 841-6642 Angels drop Royals 7-4; Brett returns this week Bv United Press International BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 341-4486 It is up to Brett, trainer Mickey Cobb and Kansas City manager Jim Frey as to when Willretch to the lineup. Without Brett, the Royals had 11 hits to the Angels 12 last night. The Angels belted four home runs and three home runs in a game Larry Gara, 18-6, and Marty Patton. Gura surrendered a two-run homer to Dan Ford in the first inning, but Amos Otis came back in the second with a home run to cut the lead to 2-1. Lanstornd's home run gave the Angels a 3-1 lead in the third and Brian Downing added a solo shot to build the lead to 4-1. A single by U.L. Washington, who went three-for-three, and a double by Wilson Illison in the fifth set up Frank White's two-run single. William Aiken's followed with a double to tie the score off Martinez. But then Aase came in and silenced the Royal's bats the rest of the way. said, with ice, whirlpool and ultrasound therapy. The loss, coupled with a Texas victory over Oakland, kept the Royals' magic number at eight. Any number of Kansas City victories or Texas losses totaling eight will clinch the American League West title for the Royals. In the American League East, New York beat Toronto 7-4, while Baltimore Amnersand THE ISLAND IS COMING September,1980 Buy now a $40 or more va 1 FREE mod with purcha of a TI-58 TI Programmable 58 APPLIED STATISTICS MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE TI Programmables learn in performance, quality. You don't have to kn program to get all tI available with a TI Pro These solid state library are preprogrammed to problems in: Enginee ness. Finance. And o oriented courses. With program steps in each can save your own pe gramming for those chie ne need it most. 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Just ask Earth, Wind & Fire. Panasonic Platinum Series™ Stereo Radio Cassettes. Platinum Series Panasonic just slightly ahead of our time. other TI reader for more information, and let him help you select the TI Programmable and free software that's right for you. IU.S. suggested retail for all Ll- braries is $40, except Farming. It costs $18 each, vs. $45. *US suggested retail price *For use with T5-59 only Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Uni Law of Innovation $ \textcircled{c} $1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED for Women $36.00 per pair seven styles open 10-6 M-Sat. closed Sun. University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN Wednesday, September 10, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 13 USPS 650-640 10 DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff The setting sun turns 10th Street just west of Indiana Street into a river of light, silhoueting $ neighborshored resident. SUA seeks monthly concerts Staff Reporter By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter The SUA Special Events committee has set a goal of presenting one concert a month this semester. Last semester, SUA reached that goal. Only one concert was scheduled during Harel 1972. This semester, the committee already is working to secure concerts, Duke Divine, special events chairman and SUA board member, said Kevin McKay, who has worked with concert promoters to sign contracts early. The committee has scheduled Johnny Paycheck, a country and western singer, for Oct. 29. Ticket sales for the concert began Aug. 29. Because the contracts were signed earlier, Divine Last year, he said, SUA had many good concert offers, especially when the roof of Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., was under repair, but he decided to settle any contracts with concert promoters. Divine said the music industry was picking up because of a slight strengthening of the economy. But the market is tight in Lawrence and it cannot compete with the Kansas City area for concerts. The death of concerts last fall was clear partly a University policy forforbidding the use of music from concerts by students. decreased the number of acts SUA could book, Divine said. In the spring of 1879, SUA A presented the Doobie Brothers, who had suspended equipment. However, adjastments were made so that they could do the show. "A lot of bands don't want to do that (make makes them look bad and it is expensive). Do you When Cheap Trick came to KU in April, the adjustments made in stage equipment and sound were complete. Another reason for last fall's dearth of concerts, he said, was that student support was not as strong as it had been in the past. A Ramsey Lewis concert, scheduled for Dec. 3, 1979, was cancelled because of poor ticket sales. However, the promotion of the show began only a few days before the concert was to have been presented. Divine said there may not have been enough time for students to hear about the concert. Timing also could have been a factor. SUA usually sponsors an outdoor show with local talent the week before enrollment, but decided against it this year because other activities already had been scheduled. Divine said SUA was attempting something different this year by scheduling Paychec because most KU students prefer rock, jazz and rhythm and blues music. however, Divine said he thought at least 20 percent of the student population could be interested. Lack of quorum delays vote on petition to shrink Senate By DIANE SWANSON By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate spent an hour and a half last night debating a petition to cut the size of the Senate in half in hopes of creating a more efficient voting assembly. When it came time for a vote, however, the petition went unconsidered because a roll call showed that the Senate lacked the quorum needed to do official business. After the roll call, Matt Davis, student body vice president, said that the lack of a quorum was "exactly why the Senate needs to reduce its size." During the evening's debate, proponents of the petition argued that the Senate's size was cumbersome and that it was getting harder to get quorum at Senate meetings. "If we don't improve our efficiency, no one will have respect for anything we do," he said. "Student Senate will begin losing its legitimacy." The petition proposed that the number of Senate seats be reduced from 129 to 60. Three of the seats would be special representatives to the Senate, and five remaining 57 would be distributed to the schools. Now, there is one senator for every 200 students. Because of an enrollment increase, the number of senators is expected to increase from 120 to 130 this year. If the petition passes, the number of Nunemaker district senators would be cut and Nunemaker would be considered as a school. Nunemaker districts would be elected as those in the other schools. NUNEMAKER CONSTISTS of freshmen and sophomores who have not declared a major. This section came under attack, and an amendment calling for five housing representatives was added to the petition. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, proposed by Bill Venable, IFC senator, passed 25-21-1, increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to 85. In explaining why the seats had been omitted, Davis said living groups would be represented by senators elected from schools. He cited an engineering seminar living in a fraternity as an example. "From my experience, there always have been people representing living cities, always have people representing living cities, always have people representing living cities." Davis said. Davis also said he didn't think living group senators really represented their living groups, and he didn't. But Venable said he was an example of an active living group representative and said the additional representation was necessary for the future. Active living groups would be represented in the future. Dan Cunningham, All Scholarship Hall Council senator, said the living group senators were needed to provide communication between Senate and the living groups. VENABLE IS VICE chairman of the University Senate executive committee. Jim Borelli, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, effects Cunningham's views. "Senators from living groups are vital to keeping the communication system open," he said. "It's more like an insurance policy. I think representation by both schools and living groups is important." A move was made to table the petition, but it was vetoed. A motion then was made to call for a vote, after which John Macchiotto, graduate student senator, called for a quorum. Because there was no quorum, the meeting was dismissed and the petition now must be resubmitted to the Student Senate executive committee. After the Senate makes a decision, the petition will be submitted to the University Council, which will approve. If acted on soon, the petition will take effect before student body presidential, vice presidential and senatorial elections in November. Because Senate was dismissed, two bills listed on the agenda failed to reach the floor. One would increase Senate committee powers and the other would improve inventory control Under the inventory control bill, the replacement cost of Senate-funded capital equipment that is damaged, destroyed, lost or stolen through the negligence or fault of an organization will be charged to that organization. The Senate also heard a report from Bob Bingaman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas. Bingaman said ASK was succeeding in its lobbying efforts on student issues and was working to increase political awareness and political participation among students. The Senate is considering whether to continue Kylie membership in the statewide student lobby. Committee ponders sentencing system Staff Reporter Bv BILL VOGRIN The inmate slouched in a swivel chair in his sloppy blue den uniform, facing three members of the Kansas Adult Authority parole agency and members of the Kansas Legislature and three reporters. In 30 minutes, the Lansing State Penitentiary prisoner retold his life story, emphasizing every encounter with law enforcement officials and the fact that he is arrest and conviction for the crime be committed. He spoke freely to the KAA board members, two men and one woman, and answered every question, regardless of the often intensely personal nature of the questioning. He also looked to the future and divulged his plans, should he be granted parole. Attorney General Robert Stephan has criticized the KAA for releasing inmates he knew had been held. report will be published in December,"Hoagland said. Haagland said the committee only made occurrences to the Legislature. It will make no decision. THE VISIT YESTERDAY by the legislators was part of a review of Kansas sentencing laws by an interim judiciary committee. Although the review was initiated by the committee, it came after strong criticism of the Adult Authority's process by Stephan. It also followed a proposal by Gov. John Carlin at the beginning of the 1968 midterm last year for changes in the sentencing system. "We are not investigating the parole system," said Rep. Joseph Hoagland, R-Overland Park, chairman of the interim committee. "We are reviewing the sentencing laws of the state, and that includes observing the Adult Authority process." "The committee will make three or four propositions regarding sentencing and give its final decision." The questions about sentencing laws on three types of sentencing—mandatory, indeterminate and presumptive. The philosophy behind each sentencing procedure is distinctly different, which makes a change more than a simple policy decision. Kansas now has indeterminate sentencing. It allows a person convicted of a crime to serve half of the minimum sentence, plus six months, and then approach the KAA for parole consideration. Presumptive, or determinate, sentencing, which is favored by Carlin, will set strict "At the other end of the spectrum—what do you do with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon ever be paroled?" Rep. John Solbach D - Lawrence guidelines for sentences. A person convicted of a crime would serve the entire sentence, regardless of extemal circumstances. There is no good behavior or rehabilitation while incarcerated. MANDATORY SENTENCING establishes precise sentences for certain serious offences. The inmate choked as he told of misfortune and a bout with alcoholism that fogged his mind when he had committed his crime. He said he was a survivor of the bombing, whose relation and the mistakes he had made. He obviously was nervous, and he fumbled with envelopes and papers from relatives and employers who had promised help and support should he be released. He pleased his case and stared into the eyes of the three KAA board members. The panel questioned the prisoner, delving into every aspect of his life—both outside the prison and since his imprisonment. They ignored the evidence of the drooping, glazed eyes that pleaded with them. "Opponents of presumptive sentencing call it a passing fad," said Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, a member of the interim committee. "They say it will have little impact on the crime rate and will increase the cost of running the prison system by $10 million a year." SOLBACH RECCOUNTED the case of an inmate who was sentenced and served two years in prison for a non-violent offense that defrauded three parties of less than $100. "This person had no previous convictions." Solbach said. "At $2 a day (the cost per prisoner in the state penitentiary) the state threw $18,250 to the police." The governor bably reinforced irresponsibility in that person. But Solbach admits that sentencing is a complex question with no absolute answers. "At the other end of the spectrum, what do you with violent offenders? Should a Class A felon Stephan argued that all discretionary questions should be taken away from the Secretary of Corrections and the KAa. He said he thought the judge who assigned a sentence should maintain full control over extinguishing wrongdoing, but the judge suspended sentence, sending the convict to a rehabilitation center for several months, an immediate parole, or a strict sentence. Benjamin Day, a member of the KA parole board, sat at the table listening attentively to every answer from each inmate, and speared each candidate with probing questions. "Determine (presumptive) sentencing does not take into account the circumstances of the case." See COMMITTEE page 5 Parents' Day festivities conflict with Jewish holiday By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter To many students, the shorter days of September have come to signify the end of a season, but to those of the Jewish faith, the month also represents a new year and a time to reflect on the past. Jewish students who have made arrangements with their instructors will be excused from classes and tests to attend Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services. Sunday tonight marks the beginning of Rosh Hashanah, the holiday celebrating the start of the Jewish New Year. It begins a 10-day period known as the holiday months, the most seldom in the Jewish tradition. HOWEVER, YOM KIPPUR 'tis this year on Sept. 20, which is scheduled as parents' Day at the University of Kansas. The Jayhawks will play their first home football game against the University of Pittsburgh, and many living activities for students and their parents. Ending with Yom Kippar, the Day of Atonement, the High Holidays are traditionally a time of inspection and reconciliation of one's behavior with God. Most Jewish students are obligated to spend Ellen Kort, KU Hilier director, said yesterday that the conflict was discovered last April and that the group petitioned the Parents' Day Committee to change the date. Hilier is a religious, social and cultural organization for Jewish students at the University. Saturday attending religious services, and many of their parents have commitments at home and will be unable to come to Lawrence, Barry Mandelbaum, Leawood sohomore, said. THE COMMITTEE AGREED that Parents' Day should be changed if possible, and made that recommendation to former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. Myers said. According to John Myers, former chairman of the Parents' Day Committee, the KU athletic department sets the dates for all special football games on Friday and Day, Parents' Day and Homecoming Day. The final decision came from the chancellor's office, however, and the date for 'Parens' Day was November 15. Hillem made another appeal to Del Shankel after he was named acting chancellor. Kort said. Shankel issued an apology to the Jewish Chronicle and appeared in the Kansas City Chronicle on Aug. 29. In his letter to the editor, Shankel said, "I also was distressed when I discovered this scheduling system." Day be rescheduled so that our Jewish students and their parents would be able to participate in the activities. Unfortunately, the date had already been publicized, and it was therefore decided that the schedule for 1980 could not be changed." The University has a policy of not scheduling events in conflict with the primary holidays of any religious group and tries to adhere to that policy, Shankel's letter said. The chancellor's office subsequently requested a list of dates for the major Jewish holidays for the next several years to avoid similar conflicts, Kort said. "Shankel has been extremely helpful in the matter, but there are still lots of irate parents." Kort said. "The freshmen are especially upset because it's their first Parents' Daw." AT LEAST 1,000 KU students and several teachers are Jewish, Kort said. "The situation is terribly fortunate and is something that everyone feels very bad about." Myers said. "It's a problem you run into when the boss says you're not in advance. We just hope it won't happen again." Rosh Hashanah is celebrated on the first two days of the Hebrew month of *Tisrih*, which usually comes at the end of September or the beginning of October. The Jewish calendar traditionally dates from Rosh Hashanah is a festive occasion and a time of family gatherings, but it is also a solemn time of reconciliation and reflection on the past year, Jane Litwin, assistant Hillel counselor. the creation of the world, which was said to occur on Tishir 1, a date roughly corresponding to 3761 B. Thus, the year 1800 in the solar-based calendar corresponds to 5741 of the lunar-based Jewish calendar. MANY PEOPLE accompany meals during this period with apples and honey, as a sign of hope for sweetness in the year to come. Litwin said. The traditional challah bread also is prepared for holiday meals, but instead of braided, it is round to symbolize a crown, or, in a more modern interpretation, the whole circle of life. Some people send Rosh Hashanah cards, to friends. Let them greet you with a card, to friends. Lukas The celebration of the new year begins with a dinner followed by sundown services, she said. Hillel is sponsoring a Rohr Hashannah service at 7:30 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Morning and evening events will be held Monday afternoons at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center. The Ten Days of Penitence traditionally mark See HOLIDAYS page 5 Weather See HOLIDAYS page 5 PLEASANT Today's high should be near 84, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly clear, with increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Winds will be from the north at 8 to the low tonight will be near 63. Skies will be partly cloudy, with a chance for widely-scattered thundershowers. Thursday, skies should be fair to partly cloudy, with a chance for thunder- showers in the early morning. It will become more clear by late afternoon. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Reagan attacks Carter's economics CHICAGO—Calling President Carter's economic policies an "American tragedy," Ronald Reagan yesterday said that he would put his own fivepoint economic recovery plan into effect within 90 days of winning the presidency. "There is only one phrase to describe the last three years and eight months." Reagan told the International Business Council. "It has been an In what was billed as a major economic address, the Republican presidential nominee offered little that he had not already proposed. The heart of Reagan's economic plan is the three-year, 30 percent reduction in personal income taxes embodied in the Kemp-Roth proposal, named after its congressional sponsors, Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., and Sen. William Roth, R-Del. Carter, campaigning in Perth Amboy, N.J., made his sharpest jab yet at Reagan's proposal $30 billion across-the-board tax cut, calling it a "very, very big mistake." "It means tremendous tax cuts to the rich . . . and high inflation for the average working family," he said. Carter predicted that Reagan would soon drop the proposal and look for something "more reasonable." meanwhile, independent candidate John Anderson, campaigning in nearby Union, N.J., received a debate invitation from the League of Women Voters. Anderson said he was confident that Carter would agree to a three-wav debate with him and Reagan. Carter has said he would debate two or more opponents, but only if he can face Reagan alone in the first debate. Mondale to join KC Star celebration KANSA CITY, Mo. ~Vice President Wendy Mondale, as part of a mid- campaign trip to St. Louis for a lunchoon Sept. 18, marking the 100th mark on the Kansas City Star. "I'm very happy Mondale will join us on this historic occasion," James Hale, president of the Kansas City Star Co., said Monday. About 1,000 civic leaders and representatives from newspapers in Kansas and Missouri are expected to attend the luncheon. The Carter-Mondale Re-election Committee will pay for the trip even though both the newspaper and Mondale's staff are calling the appearance non-political. Mondale is scheduled to campaign in Arkansas and Michigan the day after his speech in Kansas City. "Normally, this would be an official trip, but at this time everyone assumes that anything said is political," Mondale's press secretary, Al Grand jury indicts Eagleton's niece ST. LOUIS-A federal grand jury yesterday indicted a niece of Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton, D-Mo., on a charge of trying to extort $20,000 from The senator has said that his niece, Elizabeth Eagleton Weigand, intended to sive the money to the Church of Scientology. The indictment charges Weigand and her attorney, Stephen E. Poludniak, with one count of extortion and conspiracy each. The maximum penalty for conviction on the two charges is seven years in prison and fines totaling $10,500. FBI agents arrested Weigand, 23, and Poludniak, 29, Aug. 3 on a complaint that charged them with threatening to publicize damage information about Eagleton unless he paid Weigand $20,000 for her share in a family-owned business, Missouri Pipe Fittings Co. Eagleton announced the alleged attack at a news conference he called the day before. He said, "I am an Eagleton, I faced the challenge in the primary, was permafone for him." Weigand and Poludinka have denied the allegations. Weigand voluntarily testified before the grand jury investigating the case. Her husband, Scott Polish leader visits industrial center WARSAW, Poland—New Communist party leader Stanislaw Kania yesterday took his message of firm conciliation to Poland's industrial center of Katowice, where authorities attempted to head off a strike at the country's largest steel mill. Kanis's bid for worker support came as reports persisted of scattered strikes nationwide. Also, dissidents were attacked by the press for the first time since the historic agreement between the government and Baltic-coast strikers took the punch out of the nonviolent workers' revolt. The official news agency, PAP, said Kania met with party activists in atowies, in the center of the southern Silesia mining region. Kania hinted that she had ended the Edwards agreement. At the same time, Foundry Minister Frankiszek Kaim also met workers at the Katowice steel mill in hopes of averting another walk out. Workers at the foundry staged a 24-hour "warning" strike Aug. 29 and attended a full-scale walkout yesterday unless the government met six demands. A strike committee spokesman said that Kaim had approved most of the demands, such as construction of a foundry hospital, but that it would take a Kania's trip to Katowice came a day after a similar trip to Gdansk, heart of the paralyzing Baltic coast strikes that swent through northern Poland. Deadly virus may be under control SAN DIEGO – A highly-contagious virus that caused the closing of a official clinic, three young patients might be under control, hospital officials and veterinary staff. A spokesman for Children's Hospital and Health Center, the fast-paced and stressed patients and employees, said the danger of further infection might be given. The optimistic assessment was made despite less test results that confirmed two cases of the disease in children already critically ill with other aliments and those who were poorly deficient. "Because of the cases, we have delayed a decision on when to reopen the hospital to admissions, but that should come shortly," hospital spokesman Lester Hammond said. The hospital shut its does Friday to all admissions and surgeries when the patient was advised as adventurer type 7, a highly-contagious virus with cold-like symptoms. As a precautionary measure, the hospital sent home 150 employees who had symptoms such as sore throats, running noses and headaches. "We feel very good right now that the virus is under control." Anderson said. "No new cases have been confirmed since the onset of the last case on Wednesday. The incubation period for the last confirmed case has run its course." Philly teachers' strike talks progress About 200,000 students in the Philadelphia public school system got a second day of vacation, but sources reported progress during a 14-hour bargaining session that broke off early yesterday. More talks aimed at ending the walkout were scheduled. The Philadelphia district closed schools yesterday after an unsuccessful workshop in which bids for schools for a halfday Monday. Only 214 of the 12,000 teachers involved in the workshop were fully employed. Progress was reported yesterday in the Philadelphia teachers' strike, the almost all-350,000 teachers involved more than 650,000 students and almost 350,000 teachers in other states. A news blackout was in effect during the negotiations. The key stumbling block to a settlement was the planned layoff of 2,000 teachers. City legal and planning officials had said that it would be a In the newest school strike, teachers in San Jose, Calif., walked off their jobs Monday and the district's 30,000 pupils began the school year under the new contract. In Rochester, N.Y., a "pre-bargaining" session was scheduled, but the student with the highest score (39) did not receive a strike by 2,200 teachers of 88 schools and kept a 16,600 students at home. Javits heads pack of defeated incumbents From Kansan wire service Four-term Republican Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., was one of a number of incumbents to fall in House, Senate and gubernatorial primary races yesterday Former New York Sen. James Buckley won the Republican senatorial nomination in Connecticut. Incumbent Sen. Richard Stone, D-Fla., was running second in his race with 60 percent of the precincts reporting. because of overconfidence. The race with D'Amato was the first primary challenge for Javits in his 32-year congressional career. In the upset of Javits, Alfonse D'Aramato, a city supervisor from Hempstead, outplaced Javits in the vote count to 44 percent of the votes counted late last night. Two congressmen indicted in the Abscam investigation met opposite fates. John Murphy, D-N.Y., won and Richard Kelley, R-Fla., lost. Javits, 76, said yesterday that he was worried that many of the moderate Republicans on whom he was banking for support might pass up the election D'Amato had campaigned heavily on the issue of Javits' age, his liberal voting record and his professional nerve disease, which affects his walking. In the Democratic race for Javits' seat, Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman defeated consumer advocate and former Miss America Bess Myerson, former New York City Mayor John Lindsay and Johnson District Attorney John Santucci. Although Javits lost his seat as a Republican, he is assured a place on the November ballot as the candidate of the Liberal Party. A generally light voter turnout was reported everywhere but in New York, where the intensely fought Senate primaries sparked brisk voting. In the Connecticut contest for retiring Democrat Abraham Ribicoff's Senate seat, Buckley defeated Richard Bozuto, minority leader of the state Senate, by a 5-4 margin. Buckley had served one U.S. Senate term in New York. That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4th a page. KINKO'S morning. Stone defeated Gunter in a 1974 run-off election. In another Florida race, Rep. Kelley, the only Republican to be indicted in the Abcam investigation, was badly injured by challengers in his bid for renomination. And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. Although there were some pockets of moderate voting in Florida, the state's voters are more evenly distributed. However, in New York, Rep. Murphy, who also was indicated on Abscam charges, won Democratic renomination. No brag. Just fact. Stone, whose liberal voting record and handling of the Cuban refugee issue has been strongly criticized, faced five charges for the Democratic population. 904 Vermont 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 904 Vermont 843. 8019 Bill Gunter, the state insurance commissioner, maintained his lead over the freshman Senator early this The incumbent senators facing token opposition or running unopposed yesterday were Paul Laxal, R-Nev.; Jake Garner, R-Green; Greg Walsh, John Durkin, D-N-H.; Barry Goldwater, A-Riz; and Gary Hart, D-Colo. 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sun JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6th & Michigan We fill KU student prescriptions and offer ★ Discount Prices ★ Free Delivery ★ Individual patient records Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book Attention King of Jeans King of Jeans Cordially invites you, the students of K. U. To save Money on your Favorite Levis, Painters Pants, Brittania, etc. at King of Jeans Annual, Super-Colossal Trade-In Jean Sale Today thru Sunday only, King of Jeans will give you $300 for any old jeans you have, regardless of condition, toward the purchase of any jeans or pants in the store, regardless of price. - One trade in per new jean, but no limit on the number of trade-ins accepted. In other words, bring 4 trade-ins to us and get $12 off of 4 or more pair of jeans! - Trade-ins will be donated to charity. So gather up all these old, scroungy jeans you have no use for, and make them count for new ones at KING of Jean 740 Massachusetts O S S Levi's - Come see our new Calvin Klein, Brittania, and Ladies Levis Jeans 1 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 Page 3 On Campus SIERRA CLUB FILM THE SIERRA CLUB'S first fall meeting will feature a film, "Alaska, Land in the Balance," at 7 tonight in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. UNIVERSITY FORUM, which meets at 11:45 this morning at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries center, will feature Dr. Fred Samson, professor of physiology and director of the University of Kansas Medical Center's Rehabilitation Center, who will lecture on "Health and Diseases in the 1980s." The ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER will sponsor an "Introduction to Timesharing" seminar at 3:30 p.m. the auditorium of the Academic Computer Center. THE SOCIETY OF PHYSICS SCHOOL will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 323 Mallet. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlors. p.m. in the Kansas Union Parlor. Juniors and seniors in POLITICAL SCIENCE interested in electing or using elected undergraduate departments on the political science department are asked to meet at 7:30 in 525 Blake Hall. The UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB will meet at 11 a.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas University. There will be interest group sign-ups, bridge and a University history slide show, "The Lighthouse of Roof Back Ridge." BLACKS IN COMMUNICATION will meet at 8 p.m. in Watkins Scholarship The GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP room in the Cork Room of the King's Suite. TOMORROW A NEW LIEFELLOWISH film wished shown at 6:30 p.m. in 3139 Wiley Street, New York. The Board of Class Officers will hold a meeting on May 25th, 2016, in the Station Union parking lot. A LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR on sexuality at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries will examine historical attitudes toward sexuality from the time of Abelard and Heloise to the time of Freud. A seminar entitled "Introduction to Data Analysis" will be at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the Academic Computer Center. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will have an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union to talk about plans for the coming year and to organize committees. The Kansan welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus." Organizations should submit written information on scheduled free activities to the campus editor at least two days before the events. Renovation T-shirts available Anyone with $5 and the inclination to spend it now can tell the world that he survived the Watson Library renovation. T-shirts with "Veteran of Watson Library Renovation: 1980-1982," on them can be ordered at Watson Library until Monday. "We have 32 orders already, and we only started selling them on Monday," stacks supervisor Kendall Simmons said yesterday. She said the T-shirts originally were for the library staff, but people's reactions to the shirts gave her the idea of also selling them to the public. "People kept coming up and saying, 'God, that's great! Where can I get one?' " Simmons said. Some of the workmen and architects were planning to order T-shirts this time, she said. This week's sale is the second time the T-shirts have been offered to the public. Simmons said 106 shirts were sold this summer. Simmons said the "Veteran" design was selected from about 20 designs in a contest held last spring by the library staff. The design was chosen over other suggestions such as "Not Tonight, I Have a Headache—Watson Renovation," "Jackhammer Hell" and a picture of the library's founder, Carrie Watson, with a hammer through her head. On the Record Lawrence police are investigating the theft of more than $2,000 taken from cash registers at two grocery stores, a police spokesman said yesterday. Police are questioning two suspects in the thefts, which occurred during the past 10 days. The thefts were from Kroger Super Store, 23rd Street and Naismith Drive, and Rusty's Food Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets, police said. took money from the cash register, police said. In both incidents, one suspect distracted a cashier while the other Alvis Osburn, 19. Eudora, suffered cuts on his head after he was beaten with a screwdriver, police said. The other victim was not in injury. LAWRENCE POLICE also are looking for three to five men involved in an aggrated assault of two men in a parking lot after midnight yesterday morning. Police said Osburn and a friend were walking through the park when they were attacked. Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTELRESERVATIONS CARRENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 SI SAVE MORE 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices SAVE BUT 75% bud JENNING'S CARPETS AND SONS 29th & iowa • Use Your 'People Book.' Can't Do A Thing With Your Hair? 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M-T-W-F Sat. 10-6 Th.-10-9 Sun.-1-5 MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts MISTER GJY Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 Enrollment on upswing Doomday predictors have long been saying that universities and colleges across the country are heading toward deep troubles. After all, college enrollment is expected to stagnate decline in the academic institutions will face financial dilemmas. But so far, the University of Kansas has escaped this perilous fate. In fact, preliminary enrollment for a new program showed a slight increase from last fall's record enrollment. While some institutions find themselves scroungling for money, KU has started off the 1980s by breaking its enrollment records. And to be sure, enrollment figures are extremely important to a university. It is not a matter of whether "My school is bigger than your school," to a significant degree, enrollment figures dictate a university's allocations from the legislature. Most of the University's schools had increased enrollments this fall. A few schools registered declines, but the drops all were negligible. In all, the University counted a 162-student increase. Final enrollment figures will be compiled after the 20th day of classes. The increase isn't earthshaking but it probably means another healthy legislative appropriation for KU. However, as the last products of the baby boom step up to receive their diplomas in the next few years, the trend toward record enrollment certainly won't take long to be reversed. But given the latest enrollment figures, the University seems to be in a healthy state. Although enrollment drops cannot be prevented in the future, it appears the University won't suffer substantial decreases once the enrollment crunch begins. Writing overcomes sadness, loneliness and life's rejections To be a writer is something special. It is to reach, however awkward, for the stars and to move, however haltingly, in their direction. To write is the professional both, writing is something special. in fact, I love writers. No one makes even a tiny attempt to be a writer unless he has FRED MARKHAM P something hidden in his heart that possibly he does not even recognize—some little, relentless, inspiring glow that makes him uneasy the way young love makes one uneasy. I wanted to become a writer because I saw more to life than the grayness around me. I yearn to be a person who does more than eats and live in an open world, with warm fingers, moving and enchanting them. What is this thing a writer must communicate to feel complete? It is his personal view of the world, of life we all face. In our lives, we all have our own hearts and minds. It is life filtered through the personal To start to write is to start to live because you begin to observe, pity, love,爱和 sing. I welcome everyone who sat down to a sheet of blank paper would ponder this. A writer tries to communicate that which can never quite be communicated in words. You must communicate in words and closer to his goal of transforming a white piece of paper into a colorful, lively set of words. heart and mind of an individual that is important to writing. It does not matter whether an author is writing about his family or a first spring violet; what is essential to his composition is his own personal involvement in the subject. To observe life, to dig into it, to taste it and to smelt it so as to write about it, is to become more capable of living. I have no special equipment to be a writer. In my youth, I was shy, poor, severely handicapped with cerebral palsy, and lonesome. I had to do my writing while sitting at home, picking away at five words per minute using a stylus strapped around my head. I used an electric portable typewriter, which my parents gave me when I was about 10 years old. For years, I had no encouragement, except from my family. I was afraid of life and of people. Yet I kept forcing myself to know them, to love them, to be with them and then to write about them. The more I knew them, the more I felt of them and the more warmth I felt for them. Sometimes I felt I couldn't stand the years of neglect and loneliness. Possibly you have written a few stories and sat glumly at the window, watching the rain. It might encourage you to know that some of the best writers in the world are people who work on their careers to wallpaper their bedrooms. Every writer feels the pangs of rejection at one time or other. This early struggle took a long time for me to overcome. But most of us will find our dignity, and we will have the ability to put into words most of the things we feel deeply. There are no corners in the world where someone's heart cannot be touched. I don't get disturbed by rejection slips anymore. They do not imply a lack of merit. In fact, they can be very helpful. Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after you in the list, the letter should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. POW! POW! POW! POW! ©1980 MIAMI HEIMS Industrial states may swing election B. JOHN M. MORIARTY BOSTON-The nominations of President Carter and Ronald Reagan leave little doubt that the November election will be fought and won in the industrial states of the Northeast and Midwest. Such a prospect offers regional organizations a unique opportunity to have their regional economic agendas addressed by Carter, Reagan, and John Anderson. New York Times Special Features The emerging campaign strategies show that the industrial Northeast-Midwest is in a strong position to make political demands on the presidential candidates. Reagan's strategies are confident that they will carry most states west of Texas. The Republicans also believe that Carter's grip on the Deep South can be loosened, and a special session of Congress is needed Louisiana and Florida, where Republics have been consistently gaining ground. For their part, the Carter forces will to help their own in what has been the pro-Carter South. An attempt also will be made to prey on California's residents, who now hold a sizable lead in both states. The election therefore will be won in the urban industrial states of the Northeast and Midwest, where discontent with both candidates was amply demonstrated in the primary elections. That this part of the country is also the home of independent candidate Anderson adds still further to the region's importance to the election. Often referred to as the Frost Belt, the 18 industrial states reaching from Maine to Minnesota to Maryland account for 241 electoral votes—only 29 short of the number needed for election to the presidency. This point is not lost on the political leaders of the region who have been forced to adopt a special approach to the region's many economic illions. In the face of an alarming economic decline, the political leaders of the industrial belt have organized around a series of economic issues that affect all 18 states. Potent and enduring coalitions have been WORKERS OF GDANSK! THE STRIKE IS OVER! THE GOVERNMENT HAS MET ALL OF OUR DEMANDS. AND TOMORROW WE GO BACK TO THE MINES! BUT WE'RE SHIPYARD WORKERS, YOU IDIOT! WORKERS OF GDANSK! THE STRIKE IS OVER! THE GOVERNMENT HAS MET ALL OF OUR DEMANDS. AND TOMORROW WE GO BACK TO THE MINES! BUT WE'RE SHIPYARD WORKERS, YOU IDIOT! formed in the House of Representatives, the Senate, and among region's governors. The level of disagreement among them is surprisingly small. It is as if the vaunted Southern "buddy" Republican has lost ground with the shift of economic adversity from the once-north to the industrial cities of the North. There is near-unanimity among the region's governors and members of Congress on what the federal government must do to help these once-prosperous states turn the tide of economic Big-ticket items such as federal assumption of welfare costs, federal aid for the replacement of aging water and sewer lines, a strong jobs program and the adjustment of federal funding to address the cost of living into account all find broad-based, bipartisan support in the industrial belt. That this sizable block of votes increasingly speaks with the people of comfort comfort at home, making them look toward Now. The region's economic concerns can clearly become factors in who becomes the next president, and organizations such as the 213-member Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition could easily shape the upcoming presidential debates by inviting the candidates to put forth their views on these and other vital economic concerns. Although the candidates would want to avoid pitching their campaigns to any one region, they would be foolish to sidestep the pressing questions that face the industrial states. The region feels neglected, and the way in which the candidates respond to its vital concerns will be as important to the voters as the answers that are given. Neither of the two leading presidential candidates can point to an urban populist past, a fact that looms large in the minds of the disaffected urban poor and those elected to represent them. Both major candidates were governors, but neither initiated a strong urban revitalization program during their state-house years. The people of the industrial Northeast and Midwest and their elected representatives should make every effort to find out how they might by laying the next president before they go to the polls. Although Carter deserves more credit for coming to the aid of urban America during his presidency but he typically gets, he has seen it as a chance to co-elite on a number of items that head their list. H This may indeed be one of the few remaining opportunities that the region will have to deal the cards. With the reduction in congressional representation expected as a result of the 1980 census, the region's powerful electoral position might be significantly diminished for the foreseeable future. Carter's lack of passion on these issues perhaps had some bearing on his primary election losses in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Connecticut and Rhode Island—states that together account for more than one-third of the electoral votes he needs to win. He's not much better in these states, but he wisely chose as his running mate George Bush, who did. John M. Moriarty, former executive director of the Northeast-Midwest Congressional Coalition, is director of federal-state relations for Massachusetts. The coalitions that have been formed in the House and Senate to protect the region's interests could render a great service to their cause, their constituency and the presidential candidates themselves by inviting the contestants to formally present their views. In so doing, the congressional leaders are helping to call for full, and force the candidates to address the issues that clearly will have an impact on the people of this region over the next four years. Reagan and Anderson could easily gain political milage by speaking to the region's true leadership. The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 609-669) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Seasonal pass rates are based on student enrollment in classes offered by the university and $1 for each month or $8 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester, paid through the student activity fee. Footnote: Send changes of address to the University Daily Munition, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS 64103. Editor Carole Beier Business Manager Elaine Brahler Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campaign Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Makeup Editors Winter Editors Copy Chiefs Charlie Chiefs Staff Photographers Colleumnists Amy Hollowell, Ted Lickette, Mila Menezes, Britt Conley, Paul Pausti, Susan Schumaker, Blake Gumprecht Edinburgh Cartoonist Staff Artists Staff Writers Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campaign Manager Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Judy Seller Tear sheets Manager Sales Representatives Rick Binkhe, Amette Conrad, Terry Fri, Bill Groom, Larry Leibengout, Paul O'Connor, Paul Schwieger, Bill Roberts, Thaime Shetter, Anthony Tilson, Kay Wisecup, Susan Birnbaum General Manager and News Advisor Rick Musser General Manager and News Adviser Rick Musser Kanan Adviser Chuck Chowins University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 Page 5 Holidays Frompage1 a concentrated period of introspection and reconciliation. During this time, one customarily asks the forgiveness of those he has sighed or hurt during the previous year. The atonement of Yom Kippur is believed to be only between man and God. Kym Kippur is said to be the culmination of theik Holiday period, after which the old year is ended. Yom Kippur is preceded by a traditional Learned fire causes $15,000 damage Jewish feast, but the day itself is observed by sunday up on sunday Friday to sunday Saturday. Religious rites begin on Yom Kippur's Eve and run all day Saturday, ending at sundown on the hopeful note that all who have repented will be "inscribed in the book of life." A fire broke out early yesterday morning in Learned Hall, causing an estimated $15,000 damage to a ground floor laboratory, John Mullens, KU police captain, said yesterday. The Lawrence Jewish Community Center will hold a Yom Kippur pre-fast dinner at 5 p.m. Friday, and Kid Nolire Services will begin at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. No one was injured. One person was working in the building when the fire broke out at about 4:50 a.m., and he notified police, Mullens said. Mullens said an electrical failure, possibly in a laboratory oven, caused the fire. Damage was estimated at $10,000 to contents of the laboratory and $5,000 to the building, he said. Mullens said smoke lingered in the building for several hours after the fire but apparently person a chance for improvement," Day said during a lunch break. Committee From page 1 "There's no compassion. It removes the human element from sentencing. It does not give any consideration to extinguish circumstances, nor does it help kill the prisoners in the crimes that fall under the same category." DAY EVALUATES a prisoner's reaction to prison, his or her involvement in activities while in custody. The board members are appointed by the governor, but Day said there was no split down party lines, despite the mix of Carin and former Gov. Robert Bennett appointees. "I lean toward indeterminate sentencing, and although I can't speak for the other members of both sides, I show tendencies to indeterminate sentencing only by their involvement in the program," he said. "There is no split; we're all just doing a job. The decisions are not politically made," he said. "We don't need to be politically divided." has been backed by the American Civil Liberties Union, but according to Jim Lawing, an ACLU official and Wichita lawyer, the ACLU has different reasons from Stephan. The request for changes in the sentencing laws "Stephan is in favor of longer sentences. We're we just want consistent sentences." "Lawring said." SOLBACH SAID that he had not made a decision, based on the short visit yesterday, but that he did not advocate scrapping the present system. "I think the committee is not yet convinced that we need to make a change in the system," Solbach said. "We are reluctant to change without showing a definite need. We can always find areas to make improvements in it. It is not a question of efficiency, but accuracy. "I do believe that the Adult Authority should get people out before the system brutalizes them, but I don't," she said. As one alternative, Solborn suggested community corrections centers for inmates such as the Juvenile Detention Center. violent crime that totaled less than $100. "Patrick McManus (the Secretary of Corrections) said prison reinforcees irresponsibility." Solbach said. "I think we should get some of those people back into the community and teach them about responsibility and how to hold a job." The inmate gazed around the room. His eyes scanned above the heads of everyone and he Three fellow inmates had pleaded their cases from the same seat and all had returned to join the prison population to await a decision from the judge. The prisoners six days before the decision would be announced. He tugged at the baggy trousers that tung from his waist and fidgeted with a button on his shirt as he made one last statement before leaving the room. He said he had children, somewhere outside the walls, and a business proposition that would reinstate him as a respectable citizen . . . if he could only get out. You've heard of a happy hour — but only G.P. LOYD'S gives you a whole happy night! THURSDAYS— ALL YOU CAN DRINK! $5.00-Gals $6.00-Guys G.P. LOYD'S a G. P. LOYD'S 701 Massachusetts 841-2745 YARNBARN BEGIMINM KINTTNY saxes rest 15 Monday 15 seasons 5 classes 20 off 20% of materials INTEGRER AWARENESS KNITTING semapt 18 sep 19 thurdays 30 thursdays 5 sessions fires 11:00 materials KNITTING MACHINE CLABS start Sept 15 on tuesday 4 sessions 20% off clean materials seats Oct. 10 2-4 p.m. on Fridays free for 10.00 20% off class materials FRAME LOOM WEAVING BEGINNING CROCHET start Sept. 13 Saturdays 13 sessions fee: $6.00 uses: these materials BEGINNING WEAVING start Sept 15 Wednesday 7 6 sessions includes materials & includes materials & Stop by for more information! Pre-registration required BARKETRY start September 19 to Monday 5 sessions 5 sessions includes materials MACRADE start date 10.16 international Thursdays 4 sessions fee $2,000 materials materials OPEN HOUSE Sun. Sept. 14 1-5 pm Come In and see all our new yarns, knitting, and weaving supplies. MACRAME SPINNING starts Sept. 18 9 p.m. on Tuesday 3 sessions fee $10.00 use of materials & use of spinning equipment INTERMEDIATE CROCHET starts Sept. 13 3-5 p.m. on Sundays 3 sessions fee $8.00 20% off class materials 100% $8.00 20% off class materials Lawrence ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ 730 Massachusetts ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ARE YOU FEELING LIKE THE FASTER YOU GO THE BEHINDER YOU GET? Let us help you get it together. Attend the Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop Workshop Topics include: Time Management, Textbook Reading, Notetaking, and Testing. Thursday, September 11 6:30 to 10:00 (p.m.) 300 Strong Hall Please bring along one of your textbooks. For more information call or come by the Student Assistance Center, 864-4064. 121 Strong Hall. ASTA ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Flowers by Alexanders roller skates from $45 Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Mass. 842-312 1339 Mass. 842-3131 91 ti Choose a TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED 58C or 59 and get FREE Solid State Software Libraries. TI Programmable 59 - reg. $300 cash price - $259.00 $40 or more value 1 FREE module† with purchase of a T1-58C plus $98 or more value 2 FREE modules† & PPX Membership with purchase of a T1-59 TI Programmable 58C - reg. $130.00 cash price - $108.00 Choose from these. APPLIED SURVANCE MODULE INVESTMENT MODULE SURVIVING MODULE MARINE ARVICHTION MODULE NUTRITION MODULE LEGISURE LIBRARY MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS DECISIONS MODULE MARM UTEITIES MODULE ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MODULE FARMING MODULE RPM SIMULATOR MODULE POOL WATER ANALYSIS MODULE and get FREE Solid State Software Link $40 or more value 1 FREE module† with purchase of a TI-58C plus $98 or more value 2 FREE modules† & PPX Membership with purchase of a TI-59 TI Programmable 58C - reg. $130.00 cash price - $259.00 APPLIED STATISTICS MODULE R-1 INVESTMENT MODULE SAVVETING MODULE MARINE NAVIGATION MODULE AVIATION MODULE LEISURE LIBRARY MODULE APPLYED STATISTICS MODULE B.I. INVESTMENT MODULE SURVEYING MODULE MARINE NAVIGATION MODULE AVIATION MODULE LEISURE LIBRARY MODULE SECURITIES ANALYSIS MODULE BUSINESS DECISIONS MODULE MARK UTILITIES MODULE ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MODULE FARMING MODULE APM SHOWROOM MODULE POOL HISTORY ANALYSIS MODULE Now's the time to get all the calculator you need. You don't have to know how to program to get all the benefits available with a T1 Programmable. These solid state library modules are preprogrammed to help solve problems in Engineering, Business, Finance. And there is a separate module for teaching steps in each module you can save your own personal programming for those classes which need it most. TI Programmables lead the field in performance, longevity and value The TI-59 has up to 960 program steps or up to 100 memories. Magnetic card read write capability lets you record your own custom programs or those received from PPX (Professional Program Exchange.) The T1-58C features up to 480 program steps or 60 patients data and program information even when that retains data and program information. the calculator is turned off. And free modules now give you that edge you need to succeed. From now until October 31, 1980 is your special opportunity to purchase one of the world's most advanced programmable calculators. And, get a minimum of $40 worth of free software modules with a TI-58C. Or, when you buy a TI-59, get a minimum of $80 worth of software modules and an $18 one-year membership. This will allow you to select up to 3 programs (from over 5,000 written by professionals in your field of study). With a free bonus on the software, you'll want to enhance your TI-Programmable. Now is the time to buy. Come in, we'll show you what a TI-Programmable can do for you. **"For use with TI-59 only"** Jayhawk Bookstore KU - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) KU 8-5 Mon.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. 843-3826 - Push B + W Erlangements Special PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES - Rush Services Available on Black and White Dashboards. e. Overture - 16x20" B + W Prints from color or Black and White film - Black and White Prints from slides in 2 days * *15x20" B + W Prints from colour or Black and white - 4x6° Color Prints from 35mm - A48* Color Prints from 35mm * Charges Available Te K U I Departments Available To K. U. Departments 1741 MASSACHUSETTS OVERLAND PHOTO Phone 841-9730 SVA FILMS (1967) Wednesday, Sept. 10 Accident Thursday, Sept. 11 Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands the second collaboration of Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter (the first was written for the book providing examination of a professor, the student he loves and the others who contract them. Excellent performances by the students of Stanford Stanley Baker, Jacqueline Sassard (a the student and Michael York make this a complex, challenging film) (105 min). Dona Fiori is prepared to settle down with her calm second husband until her first wife, Diana, leaves and, to death, comes back as a ghost. Based on Jorge Amado's autobiotic novel, this movie follows the story of Sena Barga as Dona Fiori. Directed by Bruno Barrett (106 min.) Portuguese Friday, Sept. 12 Manhattan The Grateful Dead Movie Supervised by Jerry Garcia, the Grateful Grateful is an unputupid unique unquestion- ing of a Dead concert as they are 20 of their greatest numbers; the film also features a stunning animation as it prepares for Sam's. Directed by Garcia and Leon Gast. Plus: "Murray Mennaquines" (141 min.) Saturday, Sept. 13 Manhattan 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 3.50, 7.00, 9.50 The Grateful Dead Movie 12:00 Midnight. Sunday, Sept. 14 Pinnochio Don't be刷 off by the Disney name, this is a brilliant work of animation, bold, colorful and scary, and much too good for anyone. The story of Kirmidi Ward Kirmidi, Carmine Celineo's story of the puppet who wanted to be a resurrectionist, set against the backdrop of a by whale becomes a brilliant fantasy. Plus: "Gertie the Dinosaur" and "Good Deed Good." (B8/127) color: 200- Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be shown at Woodstock Auditorium at 10:30 AM, Friday through Saturday, 11:00 AM, Friday, Saturday, Populer and Sunday. Tickets available from www.bushbrooktickets.com. Tickets available at bushbrooktickets.us, USA Union, 4th level, Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments at the event. The Kansan Ad number is 864-4358 --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 DAVID GRISMAN QUINTET and THE DILLARDS Friday, September 19, 8:00 p.m. at the UPTOWN THEATER Tickets: $8.00 or with KUID $7.00 Available at the SUA office in the Union. Antibiotic study centers on Kansas plants The disease-fighting compounds found in Kansas plants may be the antibiotics of the future, according to the author, professor of medicinal chemistry. By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter "The literature is full of reports that mention Mitscher, in higher plants." Mitscher said. Mitscher has been investigating plants like the sunflower and jimmycorn to develop folklore for planting the idea of researching plant antibiotic activity. "I didn't stumble on unrevealed truths," he said. "Folklore suggests that the extracts from higher plants are effective in treating some kinds of illnesses." Mitscher said indigenous peoples, such as American Indians, had very old recipes for curing diseases by using plants. Mitscher said his research had systematized the search for plants that could be used to treat diseases. He said his search had uneasured results but he has achieved for effectiveness against established antibiotics such as penicillin and tetracycline. THE ESTABLISHED antibiotics, which are prepared from soil microorganisms, lose their effective compounds. Mitcher said. New antibiotics must be found to take their places, he said. New antibiotics may come from Kansas plants, collected from the countryside by a team of graduate researchers. The direction of a research assistant. When the-plants are brought back to the lab at KU, their chemical compounds are extracted and the testing for antibiotic activity begins. IT TAKES six months to three years to determine what compounds are needed for the plant to perform its chemical complexity and how easily the plant's compounds can be purified. The testing involves adding chemical compounds from a plant to screen plants. The microbes are related to those that cause skin boils, diphtheria, tuberculosis and yeast infections, which especially afflict women. Several local plants have been found to contain active antibiotics effective against skin bolls, yeast infections and tuberculosis-causing organisms, he said. The licorice root, used to flavor root beer and chewing tobacco, has been found to contain compounds that have anti-fungi properties, Mitscher said. It takes years of testing before compounds from raw plant extracts are ready for commercial use. It also universities that can develop machines that do not have, Mitcher said. Private firms, who do have the resources, have tested active compounds discovered by Mitscher's research. The effectiveness of the compounds proved to have antibiotic activity, and that they were documented for private firms to approve expensive commercial testing. K. U. Students... Keep up-to-date at a discount. Last Chance Now you can s entertainment advantage of T Just $14.49 a se Morning-evenin Mail this cou KANSAS C 932 MASS LAWF Fall This pa suspende service is no registration a Now you can save money while staying informed about news, views, entertainment and everything happening around you by taking advantage of The Kansas City Times/Star Student discount offer. Just $14.49 a semester ($14 + 49 sales tax) Morning-evening with Sonsy Mail this包裹到: CARRING MESSAGE TIMES/STAR CIRCULATION 932 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE, KS 66044 The Kansas City Times/Star Student Discount Coupon Offer limited to full time students of this university who enclose payment with their order. It is made only to areas where delivery is made by a carrier or agent of the Times/Star. Fall 1980 Semester Rate: $14.49 This price includes consideration for non-delivery when classes are suspended for holidays, fall or winter breaks or other periods when service is not requested. The offer becomes effective the day of registration and expires the last day of finals. Date ___ Name ___ Address ___ City State Zip Phone Apt Student I.D. # University Signed ___ Times STAR Spirit Squad Mike Person AUDITIONS Informational Meeting Monday, Sept. 15, 5 p.m. Allen Field House Clinics Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Sept. 15, 16, 17, 5 p.m. Tryouts Thursday, Sept. 18 All requirements for the spirit squad, mike person will be explained at the meeting September 15. No previous experience necessary. Minorities encouraged to participate. ROCK ROLL September 10, 11, 12 and 13 US Mon. and Tues. 99' pitchers all night! Thursday Drink and Drown $4.00 guys $3.00 girls Wednesday—Ladies Night free beer for ladies 7:00-9:00 PM A G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa Smooth Sailing. Timberland Available in Men's Styles in yles C. E. F. Available In Men's and Women's Styles Genuine hand sewn unlined slip-on boat船, lightweight and made from the finest quality waterproof leather. Padded leather tongue provides extra comfort. Unique slip-proof, long wearing Timberland*/Vibram* boat sole. Arensberg's =Shoes 819 Mass, 843-3470 Where Styles Happen Summer Clearance All Short Sleeve Shirts 1/2 price Movin' On JEANS $7.00 off to $26.00 All Painters Pants by ELY $9.95 to $17.50 BRITTANIA Gals Jeans $19.95 to $30.00 Th night prov north C al J Th of S elec Inc. for taxi By JI Staff the i for a West LEVI'S LEVI'S LEVI'S general jeans Store Hours Mon., Wed., Fri. 10:00-6:0 Tues., Thurs - 10:00-9:0 VISA* master charge 8 VISA+ reader charge Levi's ONE THOUSAND Massachusetts Mon., Wed., Fri. 10:00-6:00 Tues., Thurs - 10:00-9:00 Sat. - 9:00-5:00 1 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 Page 7 City approves bids on airport By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter The Lawrence City Commission last night accepted two bids for improvements at the municipal airport in north Lawrence. The Total Electric Construction Co. of Shawnee submitted the low bid for electrical work and Hamm Asphalt, Inc., of Lawrence submitted the low bid for the paving and building of a new taxiway. A $1.5 million Federal Aviation Administration grant will be used to pay for 90 percent of the improvements, and sharing money will provide the rest. The $200,000 remaining from the grant will be spent for a parking area for the event. COMMISSIONERS ALSO approved the issuance of $280,000 in notes to pay for a fire station and equipment in West Lawrence. Using a city beautification ordinance, the commission declared two houses blighted. One is at 512 Locus St. and the other is at 535 Elm St. Half-buried in the yard of the house on Locust Street is an old Volkswagen. "I move we send an exterminator out to kill the bug," Commissioner Barkley Clark said. "They might use it as a playhouse for Commissioner Marci Fraccaccio. The commission voted four to one, with Francis dissenting, to require the committee to conduct an audit. The property owners will have 20 days notification to correct the conditions. The commission approved a site plan submitted two weeks ago by Phil Bay of Bay Real Estate for a small shopping center. City planning officials have been unable to meet with the owners of the apartments, Gold Crown Properties of Mo., to gain an easement for the sewer. CONSTRUCTION OF THE shopping center will require a storm sewer in the parking lot of the Gatehouse Apartments on 28th Street. way stop signs at the intersection of Clinton Parkway and Kasold Drive. Clinton Parkway becomes 23rd Street east of Iowa Street. Clark said that with the new shopping center, tenants of the Gatehouse and Park 25 apartments would have flooding without the storm sewer. "In a way, it's too bad because it's the same story as it happened, along Clinton Parkway. Clark is." Wait, is that a comma after "Clinton Parkway"? No. Is it a colon? Yes. So the sentence is: "In a way, it's too bad because it's the same story as it happened, along Clinton Parkway. Clark is." The commission also approved four- Commissioners also approved a 45 mph speed zone on the parkway. COMMISSIONERS REQUESTED investigation of charges that the East Lawnbridge Improvement Association is seeking to have an administrator for a $20 commercial membership. City guidelines allow a $1 membership fee. Enter The Chancellor's Cup Bike Race This spectacular event will take place on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 10:00 a.m. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson Center. Recreation Services 864-3546 RUSTY'S IGA FOOD CENTERS, LAWRENCE, KS RUSTY'S IGA FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE, KS * NORTHSIDE 2ND & LINCOLN 843-5733 * SOUTHSIDE 23RD & LOUISIANA 843-8588 * HILLCREST 9TH & IOWA 843-2313 * WESTRIDGE 6TH & KASOLD 841-0144 * BAKERY 842-1473 Good Value Macaroni & Cheese Dinner 7 ½ oz. boxes 5/$1.00 Good Value Chunk Light Tuna oil or water packed 6 ½ oz. can 69c Limit 2 with each $10.00 purchase 6th & Kasold 23rd & Louisiana 901 Iowa 608 North 2 Go Jayhawks Beat Oregon! KU Ad Prices Good Through 9-15 * NORTHSIDE 2ND & LINCOLN 843-5733 * SOUTHSIDE 23RD & LOUISIANA 843-8588 * HILLCREST 9TH & IOWA 843-2313 * WESTRIDGE 6TH & KASOLD 841-0144 * BAKERY 842-1473 Good Value Macaroni & Cheese Dinner 7 ½ oz. boxes 5/$1.00 Good Value Chunk Light Tuna oil or water packed 6 ½ oz. can 69c Limit 2 with each $10.00 purchase 6th & Kasold 23rd & Louisiana 901 Iowa 608 North 2 Go Jayhawks Beat Oregon! Ad Prices Good Through 9-15 KU Go Jayhawks Beat Oregon! THE FRATERNITY FOR THE 80's $ \Theta X $ THETA CHI $ \Theta X $ Now forming at KU Theta Chi offers: Chapter involvement, Brotherhood, alumni support social interaction and the opportunity to develop your own fraternity programs. Informational-Interest Meetings: Sept. 9, 7:00 p.m. Sept. 10, 2:00 p.m. Sept. 11, 7:00 p.m. Walnut Room, Kansas Union For More Information, Call 864-3559 or 864-4861 or Contact I.F.C.office, room 120, level 3, Kansas Union Fall 1980 Leagues All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 Monday 6:30 Dormitory Tuesday 6:30 All Star Scratch Wednesday 1:00 K.U. Ladies 6:15 All Campus 8:30 Greek Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Friday 4:00 TGIF Sunday 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) P.M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 Bowling - Billiards Amusement Machines Cold Beer Hours Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Sat. & Sun. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM BOWLING IS FUN! Join A Fall League NOW For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 WILDCAT Jay Bowl KANSAS UNION 10 10 10 10 10 10 TONIGHT THE MOFFET-BEERS BAND at the Tee Pee (PARKING) TEE PEE JUNCTION (PARKING) 7/10 of one mile TURNPIKE JOHNNIES MASS ST. 6th St. ALL YOU CAN DRINK $4.00 AT THE DOOR ICE COLD Coors EVERYONE WELCOME The best shakes & malts in town... now cost less! 69¢ 99¢ Regular 85¢ Regular $1.25 IN YOUR FAVORITE FLAVOR Chocolate Strawberry Vanilla Butterscotch Pineapple Banana VISTA HAS S DRIVE-UP WINDOW THIS OFFER GOOD FROM SEPTEMBER 10th THRU SEPTEMBER 14th HOURS: Sun-Thurs — 10:30am-12mid Fri-Sat — 10:30am-1am Vista RESTAURANTS 1527 W. 6th 842-4311 VISTA HAS 2 DRIVE-UP WINDOW Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 198 Consumer Affairs to file for funds A supplemental budget request that the Consumer Affairs Association plans to file this week might stir hot debates in the Student Services committee, a private treasurer, said yesterday. But Abbott said he expected Consumer Affairs to be funded. Debate is nothing new for Clyde Chapman, Consumer Affairs director. He said Student Senate funding had not come without debate since the Senate began partial funding of the office in 1972. The issue that might be raised at next week's budget hearings is whether Consumer Affairs serves enough students to justify student funding, Kevin Boldt, budget co-chairman, said. Chapman said students filed 43 percent of complaints against him. Affairs offices at June 19, 2006. "We had 3,500 people file complaints and another 400 of them were filed by students," he said. LAST SEMESTER, the Student Senate initially denied Consumer Affairs funding during budget discussions. The committee chairs these committees said the office duplicated ser- the Student Senate Finance and Auditing committee overturned that decision, but it granted Consumer of its original $13,388 funding request. vices offered by other student organizations. Last semester's funding will only pay salary until Dec. 18, Chaplainship. Chapman said he would submit a budget request for $7,334, which would be used to pay for the director's salary and a long-distance calling service. Chapman said he also was seeking a 10 percent salary increase to compensate for a heavier job load and inflation. In addition to student funding, Chambers County Attorney Affairs is funded by federal and local funds. r or the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1980, Consumer Affairs received $27,130 from the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act program to pay three other Consumer Affairs employees' salaries. savings. It received funding for half of fiscal 1980 from city and county revenue sharing, totaling $4,300. footlights be formed in two to four weeks and that he would seek committee candidate suggestions from several University presidents before choosing committee members. "I'll talk to Student Senate, SenEx (University Senate executive committee), vice chancellors, Academic Vice President, or appropriate University bodies," he said. Imaginative Cards & Gifts A soon-to-be-appointed search committee should find a new coordinator for the Academic Computer Center by March 1, 1981, William E. Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. Posters, Stationery, etc. 841-6377 Holiday Plaza (across from Greenberg's Dell) Wolfe will leave his post at KU between April 1 and July 1. New computer director to be chosen by March He said the committee would conduct a nationwide search for candidates for the position of director and probably to advertise in national publications. ween april I and say that Hogan said that the committee would THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW MIDNITE SHOW 1st & 2nd Varsity Theatre THE 831st FILM CENTER COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown, 842-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PG Varsity Downtown, 842-1085 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7:30 & 9:20 R THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW MIDNITE SHOW Friday Varsity Theatre Hillcrest 91th & Iowa, 842-8400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 R 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 R 3. Airplane 7:30 & 9:15 PG Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa, 842-8400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 PG 2. The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fumanchu 7:30 & 9:30 PG Sunset West 81st St., 843-8177 The Shining & The Exorcist starts at Oask R SPECIAL ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 HAIRCUT, SHAMPOO, & BLOW DRY $10^00 Good Mon.-Wed. in the month of September. 9th and Vermont 843-4666 open Mon.-Sat. THEATRE SHOW Corn's Studio of Beauty R REDKEN K AVA CARE SKIN CARE MASK CARE HEALTH CARE SATURAL PRODUCTS The Kansan ad number is 864-4358 and Refined Refreshing Plush sweaters, pleated skirts and popular pants set the stage for fall. Mix and match. choosing from a variety of colors and styles. Clothes Encounter ~in step with your style Holiday Plaza 843-5335 25th & Iowa Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358 TONIGHT! Get in FREE with KUID and get House Drinks for $1.00— Ladies get in FREE and get coupons LADIES' NIGHT THURSDAY All Night Long 23rd and Ousdahl IS GAMMONS SNOWBOARD for 2 FREE DRINKS (after 8:00 pm) Southern Hills Shopping Center STUDENT SENATE SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARINGS The supplemental budget hearings request forms are now available in the Student Senate Office, B-105 Kansas Union. The forms are due by 5:00 p.m. September 12. Paid for by the Student Activity Fee HILLEL High Holiday Services September 10 - Wednesdav September 10 - Week 5 Rosh Hashana Services · 7:30 p.m. Ross Mahanasi Forum Room - Kansas Union Point Public Library Onew following - Lawrence Jewish Community Center September 11 - Thursday September 17 - Thursday Rosh Hashana Services - 9:30 a.m. September 12 - Friday L. J.C.C. Rosh Hashana Services - 7:30 p.m. Shabbat Services - 7:30 p.m. L I C September 14, 2019 Rosh Hashana Services - 9:30 a.m. T Kol Nidre - 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union Call Hillel for Reservations September 15 - Friday Pre-fast Dinner - 5:00 p.m. L.C.G. Forum Room - Kansas Union September 26 Saturday September 19 - Friday Yom Kipur Services · 9:30 a.m. L.J.S.C. Yom Kippur Services, Conclusion · 5:00 p.m. Break-fast following For further information, call the Hillel office: 864-3948 K.U. WEEK TONIGHT West World TONIGHT Contemporary Rock From K.C. Ladies Night General Adm. $2.00 Ladies Adm. $1.00 and their 1st draw is Free All Q.S.P. and Corbin Residents get in free with dorm I.D. FRIDAY KELLEY HUNT AND THE KINETICS K.U.I.D. Night General Adm. $2.00 7th Spirit Members $1.50 SATURDAY Double Feature THE CLOCKS - From Wichita AND FRED'S WALLET 10 9:30 Royale (K.MI) Buck Night - $1 Adm. and the 1st pitcher or drink is $1 S Sp Coming Events September 14 JOAN PLAU 19 LUMOUSINE 20 ROBERT FORD 25 RIVENWORK 29 ULTRAVOX Where the stars are 7th & Meaas 842-8930 LAWRENCE Operatcouse Scorecard Universitv Dailv Kansan. September 10. 1980 Page 9 Sports Calendar 10 @30 p.m. — Kansas City Royals at California Angels (KMBZ-AM, KKXX-FM) 11 3:09 p.m. - Kansas City Royals at California Angels - KU vs. Oklahoma City - KU vs. Kentucky in Kansas State侵犯Manhattan 12 30 m - Kansan City 30 m - Kansan City (KMB2 A, KMKF2 A) Ruvolyebukli in Kansan Kansas City Manhattan, Manhattan Toronto tennis vs. —KU woman's tennis vs. Oral Roberts at Manhattan k-p - m-TUJK vs. Kane City Blues RFC at 23 and tow areas and teams. Baton County Community College in Quaker Flats in Quaker Flats of Orange Gauche (KANF) in Orange Gauche (KANF) p-m-Kansas City Royals at Oakland's A team 13 Sports Quiz Q Today's question- In the 1948 Orange Bowl, KU lost to Georgia Tech, 20-14. All-Time lead score, a day later, equaled 12 of KU points on two touchdowns, and a total score of 35 points for the conversions for the other points? The player, who must played on the offensive line, is still closely associated with KU. The last member of the 1989 KU Orange Bowl team to play in an NFL Super Bowl was Larry Brown. In the bowl game, Brown was a sophomore tight end. His last season was 1970. Since then, he has played on the offensive line for the Pittsburgh Steelers and picked up four Super Bowl rings, including one last year. Another member of the Orange Bowl team, wide receiver Ron Jessie, would have played in the playoff games with the Los Angeles Rams if he had not been injured. C Major-league Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE W 8 L Pet. GB New York 86 52 632 - Baltimore 79 73 801 - Milwaukee 78 60 651 - Detroit 71 67 514 - Cleveland 71 67 514 - Cincinnati 70 67 182 % | | W | L | Pct. | GBC | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 87 | 52 | 168 | 50 | 17 | | Oklahoma | 82 | 52 | 168 | 50 | 17 | | Oregon | 69 | 71 | 493 | 18 % | 18 % | | Minnesota | 69 | 71 | 493 | 18 % | 18 % | | Chicago | 58 | 71 | 424 | 32 | 32 | | Cleveland | 54 | 73 | 378 | 32 | 32 | | Seattle | 54 | 87 | 370 | 32 | 32 | NATIONAL LEAGUE W 72 L 53 Pct. GB Montreal 73 74 C45 Philadelphia 72 63 C50 Pittsburgh 62 75 C48 New York 62 75 453 12 % New York 62 75 453 12 % Los Angeles 79 W 10 Pct. GB Houston 78 78 60 Pct. Alcantara 78 78 60 Pct. San Francisco 71 67 574 8 San Diego 71 67 574 8 The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one twelve two three four five six seven eight nine ten 13 word 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 Each additional word w AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanas will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the Kansan business office at 814-8388. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 884-4152 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible of fellow Saints? Build a Bible study. Tues. 9:20 p.m. Parish Bible build every Tuesday. Tues. 9:20 p.m. Parish Bible build every Tuesday. Tues. 9:20 p.m. Dollar dollar pitchers, Monday Tuesday, and durey at 8 a.m. Monday, W10 W28 W30. Durey at 8 a.m. Tuesday, W10 W28 W30. INTRA INTRAMURAL GOLF Every Wednesday starting Sept. 10 at 4:00 p.m. at The Orchard's Golf Course. Need more info? Recreation Services 864-3546 97 ENTERTAINMENT Yeah-hah! Sept. 10, 2012 is Blue Grass Time and the Winterside Big Grass Tour. Tickets are available at www.wintersidebiggrass.com. SCHOLARLY, LITERARY, TECHINICAL, MATERIALS & MACHINE J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER. We also have 25,000 $1 price paperbacks. Come in and see what games to see you at Massachusetts. We are at 9:40 AM at $ce schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUIS'S BAIR, 1009 Mass. tt Looking for something new on Sunday? 2019 Come out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 5 p.m. 'till 3 a.m. Membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 **RINGIN' IT ALL BACK HOME**. This week we are going to highlight features from our earliest day. Fast pacing, the use of a variety of Roger Bain, Dr Jack and more Wed, and Thursday. 13, 17, 19, 20, 24, 25, 30, 31, 13, 19, 10, 16, 20, Only on Cable 6 - 9-12 DPUS presents Barry Bernstein sino lacus in-volved music; Fri. Sept. 12, 8 a.m. Lawrence Arts Center. Bring oven rack, soda, bottle, chick stock. 9-12 FOR RENT 6 Bedroom Townhouse Renting - 1½, bath, attached garage, all appliances, you. you'll like our looks. Southern Parkway townhouses, 26 and Kasold, 842-8800; tf www.bedrooms.com For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. May work out part of work if 844-418-351. 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplace 1874-2011 will take students. 2500 6477-2333 6477-2334 bdn. aepi. $350 monthly. All utilities paid. deposit. no. 843. bard-844. 8-5 as-nil. dule. Nice 2-bird, furnished apt. close to K.U. $250/mo. 841-9247. 9-12 New and contemporary 2-level duplex, kitchen, dining room, living room, 2 full bath, garage, kitchen, dining room, living room, garage. call 842-449-8 am-5 p.m. 9-30 Office space at IA 1, 932 Maist. 630 sq. ft. reception room and 3 inner rooms. Minor nursery 820 sq. ft. Call 842-348 or 837-0777. nursery 820 sq. ft. Call 842-348 or 837-0777. *Villa Capri* apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. available. Central air, wall to wall carpet. quiet location. 2% blocks south of the street. 492-903 for 8:30 a.m on weekends. Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrence, daughter's family. 4 siblings. kitchen, dining rm, living rm, library, utility rm, and 2 full bedroom. Newly furnished. Formal Junction Formation call 8-4235 am 4:45 pm. p. 9-30 Available now. large older four bedroom furniture. 180x240. $350. 260 Manhattan $260 mon. Call 855-273-3999. 3 bdm basement spp $200 month. All util- less $100 deposit. Bid 843-264-6944 for jule. 2 bdm. house, clean, quiet, close. 742-5207. Collect. 9-17 For fall or spring, Naimish Hall offers you a private room for an apartment. Good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room, and cleaning supplies and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment limit what you can stay in, Naimish Hall, 1800 Naimish Drive, 834-8359, iff Inferior inferior, i BRAND NEW FOUR-FLEX! For only $295 per month. You can live close to shopping, be surrounded by distance to KU. And you will be the first to receive a home air- refrigerator, disposal 2 dbm, Cedik Dick Edmundson Real Estate at 814-8741 or Bob Mondon Real Estate 893-8632 to see its dmondon real estate. 9-15 Modern, air conditioned large 2 bd. apt, ample storage, available 5-10. 10 Call 484-5265 for details. Available 10. 10 Call 484-5265 for details. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic water heater, 1 bedroom, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-445-8.5 m. 8-p. p.m. Wanted: 1 or 2 Students to assume 9 mo lease on house. $300 per month. #48-5148 KUMC duplexes—reply refurbished 2. KUMC duplexes—reply refurbished 2. Bougainvillea beautiful house! Call 913-345-2800, 10-9. Large 1 bmft afunfamkd put. water paid. Small 1 bmft afunfamkd put. water paid. west sun exposure on bus route, 841-7423. Large modern unimfished 1 bdr. apt., interior w/ large glass doors, Oct 17. Walk to wall car parking, central air conditioning, street parking for only $90 month, and private parking. No robbed no pets. Call 9-11 at 834-4414. For Reni-1, balm, apn, Nice location, 319 For Reni-2, balm, apn, Nice location, 319 carpets, carpet mats, rent mats, rent carpets, 841-827-6060 carpet mats, rent mats, rent carpets, 841-827-6060 New excellent quality bedding—often sold in New York and New Jersey. The Furniture is 100 New York St., 814-352-9680. Mice DR & LR FURNiture; incl. 5 pc. Dc. Furniture and Blinds and Chairstools bpm. 841-0723. A-9 bpm. 841-0723. B-9 FOR SALE WATERBED MATTRESSES $198. 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704. Mass, 852. 265 sq ft. 2 bdm. burgalow, recent extent remedial remodel. 843-7396 call or George Waters. 842-7394 ever or Ketlen Stanley. 843-7396 mass. Haldi Real Field. Estate. 9-12 Mass. 843-7396 1977 Datamap pickup 4 speed, excellent companion service. maintenance: 84-793-6021 after 5 p.m. 0124-675-1000 1964 Chevy 4-door, $277 - $4,3 speed mop -850, battery, $299 good value, 9-10 -850, battery, 811 - 441.478 Alternator, starter and generator special- ly designed for AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 8193-965, 8193-966. 1971 Camerano-Beautiful throughout. Musz Call Andy at 843-908-6567. Cally Andy at 843-908-6567. Papers came due twice. Like new plastic typec tiles on a metal plate, the one piece phone, microscope 802-293, 9-10 Bookcases $30, custom orders taken on caravans, camper vans. M J Stough. 8892. 9-10 8892. WANTED TO BUY - Cameron, any year comp. Call: 212-389-7089 or 378-5043 Call: After 5pm on Wednesdays or Fridays Marmat air receiver Model 18. 14 watts/wchan- al at 0.25% distortion, excellent condition. $175. bicycle: girl, 18-speed, Raleigh, pege- nal, meter, good condition. Cali 641-1875. 9-16 109. MUSTANG. 4, spd. 4 cyl. A.C. 27,000 m silver w./red. 841-199. 9-10 9-10 Drawing Table **30** x **12''** and padded stool *Balloon* $135. CALL 845-0802 after $5. 9-11 Double Bed. Mattress. Box springs. Frame. Good condition. $100 or Best offer. Call 9-10. 78 Mazda GLC, ex. cond., best offer. 842- 5152 9-11 Dolphin Senior 14 ft. Sailboat Good condition. Battery charged. Priced to sell. 82-99-97. 9-11 75 Mustang 2, 4 c.yl., new radials, luggage floor system. Call tom after 6 a.m. at 843-5121. 9-11 Saint Alain cardiology®, $15 and a 4$ x 12$ $small metal or ceramic®, $125 and a 4$ x 12$ $small metal or ceramic®, $125 and a 4$ x 12 Snow skis 19m, with boots. Must sell. Call 841-8874 or 864-3627. 9-12 704 Chevrolet Malibu, PS, PB, AC, AT. Book price $1400, 749-5095 after 5 m days. 1968 Dodge Dart—Automatic Transmission, slant six (6) engine, runs good. $385. 862- 5718 after 5:30 p.m. 9-12 Free dachshund to living home, Health, 841-1094-843, Bid two year old animal 841-1094-843, 843-3533, 9-12 1978 Cullase Sup Salon. 2 Dr. FT. AC, AM- 4k. Blue with white inferior. AC, 2124. Good food-All you can eat. Country Import 10-92 1-92 *eat turkup entrance* 1-92 Brand new Smith-Corona electric type- 454-382-382 and a stenographer machine 9-17 70 V.W. convertible. Very good mechanical condition. $1600. 749-1291. 9-12 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Still in warranty. Good condition, I84-9674. 3-5/14 Ping Pong table. Like brand new. Complete with net and垫盘. 841-1106 9-15 Like new large plush blue dorm carpet. Excellent condition. Must see. Calls 9-15. CARPET for dorm room. $70. CURTAINS must sell. 14-90. PARACHUTE. 9-16. Must sell. 14-90. 75 Honda ST $90. Good Condition, Grain Mileage $30. Call Sarah, 841-2581. PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For protection of the stamped envelope to: D & J Productors, Dek K1, Box 522, Tempe Arizona 85218. 38 mg Honda Hawk II 400 cc. street motorcycles. Takes 1/2 mile, races hard, and farts. offers with helmets. Cradle bates, faring, and comes with helmets. 1977 YAMAHA RD 400, like new, $750, Call- 864-8933 Watson Bulk Film Ladder and 100 feet Bulk Film Ladder Auto Broke Wire $53. Call 864-6933, 9-11 King size Waterbed—heater, liner, liner tuxes. finished frame, 1 yr. old 841-5687, after 5 p.m. 9-12 FOUND Raleigh 10-speed, good condition, worth $89.99. $149.99. SL-81 9-16 a. $100. Ph. 843-6983 A set of keys with the inscription of "sincerity" 9.5: CALL 84-8255, ask for C Chris M. 11 9.5: CALL 84-8255, ask for C Chris M. 11 HELP WANTED Magnifying glass on Crescent Dr. Thurs. 9/4. Describe and claim. 864-359-306. 9-11 Brown beaten to higher 814-982 or 843-825. 9-12 Needed immediately--School or graduate student with a disability. Live in Chicago. Call Dana Way 262-972-1411. The University of Kansas Audio-Reader Network seeks a part time (hourly) community support position to organize volunteer activity, assist and identify eligible listeners and coordinate community involvement. Person will also serve as charitable development. College degree required. College experience. Relative education and graphic literacy ability to interface with grant writing skills. ability to interface with hourly salary. 10-16 hrs. per week. Application deadline 9-11-80. Position available via email at kansas.edu/reader_network. 150 W. 110th, Lawrence. We are an equal opportunity employer. VENDING MACHINE ROUTE PERSON Part-time to work 7.30 a.m. to 11.30 a.m. part time to work 8.30 a.m. to day evening 6-10 p.m., Sunday 8 Wanted - Patient with artistic ability and automotive knowledge to do cut-daw-ing drawing of 29 Ford Roadster Street Rod Wage Cars 1800-4000. #379-5033 Tecumseh, Ks. 9-12 PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS TO PERSONAL CARE PARTY 5-10 hours per week. WEEKS may part time: 5-20 hours per week. Duties may include bathing, transfers to and from wheel chairs, transportation, and delivery. Employer Kentucky, Kentucky, 841-0333. An A-9 11-8 Babystaying for our 4-mon. old in our home, Mon. thru Tue. 8:45 a.m. - 12:45 p.m., 10:00 a.m. Must have own transport to home. Must devote to device this year. 8:43 - 11:23 9:12 - 12:45 Salesperson (male or female) needed at patient desire. Call Duane McWearl 9-125 or patient desire. Call Duane McWearl 9- 125 Applications being taken for kitchen workers, bus people, dishwashers. Apply in person. Country Inn Restaurant. 1350 N. W. 2nd Street. (1) block N. 9-12 turntable entrance). Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must be 21 years old. Wear a jacket, 40 wpm. Average 12½ hours per week. Must be eligible for work study. Contact Abel Handmade 864-6647 or Roderick Hassett 864-6647. Part-time~Local Building Cleaning Service & Office, 5 days per week, hrs. per evening, 5 days per周 842-5300 GRADUATE ASSISTANT ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE ASSISTANCE KANSAS, Lawrence, Assist with special assistance of Kansas law enforcement and compu- rative ordinate activities of large compu- nities. Position available immediately month. Position available immediately bility of rowal. Application deadline description Office, complete position description Office, complete position Vice Chancellor, 231 Stronge Hall, University of Kansas. An affirmative action, equal opportunity program. ATTENTION SKIPERS: Part-time student sales representative position available for job interview promoting high quality skirts and to receive for commission plus free travel. Call or write for an application. Summit Travel (800) 325-0499 (outside Moe). 9-10 (800) 325-0499 (outside Moe). LOST Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Inside blue backpack taken from my ago at 1359 Abbey Road, 88-8731 or 89-4360 No questions asked MISCELLANEOUS SUR TRAVEL Weekend Getaways Presents; The 9th annual Winfield Blue Grass Festival September 19 Festival September 19 $38 (includes transportation and admittance) For more info, drop by the SUA office, or call 841-9732. Reservation deadline Sept. 17. Sign up now, tickets are limited! Yee-hah! September 19-21 is Blue Grass Time again. Camp out with SUA at the 9th annual Winfield Blue Grass Festival and are limited so sign up with 9-10 NOTICE NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE AUTHORIZED LICENSEE membership card gets you $1.00 highballs all right long. Only at your place, THE LOISE WHERE "Partying is our way" ness. SOLAR ENERGY International Club will host a week-long session from 10:30 am, to the Public Library, room 2078, with participants with the Kansas Solar Energy Society at 643 New Hamshire. Theme will be speakers and information discussion high-level questions and inquiries us at either meeting Questions? 843-898-06 PERSONAL DRINK, AND DRIED every night nightnight drink, and McDonald's on 6th ; ghirre drink, and McDonald's on 6th ; ghirre drink, and McDonald's on 6th ; ghirre LOUISSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday basketball and $150 pitches, 70 and MileH. Partying with the boys. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortion Control. Consultation. Tubal Ligation. For Counsel. Consultation. Tubal Ligation. For Counsel. Consultation. Tubal Ligation. W. A. W0093 $t. Overland Park, Kansas t. HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUNGE. Eve- ton on Thursday, backgammon and the atmess- on Tuesday, backgammon and the atmess- on Wednesday, backgammon and the atmess- on Thursday, backgammon and the atmess- on Wednesday, backgammon and the atmess- on Thursday, backgammon and the atmess- on Wednesday, backgammon and the atmess- on Thur PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are only available to ladies every Wednesday. Ladies no charge to Club Lounge, no charge to Club Lounge, 500 Locust, 842-9439. 9-30 SUPER TOGF at THE CLUB LUOUSE 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday PART TIME INTERNSPHIL OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern base company our part-time information opportunity in a information Opportunity Employee M.F. Looking for the perfect gift ideas? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-619-6920. Pleasant Aquarius female invited to meet with attractive Libra male. Call 864-2647 **TGIF AT LOUSES' BAR with $125 pitch-off** Friday from 2 till 6 **Blee there—Alcohol** He Start Need Yes to volunteer to work teacher aids, four days a week for teacher teaches, four days a week for teacher 9-12 In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good food, we offer TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the rooms are furnished only $2.00 The Moffett Beers Band is now holding their spring concerts on Thursday, matches only Call 842-508-9334, 842-508- 9341. Take a break after classes at LOUSE Afternoon specials every day until 6. TENNIS PLAYERS: There's still a lot of good tennis weather left. Make sure your game is on the ball with Hossein BOSHA 8054 for great prices on good strings and racquets. Professional fringers: K U. Vartanian 9-18 FRESHMAN LADIES! Are you alone and lonely? Are you bored with being alone? Find Sid at the Main Union—8 p.m. Sept. 9 I'd rather have a bottle of meat for me than labored greens. Greens Tavern 52d, 52d, 9-12 Portable Dishwasher. Excellent condition. Portable Call 842-753-1920. 841-845-684. Keep trying! The Mofet Beers Band has an immediate opening for road crew assistant. Call 864-2033 or 842-5068 or 843-9324. 9-17 SUA Indoor Recreation ORGANIZATIONAL Room-Kansas University, Football. Table Tennis, Pool and Bowling. Join the fun! 9-11 SUA Indoor Recreation BEGINNER'S Backcramming, Bridge, Chess, Scrabble, and learn to play or teach others to play Tired of cleaning and jerking 50 lb. kebjs G.L.抬Lipows West now has their party G.L.抬Lipows Cut out of the side, anywhere in the city. Call in your salary. 841-8848 9-10 Its Wednesday and GNO. AI THE HARBOUR LITES, all SINGLE women receive 7-50 prizeflats, you Attractive, partying female invited to Queen conference; invited to party; and party conceived. Cail Mine 864-231-8900 Skydive. Look before you leap. Learn how to stay safe in the sky. Lower student-instructor ratios. superior safety record. 7 year history. Contact Tennis coach. 144 N.W. 85th st. 6:16. Trucks. Kk 66177 Experienced skydivers trained in $12 +$ experience and team with 75 A jump, SCR. SCS, NSCR I E dive contact Rick (913) 288- 0235, 144 W. St. Brooka, St. Koehl, Ks. 6617-67. ATTENTION: Established bran band is sensitive. Serious injuries only Call 841-760-5255. Serious injuries only Call 841-760-5255. SERVICES OFFERED COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-9:30 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2½ EACH HOUSE OF USHER MAZINGER'S CITY HOME THE BINE GARAGE-Complete professional bakeware repair and guarantee. Guaranteed and readily available. Call & Total Overhauls 'Call 814-2781, if you need help with your bakeware or students. The only European training salon in aweworthy Guaranteed kit, no barriers to participation. appointment Monday thru Saturday, 8am - 5pm. Kegs and Case Bear. Long neek Bucket Bot. 23rd. Deposit. Greens Tavern. 9-12 28rd. 9-12 For the finest complete service on most imports-STRAIGHT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Datsun, Flat, Honda, Toyota 43-96-26 Banjo and guitar lcons with (Chris Bluggs, Benjamin Tucker), and (James P. Pilon) pilations in 1787 and 1790. Bali-481-8417. Instruction in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu Monkey, Preying Man. 841-754. 9-12 ENSTEIN'S TUTORS. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call Bard; 841-7683. English, grammar, compo- sition, research, typing, call Handy; 917-7040. Astrology provides a frame of reference for your predictions. If you are confused about where you stand, Astrology will strengthen more clearly identified this could make a difference for you. Call 843-1850 or visit astrologystudios.com. LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes that start Monday September 15. **D-** LeBron James will play at Nathaniel Southern. VOULEZ-VUOUS PARLIER FRANÇAIS! French host for night and French and French. Grammar culture, or why not cooking? Tutor or small group. Call 842-8434; dinner tutor or small group. Call 842-8434; dinner tutor or small group. Call 842-8434; dinner TYPING RESUMES PREPARED to suit your budget. Professionally written and typed. Call 769- 2978 evenings. Typing pages discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6097 after 5 and weekends. if Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, music, electric IBM Scalable Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-9554. Mrs. Wright. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective Call. Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 12-8 The University Daily Experienced K.I.T. typist for Correcting Writing and proofreading. Send resume, Sandy, evening and weekends, 748- 9181. Typet Editor, IBM Pixe/Eltis, Quality homeowner, editing layout. Call Joan, 842-756-0391. CITY 412-2001 ENCORE COPY CORPS 139th Battalion I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf Accurate, experienced typist HM corrobing Selective, Call Dona 842-2744 Experienced typet -thesis, disortations, selecting letter B, after 5 a.m. 842-2100 Barb, after 5 a.m. 842-2100 IRON FENCE TYPEING SERVICE. Fast re- tailable, accurate IBM i4820, elite 8422- 100 and 1000 and weekend. For PROFESSIONAL TYPEING Call Mfzra 841-4980. Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-15- 9350 Theses, Dissertations, etc. IBM Selectric or entered on computer via your account 841-624, after 5-30 9-12 WANTED GOLD--SILVER--DIAMONDS. Clam rings. 6" x 7" x 3-1/2". Free pick-up. 841-746-4920 more. Free pick-up. 841-746-4920 Buying gold. Paying $80-$140 for men's groomsmen. Buying silver. Paying $60-$90 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza, #824-958-900 Professional couple w/ 4 children seek non-smoking student with own transportation to school. Send resume to 3 or 4 mornings a week or T & Th after 10 am. Applicant must be Bdtrd 86 at ii4l for interview appt. Person to share now 2 bdmr. apt. -5 pm. Person to share now 2 bdmr. apt. -5 pm. studios and new call. Mall 864-4439 or studios and new call. Mall 864-4439 or Male roommate for Jayhawkter Towers. $110/mon. For this semester, 79-213. Female roommate share nice 2 bbm house, 9-12 p.m. i p.m. 8-14:260 after 8-14:260 10-12 p.m. Female roommate to share nice 2 bpm apt, 8-14:260 after 8-14:260 for 1 bbm Call Sara at 739-943- 9-12 RIDERS depart Wichita MA. de. 8-14:260 after 8-14:260 Wednesday 8-14:260 - 8-14:265 or 8-168 - 8-168 Non-smoking roommate to share with guest Malta Old English Apst. Rent $55.61, Con- trol $20.25 Rider from Topaka to Lawrence. We arrive MWP 4:00, TR Leave 4:30, Call $25.87 Female roommate盯住 at Jayhawk Town- $75 a month U什業 Pd 9-11 2263 2264 Roommate for 2 bdmr apt. jayhawk West. Roommate for 1 bdmr apt. jayhawk East. Nooning roommate for apt. near campus. All other vices or habits acceptable. Jeanie, 841-6638 or 841-3425. 9-12 2 nice mates on carpet laundry, partially furnished on carpet laundry. ROOOMMATE (Site Gas Station) ROOOMMATE WANTED. Responsible K.U. 10-11 physically major to share 2 bdmr 1/2 both fully furnished apt. located at 1012 Birmy Street + 1/2 utilized. Call 841-6638 accommodations 0.19 Will buy baseball cards, 1979 and earlier. For more information call 843-0530. Ask for Randy. 9-12 Female roommate for nice apt, close to Pool. AC, utilities $72.12 b1-3898 b1-3899 ORDER FORM KANSAN ORD CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write Ad Here: Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 14 awards or less 1 times 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 .02 .03 .04 .05 .08 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 NO DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY ... Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY ... Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: 1 1 University Daily Kansan, September 10, 1980 Brett-less KC falls to Angels From Kansan wire service ANAHEM, Calif. — The Kansas City Royals backed closer to clinching the American League West last night when the second-placed Texas Rangers lost. The Royals, however, also lost, for the sixth time in their last eight games. The California Angels beat the Royals, 4-3. The magic number fell to seven because Texas lost to the Oakland A's, 6-3. The magic number is the combination of Kansas City victories and Texas losses that will clinch the division for the Royals. The Royals, playing without George Brett for the third straight game, fell behind early when California scored a goal in the second and cracked a solo home run in the third. Kansas City Royals' Magic Number Without Brett, who hurt his right hand Saturday in Cleveland, the Royals have a 19-18 record. Team officials are confident they will win against majors with a .396 average, will return. He still needs 55 plate appearances to qualify for the batting championship. y California's Frank Tanana, 8-10, had Kansas City shut out until former Angel Dave Chalk singled in John Wathan with two out in the seventh. Tanana departed with none out in the ninth after Willie Mays Aikens hit a two-run homer. Mark Clear finished and earned his ninth save. The Angels scored in the first off Paul Splittorff, 11-10, when Dickie Thon doubled, moved to third on a groundout on Carney Lansford's RBI groundout. Ford smashed his seventh homer of the year with two out in the third for a 2-0 lead. The Angels added their final runs in the seventh when Bobby Grich singled, took third on a double by Rick Miller and scored on right fielder Jose Cardinale's throwing error. Then singled home Miller. The Royals still lead Texas by 17½ games and lead third place Oakland by 18%. Kansas City has 23 games left to play. Texas has 24, Oakland 22. In the other American League pennant nash, Baltimore closed to within three games of the East division-leading New York Yankees with a 2-0 victory over Detroit. The Yankees, meanwhile, lost to Toronto, 6-4. The victory was the Orioles third in two days, during which time they have been undefeated. OU Ducks waddle on By TAMARA SWENSON Oregon Daily Emerald Sports Editor EUGENE, Ore.—Oregon fans have heard more about scandals, penalties and indictments in the past month than they have about Oregon Duck football. Then there are the penalties. Eight players have been indicted by a Lane County grand jury for charges ranging from telephone credit card fraud to shooting another football players who have transferred to other universities also have been named in indictments. THE PACIFIC Ten Conference has ruled the Ducks and four other universities—Southern Cal, UCLA, Arizona State and Oregon State—ineligible for post-season play. The Pac-10 also placed Oregon's athletic program on two years of probation, took away three football scholarships for next year and ruled that the Ducks must forfeit any victories in which ineligible players participated during Coach Rich Brooks' reign. A variety of penalties also were imposed by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, including a one-time first-year starting quarterback Reggie Ogburn. "What's more important is what happens every Saturday." said yesterday. "But they are past events now. WHAT HAPPENS this Saturday will be important for the morale of the Oregon football team. After a 35-25 loss to Stanford in the season opener, the Ducks, 6-5 last year, have been working to correct their mistakes and prepare for Kansas. The Jayhawks open their season Saturday in Eugene. "Playing an early first game was better than if we had been idle," Brooks said. "We can correct our mistakes. Players don't know what theirs are yet." VIN Meisner Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! But the early game also had its problems. Two of Oregon's top cornerbacks are out of action. One, Dennis Clay, broke his hand against Stanford's quarterback and was not given to other, Kenny Lawler, twisted an ankle and is not expected to play. 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza RICK'S BIKE SHOP 400 BIKES in stock ph.841-6642 EVERYTHING YOUR COLLEGE RING SHOULD BE, AT A PRICE FAR LESS THAN GOLD. REAL ESTATE BETTER NATION STATE WEEKEND HONORARY AWARD THE DUCK FOOTBALL team will be better prepared defensively for KU; "Kansas, like Stanford, is a throwing team," Brooks said. "They said last spring that they wanted to put more pressure on running, but we have yet to see that." LUSTRIUM RING Take Advantage of Our Ring Days! Special Price—$78.00 September 10 and 11 High School Ring Trade-ins Accepted! statusually, the two teams (Oregon and Stanford) were almost identical," Brooks said. "This weekend, I think you will see us run the option more. Reggie Obgnan has great running ability. I also know pass options will be exercised more." The Ducks will be going into Saturday's game smartening from their loss to Stanford, but starting quarterback Oxburn will return. KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store Level 2 Main Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union "we have the depth to cover these positions right now," Brooks said. "But if there are any injuries against Kansai, the situation will become difficult." without tackle Kevin McGill, who bruised his foot. OFFENSIVELY, the Ducks will be "Whatever they throw at us, I know the team wants to win. And there is no reason not to." YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students. take this ad and shove it... INTO YOUR POCKET and go to Kief's, the Sanctuary or SUA for your tickets to the Johnny Paycheck show also featuring BILLY SPEARS Oct. 25 • 8 p.m. • HOCH TICKETS $7.50 and $6.50 less student discount JOHN WARD, SANCTUARY PRODUCTIONS AND SUA Special Events 842-2001 SUA Special Events Attention: Thesis Copiers Below are the comparative prices for July 1980 making 5 copies of a 100-page thesis onto 25% rag paper-collated. We called and found: Kinko's... $35.00 Lawrence Printing... $35.00 Encore Copy Corps...$26.25 House of Usher... $35.00 Lennar County Cooper Lawrence Kansas Why pay more? ENCORE COPY CORPS That's why you'll say Encore (We also feature typing, editing, and binding) "Your One Stop Thesis Shop" 25th & Iowa (Holiday Plaza) IT'S STANDING UP AND YELLING FOR THE BLUE. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! K. U. Football gives you five great home games! Sept. 20 Pittsburgh Sept. 27 Louisville Oct. 11 Nebraska Oct. 18 Iowa State Nov. 8 Oklahoma ATTENTION STUDENTS! ATTENTION STUDENTS: Season Football Tickets Still Available Sept. 9-20 - K.U. Ticket Office, Allen Field House - SUA Office S! - Satellite Union KU Also, for your convenience, Sept. 9-12 from 10-4 p.m., a table will be set up in front of Wescoe. 7 KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, September 11, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 14 USPS 650-640 Council considers enrollment system By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Enrollment hassles facing KU students at the beginning of each semester may be a thing of the past. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said recently that he expected the question of pre-employment education to be a priority. Proposals for pre-enrollment at the University have been batted back and forth among committees, administration and student groups for almost a decade. THE MOST RECENT action by the Recruitment and Retention committee, which deals with pre-enrollment, was a proposal to vice chair the Board of the Municipal Council to consider the issue of pre-enrollment. Deanell Tacha, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and committee chairman, said yesterday that the committee had recommended pre-enrollment to improve student advising. Tacha said that the Council and vice chairmen should approve the principle and then make specific proposals. Two years ago an extensive proposal for installing a pre-enrollment system at KU was submitted to the administration with the approval of the University Council, a representative body of the University composed of students and faculty. Since then, action concerning the proposal has been sporadic. Tacha said the proposal submitted two years a probt would provide a basis for diagnosis. That proposal was based on a system in use at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Students at Iowa enroll before finals for the following reasons: at one of 24 computer terminals on campus. OFFICIALS AT IOWA it said the cost university close to $80,000 to install the system. It says it could pay for a full year. The difference in cost depends on the type of system installed. William E. Hogan, associate manager, IBM Corporation, seeks between $61,000 and $110,000 to install a similar system. Both an on-line terminal system and a batch system were considered in the report, Richard Mann, University director for institutional research, said. The on-line system, which is used at Iowa, would allow a student to bring a completed schedule to a computer terminal and to work on his schedule with an operator. Mann said he thought the on-line system was best for students. "I believed that that was the most responsive approach to take," he said. "Once you put a request in (the terminal) you have a chance to sit down at the screen and work with the system." Mann said a student could revise the schedule if the classes and times he wanted were filled. Students could receive a partial schedule, he said, and during regular enrollment add and change the schedule. He said students who pre-enrolled would get first chance at classes and times. Those who did not bother to pre-enroll would have to settle for the remaining available classes, he said. THE BATCH COMPUTER system would take all of the schedules submitted by students and process them. He said that a student could receive a schedule that was totally different than the one submitted because the computer would place a student in a room where he could face, even though it was not at the requested time. With both systems, students could rearrange their schedules and add drop classes in the summer. Hogan said he thought the on-line terminal system was preferred by those considering the He said that before a decision was made He said that before a decision was made SEE PRE-ENROLLMENT page 5 See PRE-ENROLLMENT page 5 Lowman to return to teaching; leaves KU School of Medicine James T. Lowman has resigned as dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Kansas College of Health Sciences. His resignation is effective Nov. 1. Lowman, 49, has been dean since 1977. "For a number of professional and personal reasons, I am anxious to return to my work in pediatrics—the teaching, research and patient care opportunities," he said. Lownan said that, when his tenure as dean is over, he would return to his clinical research in the program. "In the beginning," he said, "when I go back, I'll try to sharpen my clinical skills and try to help develop some new programs in the department." of leukemic cells. He also will resume his teaching duties. He would not say what any new programs might entail, but he said he would not be assuming any administrative duties. "I chose to make this move," Lowman said, "and I'm very happy to be going back to See RESIGNS page 5 1985 CHRISTODD/Kansan staff A one-car accident on U.S. S9, 58 about $51/2 miles south of Lawrence, killed. According to the state Highway Patrol, the accident happened when I one woman and injured another yesterday. Clara Davey, 69, of Baldwin, tried to avoid another accident when a truck attempted to pass an automobile was pronounced at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The driver of the vehicle. Hill's车 crossed the southbound lane, landed in a ditch and the car, Francis Hill, 62, also of Baldwin, is listed in satisfactory condition. flipped onto its top. Davee was thrown from the car into the ditch. College works for improved advising A new advising program in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will try to give students a sense of continuity by providing permanent advisers, Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English and coordinator of the program, said yesterday. The program will match each new student with a faculty member who will advise the student. In past years, some of the 10,000 students in the College complained that they had to adjust to new advisers every semester. Goldman said, "some students didn't know they had advisers." Last year, while preparing the new advising program, Goldman asked members of an English composition class who their advisers were. "Ninety percent of them didn't think they had advisers," he said. "And half of the students who knew they had them didn't know their advisers' names." ONE STUDENT SAID The college's advising person made her feel like just another student number. juniors. 'They didn't even think to ask me whether I could handle it.' "When I was a freshman, the advisers seemed really impersonal and set in their ways," Sue Carroll, Anchorage, Alaska, sophonore, said. "They told me, 'you can't take that class,' it's for Under a program begun this summer, onl$^2$ faculty members who volunteer and are interested in helping in the process advise students. During the year, they will be required to set aside at least three hours a week for the students they advice, Goldman said. "As we gradually phase in the new advising program, students should sense that they are talking to people who know what they are talking about and who want to help." Goldman said. LAST SPRING, Goldman recruited 56 faculty members to advise freshmen and sophomores during summer orientation. The advisers were each assigned about 60 students, whom they will continue to advise for two years. After that, the advisors would be in their academic departments, Goldman said. The College will recruit about 120 more faculty advisers during the next two years, Goldman said. As a result, he said, each faculty member eventually will have fewer students to advise and each student in the College will have at least one person to turn to. "I believe that every faculty member ought to advise; it's part of education." Goldman said. "But I also believe faculty members should be able to choose at what level they wish to advise." SOME FACULTY members resented the previous program because it required every summer faculty member to advise freshmen and sophomores, Goldman said. New students were funneled into departments and assigned to the faculty adviser on duty at the time. Then, for the next two years, the students theoretically stayed with the same adviser, Goldman said, but only 50 percent of them actually returned. "The old program was due for a change, G. Caron." There was a lot of unhappiness withadjustment. The College has steadily revised its advising system for the past five years, he said. In 1977, a College Assembly task force studied the system and recommended changes. Two years later, Goldman outlined the present policy from the committee's findings. After a six-month search, Goldman was appointed coordinator of the program but he still teaches two English classes and advises 30 students. he said. "I decided I had to live under my own system," he said. Goldman said that although the new program was an improvement, it was not perfect. The new guidelines do not provide permanent advisers for students in the Bachelor of General Studies program, he said. "But we're working on them," Goldman said. "I'm trying to tackle one problem at a time." Lisa Eklund, Kansas City, Kans. senior, dodges streams of water spewing from sprinklers near the chancellor's residence on Lilac Lane. BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Symposium to help minorities set goals for college careers Staff Reporte. By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Helping black students make the most of their college careers is the idea behind the Black Awareness Seminar/Symposium, to be held this Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union. The theme of the two-day seminar, sponsored by KU's Black Student Union, is "Now's the Time, Let's Get Serious." Featured speakers include Bernard Franklin, chairman of the Board of Regents, and Gilbert Parks, a psychiatrist from Topeka. ACCORDING TO Rita Holmes, vice president of Black Student Union, the program is geared toward freshmen and incoming students because she's been a strong supporter on setting meaningful goals for a college career. Other topics, such as self-evaluation and job planning, should be helpful to all students, she said. The seminar is not intended solely for black students and faculty, Holmes said, but for anyone who is interested in the problems of race and racism in society. It is free and open to the public. The seminar will begin at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room. Franklin will give the main address from 7 to 9 p.m. He said yesterday that his speech would encourage students to develop a sense of purpose while they were still in school. "My part of the program deals with helping students, especially minority students, gain some perspective on what they are doing in college." Franklin said. "Many students go through college without asking themselves important questions like 'why am I here?' and where am I going?" They wind up in culls and tails. "They're not asking advice." The need to know how to make an expensive education worthwhile." At 9 p.m., Leon Brady, a 1890 KU graduate, will speak about the upcoming Student Senate elections. Leslie Saunders-Turner, a 1874 KU graduate, will present plans for the Black Career Conference and Job Opportunity Front before the session adjourns at 9:30 p.m. THE PROGRAM WILL resume at 1 p.m. on Saturday with the address by Parks. The topic of his speech is "The Problems and Issues Facing Students of Predominately White Campus." The groups will rejoin at 3:30 p.m. for a final discussion session and a "wrap-up" address by Faye The audience will break into discussion groups at 2 p.m. to talk about solutions to the problems presented in the discussions will be moderated by black face instructors, members, black alumni, speakers and students. A reception will begin at 5 p.m. for everyone who participated in the seminar. University administrators and faculty members also have been invited, Holmes said. Weather KU 2 KU Today should be partly to mostly cloudy with a slight chance of showers, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be southerly from 10 to 20 mph. The high for today will be near 83. Tonight should be partly cloudy with a low of 65. Tomorrow should be partly sunny and mild with high in the upper 80 and little chance of precipitation. It should be a mild, clear weekend, with a high Saturday of 80. Sunday should be cooler, with a bigh of 79. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Militants doubt Bani-Sadr's courage The Iranian militants holding the 52 American hostages charged yesterday that President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr does not have the courage to stand up to the United States. The statement broadcast by Tehran Radio underlined the intensity of the Islamic fundamentalist opposition to Bani-Sadr. The broadcast did not mention Bani-Sadr by name but it was obvious that it referred to an interview the president gave recently to a French newspaper in which he said Iran was being held hostage by the United States and was isolated from the world because of the 312-day crisis. The militants issued their statement hours after Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajal, having received an overwhelming vote of confidence from the fundamentalist-dominated Parliament, said he saw no early prospects of agreement with Bani-Sadi on the formation of a full cabinet. I anticipated threatened to further postpone Parliament's debate on the fate of the hostages, but Tehran Radio said the assembly would meet Sunday to consider a Foreign Relations Committee reply to a letter from U.S. congressmen seeking an end to the crisis. The political clashes in Tehran paralleled reports of serious new fighting along the border with Iraq. Tehran Radio reported that Iranian forces shot down two more Iraqi MiG fighter jets and two helicopters. This brought the number of Iraqi aircraft that Iran claims it has downed in the latest fighting to four jets and three helicopters. Poles protest AFL-CIO contributions WARSAW, Poland—Polish officials have complained to the U.S. Embassy about the AFL-CIO's $25,000 contribution to Poland's fledgling free trade unions, a Western diplomatic source said yesterday. The source said that Polish Foreign Ministry officials protested the grant and expressed their "unhappiness" in a recent conversation with U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Nikolai Kukushkin. An AFL-CIO spokesman in Washington, confirming the contributions and the establishment of a National Polish Society, said: "Whatever the Polish society has done, it is a positive step." State Department spokesman John Trattner refused to confirm or deny whether the United States had received the complaint from the Polish government but he later told reporters, "This might be classified as a deliberate misinterpretation." Secretary of State Edmund Muskier later warned AFL-CIO president Lane Kirland of possible repressiveasures on the American trade unions contributed to the outbreak. A high administration official modified that warning when he said this week "it would be a good thing" if the U.S. trade unions were to financially help the independent unions in Poland. He added, however, that the American unions "shouldn't push it," and make a large stir with their effort. Lawvers urged to settle Oswald case FORT WORTH, Texas—Attorneys for and against exhumation of Lee Harvey Oswald's grave and the court of out to avoid court to avoid lawyers, lawyers said yesterday. of Concurently Lawyers representing Oswald's brother, Robert, said that Civil District Judge James Wright on Monday urged that all attorneys involved in the case settle the dispute privately. Wright said it would not be proper for him to comment before returning a verdict in the lawsuit filed by Robert Oswald. The verdict is expected next One source said, "The judge wants it done out of court. Otherwise, he thinks it could go on for years." Robert Oswald's lawyers sued British author and lawyer Michael Eddowes, who is seeking the exhumation, and Rose Hill Burial Park, the grave of his late wife. Attorneys for Eddowes would not comment, although they were at the meeting Monday. Courthouse sources said the judge believed that public desire to know who, if anyone, was buried in the grave would constantly increase if the grave were not opened and that attorneys for Robert Oswald might have to spend years trying to justify why they blocked an exhumation. w right reportedly told the attorneys, "It might be better to agree to an exhumation and have it done right than to have someone sneaking around out there and do it anyway." Carlin. Dugan to discuss differences TOPEKA-Gov. John Cartlin and his discontented lieutenant governor, Paul Dugan, have scheduled a meeting for next week that is sure to include discussions on the budget. Dagan and Carlin plan to meet Sept. 19 in the governor's office, according to Carlin's press secretary, Bill Hoch. Dagan, a Wichita attorney, last week said he would not be Carlin's running mate if the governor ran again in 1982. Complaining that he has not as active a role as he had wanted in Carlin's administration, Dugan said he was considering running for attorney "I just felt like I should talk to him." Carlin told us conference yesterday, "I have and I'll continue to. As he pointed out, he'll continue be Although Dugan said he had not been consulted on state affairs as much as he would have liked, Carlin he had communicated with Dugan through the letters. More California wine workers strike SAN FRANCISCO—The California wine strike spread to three more large wineries yesterday while truckloads of ripe grapes continued to roll up for processing. Major issues are a union proposal for a 30 percent wage increase over three years and the length of the probationary period for new employees. No longer do some employers have to pay a salary. Workers left their jobs at the Almaden, Guild and Paul Masson plants, raising the total of strikers to 3.000. The union strategy was to add two or three new strike targets daily on a schedule dictated by the rivening of the grange crop. **a) walkout that began last Friday, 11 of the 23 major companies involved in the disruption have been struck. The 23 companies produce 80 percent of California** All the struck vintners use supervisory and temporary employees to perform the crushing, fermentation and filtration work that occurs in the production process. Management said the work was getting done, but union officials said there was no way the wineries could handle the entire crop without the striking workers. Matthau to explain promotional role HOLLYWOOD--Picketing actors circled MGM studios yesterday as one of their most famous colleagues, Walter Matthean, prepared to face a trial committee on charges of "conduct unbecoming a member of the Screen Actors Guild." Matthau, who has joined at least one picket line and has been an ardent supporter of the walkout, was ordered to appear before the committee to explain a promotional appearance he made last week for his motion picture, "Honecock." It is the first known action taken against a performer in the 52-day nation's strike by more than 67,000 actors, a result. Matthau could be accused of being an insider. The actors, members of the guild and the American Federation of Radio and Television Artists, moved their picket line yesterday to MGM studios, where they also sold tickets to a Sept. 16 benefit at the Hollywood Bowl that will reenlist their strike fund. A federal mediator has recessed negotiations between the two striking actors unions and the producers. Although several issues are yet to be settled, the main dispute is over the amount and distribution schedule of residual payments in the growing home video television market. WASHINGTON (UPI) — The League of Women Voters said yesterday that President Carter had rejected new debate proposals by the Reagan administration, and was prepared to go ahead with two debates and one empty chair Sept. 21. "The impasse remains ... I regret that very deeply," said League President Ruth Hinerfield after two and a half hours of negotiations with representatives of Carter, Ronald Reagan and independent John Anderson. Reagan, Anderson to debate without Carter The debate will be Sept. 21 in Baltimore. Anderson and Reagan promptly accepted without reservation, but Carter declined, saying he first wanted to head-to-head confrontation with Reagan. Anderson got the debate invitation his campaign badly needed Tuesday, and predicted President Carter would join and invite the three-way configuration. Hinerfield said Reagan aides had suggested a series of round robin one-on-one debates among the three canceled, followed by multi-candidate debates. Reagan and Anderson aides "were forthcoming and indicated their willingness to consider the proposals, which the Carter campaign rejected them. Another proposal was a multicandidate debate followed by a Carter-Reagan debate and then a vice presidential debate. Both Reagan and Anderson have indicated a willingness to take part in a first debate Sept. 21 in Baltimore even if Carter's chair is empty. Hinferfield said the league's policy had always been to include an empty chair if an invited candidate failed to show up at the debate "for his own purposes," and "that will be the case" in Baltimore. Hinerfeld said that the league would sponsor a Carter-Reagan debate only if the president showed up for the Sept. 21 game, and that the invitation to Carter was still open. Carter's campaign manager, Robert Strauss, said both Carter and Reagan have "selfish reasons" for their stands on including Anderson in the debates. Strauss said that Anderson would take votes from Carter on Nov. 4 and that this knowledge affected the choice of both major party candidates. Anderson, upon arriving at Los Angeles International Airport Tuesday night after a day of campaigning in the East, told reporters the president would change his mind once he had seen a fight of public outrage over his decision. But Anderson refused to question the mother's motives for deciding not to debate. "I would certainly leave his motives for others to judge," Anderson said. Meanwhile, Reagan promised to free the United States from oil domination by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and charged that President Carter misled the public when he claimed there was an energy shortage. He said Carter had led the country to believe there was an acute shortage of energy resources when, "the truth is America has an abundance of energy." "The American people have been held hostage by the OPEC countries long enough," he told a rally in Cleveland's Public Square yesterday. The Republican presidential nominee earlier told an audience of blacks he was proud of his civil rights record as governor of California, but that he had never spoken of his actions lest he be accused of boasting. At the White House, leaders of almost every major U.S. environmental group endorsed President Carter's re-election bid yesterday and denounced Reagan as an insensitive man who failed to grasp ecology issues. Tom Kimbail, president of the National Wildlife Federation, speaking for the group of 22 conservationists, said the endorsements were made by individuals rather than on behalf of their environmental organizations. Others at the meeting included representatives for the National Wildlife Federation and the Sierra Club. Carter, posing for a picture with the leaders, said he had a "lot in common" with Mr. Wheeler. Kimbala said, "On balance, we believe President Carter has been sensitive to environmental concerns submitted to conservation principles." Afterward, the conservationists took turns denouncing Reagan, who they said was the only viable opponent Carter faces. School gym damaged in fire CANEY (UPI) - A fire yesterday destroyed an elementary school gymnasium in this southern Kansas town, but no one was injured. The gymnasium, in the center of the building, was destroyed but the building's firefighters, Damage has been estimated at about $600,000 to $700,000. The fire broke out about 8:40 a.m. in the gymnasium of Lincoln Grade School, but a teacher spotted the fire and quickly alerted the students, according to a spokesman for the Caney Fire Department. The fire apparently started underneath some bleachers in a janitor's closet that contained paint thinner, the spokesman said. Fire officials are still investigating the cause of the blaze. *1980 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee. Wis. time. Miller Now comes Miller time. Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Page ; On Campus UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB THE UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S CLUB will meet from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. today in the Watkins and Kansas rooms of the Kansas Union. The club is open to women faculty members and wives of faculty members. TONIGHT THE GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet from noon to 1:30 p.m. in the Cork Room of the Kansas Union. THE GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Cork Room of the Kansas Union. A seminar on sexuality will be held at the CINEMAL MUNISTRIES CENTER 07428 FAYETTE THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. THE BOARD OF CLASS OFFICERS will sponsor the BIG BLUE RALLY at 7 p.m. in the Satellite Union parking lot. TOMORROW THE BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold a BLACK AWARNESS SEMINAR from 6:30 to 10 p.m. in the B1 Room of the Kansas Union. The Kansan welcomes items for inclusion in "on Campus." Organizations should submit written information on scheduled free activities to the campus editor at least two days before the events. SUA iR indoor recreation Beginner's Night September 11 6-9 p.m. Satellite Union Backgammon, Bridge, Chess, and Scrabble COME AND LEARN TO PLAY OR TEACH OTHERS TO PLAY!! THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7 30 & 9 30 P Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Cheech and Chong's Next Movie 7:30 8 9:20 R Lance wants open testimony TMF MERRY HIMMIES PICTURE SHOW MIDNITE SHOW Fri & Sat Varsity Theatre THE WASHINGTON (UPI)—Bert Lance will testify before a closed meeting of the Senate panel investigating Billy Carter, provided his written replies to questions are made public immediately. It was announced yesterday. Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 President Carter's former budget director refused to give a sworn deposition to the panel's investigators Tuesday unless reporters were allowed in the room. He had said he feared he would be "smeared and villed" by selective leaks by what he calls government "powercrats." 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:30 & 9:30 But Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chairman of the panel investigating Billy Carter's financial dealings with Libya, said yesterday that staff attorneys had worked out an agreement with lawyers to obtain Lance's sworn statement. 2. Caddyshack 7 20 & 9 20 Lance will appear before staff investigators Sept. 18, Bayh said, "for the purpose of preparing a statement by the subcommittee to impartition to the subcommittee's inquiry," "At the close of the meeting, the statement will be immediately made available to the public and the press," Bavh said. 3. Airplane 7:30 & 9:15 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 2. The Fienish Plot of Dr. Fumanchu 7 30 & 6 30 P6 Lance has said that he knew little about Billy Carter's dealings with Libya, and that he had no dealings with the White House on the subject. . Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 The Shining & The Exorcist Sunset Lakes West 61st St 543-8172 THE HOUSE, meanwhile, demanded that the White House provide within seven days all documents and records it gave to Billy Carter's relationship to Libya. Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, argued against the move, saying reams of money already had been submitted to the Senate. Sadat said Egyptian State Minister for Foreign Affairs Butros Ghali will leave for New York Friday to attend the U.N. General Assembly session, which opens officially Tuesday. House Republicans nevertheless pushed for a resolution demanding the material. After Democrats failed on a vote, the measure, it was approved by voice vote. White House counsel Lloyd Cutler appeared before the Senate committee also and said the president, on learning that his brother Billy had received $220,000 as part of a rehab package for him, concerned that his brother had obligated himself to Libya's radical regime. Cutter testified that he had forgotten to previously inform the panel of a conversation he had with the president July 8 or 9 about the Billy affair. Cutter later said his brother had finally agreed to register as a foreign agent for Libya. The two foreign ministers "are planning to meet together and to meet also with our friends in the United States." he said. Cutler said he talked with Billy's attorneys July 2. "They informed me that Billy Carter had authorized them to negotiate a registration statement with the Justice Department's lawyers," he said. "I believe I advised the president of this development on July 8 or 9 when en route with him to Tokyo to attend the meeting of the Prime Minister Masayoshi Ohira." U. S. Middle East envoy Sol Linowitz won agreement from both sides last week to resume the talks concerning the future of the 1.1 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. It also was agreed to prepare for a summit President Carter later this year. Emerging from an hour-long meeting with Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, Sadat said the two had made progress toward improving bilateral ties between nations but he did not elaborate. ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (UPI)—Israel and Egypt have agreed to resume their Palestinian autonomy negotiations later this month in New York, President Anwar Sadat said yesterday. starts at Dusk Egypt suspended the autonomy negotiations Aug. 3 because of Israel's decision to declare united Jerusalem its eternal capital. Carter, Cutler and White House national security adviser Biqniwge Brzezinski submitted a lengthy report to the Senate panel Aug. 4 describing in detail the conversations and dealings they had with Billy Carter on Libya. - Documents on Attorney General Benjamin Cilietti's alleged recommendation to his investigators June 11 that they put off any action in the Billy Carter case for 10 days. Justice Cilietti said he would have said Cilietti made the recommendation just after Billy Carter admitted getting $220,000 from Libya. - Any papers on Civilians' June 17 conversation with President Carter. Carter has said Civilians told him that day that Billy should register as a foreign agent for Libya and that he could not face criminal prosecution if he did. But Rep. Robert McClory of Illinois, ranking GOP member of the House Judiciary Committee, said there were no problems from the material submitted by Carter: He also said that Prime Minister Menachem Begin's plan to move his office from west to Arab East Jerusalem had been deferred, easing the recently heightened tensions between Israel and Egypt over Israeli moves in the disputed city. Carter said he subsequently urged his brother to register. Israel, Egypt to begin autonomy negotiations IN TEL AVIV, Begin also said that the talks with Egypt would start again this month and that a steering committee might convene as early as next week to work out an agenda for negotiations. Sadat said "yes, at the United Nations" when asked specifically whether the autonomy negotiations would be resumed later this month. Shamir, returning to Israel from his 24-hour visit in time for the start of the Jewish New Year, said he was promised a "serious effort in many different spheres would now be made so that the process of normalization between the two countries would become more real." Take Advantage of Mr. Stoak's Student Special It's not your basic beef patty on a sesame seed bun. 10% off lunch and dinner (for regular priced items only) Present current student ID to waitress. offer expires 9/30/80 We serve only USDA choice beef naturally aged with no chemicals. Or try our quality seafood. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas Mr. Steak 841-3454 You can't cut quality when your reputation is at steak. BIG 1980 BLUE RALLY TONIGHT AT 7PM. SATELLITE UNION DON FAMBROUGH + THE JAYHAWK FOOTBALL TEAM BOB FOSTER + THE JAYHAWK MARCHING BAND BOB MARCUM + TOM HENDRICK K. J. POM PON GIRLS FEATURING: WHITEMOUND + PYRAMID SOUNDS FREE BEER TO ALL CLASS CARD HOLDERS CLASS MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE ALL NIGHT KINKO'S That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. No brag, just fact. And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. 904 Vermont 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 843-8019 10.5 Sat 12.5 Sun tempting traditionals CLASSIC MONOGRAMS dB7 SALE! SHETLANDS & BUTTON-DOWN SHIRTS! This fall, the more traditional, the better! Make your statement in an oxford cloth shirt, topped by our classic, famous label shetland sweatering, with your personal monograms ... here, there and everywhere. SHIRTS REG. $18 to $26 15 90 19. 90 SWEATERS REG. $19 to $22 15. 90 19. 90 FREE! Buy any two items,choose one to monogram,free! Seilgerts 821 Mass. Seilgers 821 Mass. C Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 The ode to a commode Employees in Summerfield Hall are suffering a humorous case of the toilet-bowl blues. Ever since Summerfield was built in 1959, the third floor has had only one bathroom—not unisex, of course—and it was designated for men. For the few women on the floor, it was hardly a consolation that women's bathrooms were on other floors. The problem became more stopped up as more women employees were added to the staff. So women employees at Summerfield started a petition to remedy their situation. Evidently, their efforts were successful because the sign on the third-floor bathroom now reads "women." However, the problem hasn't vanished as far as the men are concerned. And preso, Summerfield has plunged into the "bathroom controversy." The controversy has the building buzzing. There is hope yet. If enough money can be raised for an addition to Summerfield, an extra third-floor bathroom will be included in the plans. That would solve the problem. In the meantime, the men, who still constitute the vast majority of the school's staff, have no bathroom on the third floor. While the men are not flushed with anger, they're not extremely pleased, either. The controversy has generated several proposals. One proposal calls for a unisex bathroom. Another calls for portable toilets in the hall. permaps the niw Ti-D-Bowl is the only one who can save Summerfield now. MARK MORRIS America, there are those in Washington who would have us believe that we must accept difficult and painful solutions to our nation's problems. But I say poppycock! [Illustration of a cartoon monkey with a wide smile and bright eyes, pointing forward.] They ask: How else can we restore America's prestige overseas? Simple, I say . . . build a bigger army and everyone will have to respect us. MARY MONK They inquire: How else can we revitalize our economy in an age of dwindling resources? I say, simple ... get government off of business's back and trust our corporations to take care of the future. Computer zaps Miss Kansas; dreams fade with odds game The magazine never told her differently The magazine never lost her dare.* In all, Leann spent 3½ hours one day with the photographer, shooting at locations throughout Lawrence. Two weeks ago, Lean Foam got a call from People magazine. They wanted to take her picture and arranged to send a photographer to Lawrence from Chicago. Leann, the 181 Miss Kansas and a KU senior, figured people was taking photographs of all 50 Miss America contestants. After all, the pageant was just nine days away. He took a couple of pictures of her near a barn outside Lawrence, including a series of BLAKE GUMPRECHT She also possed in a cairnforton and later in the Kansas Union bookstore. **D. J.** her sitting on a plank fence. She wore an Izod shirt, cutoffs up the side and a pair of thongs. She also posed in a corriedief of Lawrence and held the Kansas Union bookstore. The photographer then wanted some "natural" poses. He took a few of her playing backgammon with her roommate in their apartment and several more while Leann played the piano at the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house. Leann never gave the photo session a second thought. But last Monday morning in Atlantic City the picture began to come together. Today she's still trying to sort out the events that led to her getting more publicity than any of the other candidates—even the eventual Miss America, a college senior from Oklahoma City University. A reporter from the Philadelphia Inquirer told her the startling news. It seems that a statistics professor at Northern Illinois University had admitted that Leann would be the next Miss America. It was the start of a bizarre week. The professor, George Miller, 57, made his predictions by plugging the height, weight, measurements, hair and eye color, talent category, college major and age of each of the contestants into his Amdahl 470V/A computer. Neither he nor the computer ever saw a picture of any of the candidates or watched them perform. Learn, a psychology major from Wichita, saw the people magazine article later that day and was swarmed with attention until she left Atlantic City four days ago to return to Wichita. Based on those same eight characteristics of 21 past Miss America winners, Miss Kansas was chosen the 2-1 favorite to win the 1981 crown. None of the other contestants was even close. "I'd be surprised if she doesn't rank in the top five," Miller, who claims he correctly picked last year's winner, said before the competition began last week. At first, Leann didn't think the prediction was a big deal. She figured the publicity would die down quickly. In fact, she kind of enjoyed the attention. "It was neat," she said upon returning to Kansas. "I was excited about the publicity." but it's moracunical. The media wouldn't leave where she went, the followed. She was the favorites. Leann estimates that she did more than three dozen length interviews. Papers from New York, Philadelphia and even London did features on her. ABC TV interviewed her on camera for Friday's network news. And, of course, there was the two-page spread in People. "It got to the point," she said, "where every time someone started coming over, I knew what happened." The pace never slowed. After each preliminary event during the week before the pageant, the crowds were there. After the evening gown competition. After the personality interviews. After the swim suit competition. After the ballet rendition of Kiki Ma in the Rain," playing piano and singing, for the talent competition. "After every event, a bunch of reporters would come up and ask me how I did and how I felt," she said. "I had no answer answers than once, but he always asked it a specific point to come over and ask me. "People were watching everything I did. They wanted to see how I did, how I looked, whether I'd mess up—because the computer had said I was going to win." Of course. Leann didn't. The only celebrate she did on Saturday night was for her 21st birthday, which fell on the night of the pageant. She wasn't even one of 10 semifinalists. The winner, Miss Oklahoma, Susan Powell, was a 25-1 shot, according to the computer. A winning throughout with those odds would pay $30 for a $2 ticket to win. "I wasn't really surprised when they called the top 10," Leann says. "I heard that they interviewed some of the judges who said they weren't going to let a computer tell them what to In the end, only one of the computer's top packets has the answer, the second runner-up- rupts the judge's 'top'. If it's any consolation, Leann will always know that she was, in fact, the epitome of 21 years of Miss Americas—even if it was a computer program that declaration instead of a panel of judges. "The more I thought about it, the more I thought it might hurt my chances," she said. "A lot of the other girls thought it had an effect. I don't know. But it does kind of make me angry. If he had kept his mouth shut, maybe things would have turned out differently." However, Learn says she's not bitter. She just wishes that Miller would have kept his prediction quiet, except to tell a few witnesses. "I guess," she said. "I just never thought of it that way." But she could have been happier. A I say, by golly America, there are simple solutions in a complicated world. They inquire: How else can we meet the social needs of the people? Simple ... create more jobs by cutting social programs and giving taxpayers a break. WARNING THE SIMPLE CANDIDATE RONALD REAGAN 40e Buntos '80 KANSAN But then, such simplistic ideas and views, such as loyalty, seem to have had their day. What the people do is a matter of choice. Reagan has answers for America Until the People's Republic of China accepts Taiwan as an independent entity worthy of existence—and it will not in this election year—its friendship should be accepted with the harshest scrutiny. This does not include casting aside a 30-year old-age like an old shoe. Loyalty to one's allies, another evidently "simplistic" virtue, presents more problems for Reagan critics. Loyalty, it seems, is an archaic concept, at least as far as Taiwan is concerned. The same applies to China, where cannot be ignored should try to remember the millions in Taiwan who also cannot be ignored. Ronald Reagan may have a reputation for shooting from the hip, but those of his detractors who criticize his "simplicit" views of the world are simply shooting from the holster itself. If holding a so-called simplistic view means believing that a preservation of the balance of power is essential to world peace, then history behaves in a simplistic fashion. History has proven that a balance of power prevents major conflicts. But because Reagan says the balance should be preserved by bringing U.S. armed forces up to scratch, critics call him simplistic. A recent study found that Carter administration, held that a fiasco such as SALT II, with its outrageous disparities in weapons limitations, would have been a major step toward lasting peace had it been passed. Sure, the world is a complex thing with which to deal. The problems facing the next president of the United States will be as difficult to solve as those facing any previous president, including Jimmy Carter. What Reagan's critics should have viewed are some fundamental principles. If Carter had followed them, he would be a sure bait in November, instead of an even-money shot. BILL MENEZES A. S. Mishra Western Europe? That really would improve our relations with the Soviets. After all, how can all those millions of Russians be ignored? The same "reasoning" pervades discussion of domestic issues. Perhaps stressing old-fashioned values such as hard work and strong families is more useful in the current era than the thought of less government because it would In truth, there are more simplistic views in the attacks by Reagan headhunters than in Reagan's proclamations. The best example, of course, is the preposterous fear that a vote for Reagan is a vote for World War III. Elect him and he'll drop the big one, no doubt about it. It doesn't matter on whom, just who ever happens to be messing with the United States at the time. leave them with fewer spoon-fed benefits and with more pressure to get off their butts and earn a living by working instead of just walking out to check the mailbox. Making government a simpler operation, one of Reagan's primary goals, would solve problems in many sectors of American life. A reduction of the bureaucracy and more autonomy for state and local governments have long been supported by Reagan. In 1976, Carter crowded that he would reduce the bureaucracy "to no more than 200" federal agencies. Of course, he established two huge, virtually worthless, bureaucracies: the Department of Energy and the Department of Education. So much for streamlining. This argument is simplistic, more so than any other, because it lacks rationale. The argument is really just something that Reagan detractors say to each other to assure that they are doing the right thing. After all, nobody wants a nuclear conflict. It is also a good excuse for those covering at the thought of a peacekeeping mission in the Middle East or Holocaust camps these people quivering, the mention of a daft simply shakes them to pieces. But back to simplicity. It is not as easy to start a nuclear war as the anti-Reagan forces think, Dr. Strangelove notwithstanding. It is rather simple to think it could never happen, but even if we were wrong, our enemy would stand up to the Soviets were to be elected. Hasn't anyone ever heard of John F. Kennedy? The real "viewer with simplicity" is Carter. He has really shown a flair for foreign policy during the Iranian hostage crisis. According to an Associated Press report on Carter's flip-flipping policies, the president said in mid-April that he would not campaign until the hostages were free and back at home. The president would "concept of duty." Within two weeks after this statement, Carter began campaigning again, saying the hostage crisis had become "manageable." Now that was simple, wasn't it? 12345678910 GIRL SCENE Miss OKLAHOMA Wins! KANSAS Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and contact information. Letters should be filled with the University, the letter should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 695-640) 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 68445. Subscriptions by mail to the university, months or $2 a year in Douglas County, or $18 or six months of $3 a month. Additional subscriptions by mail to the University of Kansas Flint Hall, Fulton Hall, Postmaster: send changes of address to the University Dailian Kansan, Flint Hall, Fulton Hall, University of Kansas. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Lawrence, KS 68045 Editor Caral Beeler Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Makeup Editors Wine Editors Copy Chairs Chief Photographer Chief Photographers Columnists Amy Hollowell, Ted Lickeig, Bill Meneses, Scott Faust, Fred Markham, Susan Schoenmaker, Gail Eggers Editorial Artist Staff Artists Staff Writers Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Cardial Sales Manager Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Teasheet Manager Sales Representatives Business Manager Elaine Strahler Cynal Hughes David Lewis John Weinstadt Jeff Speiri Mark Spencer, Don Monday, Cindy Wilcome Gene Meyer Paul Orodt Kevin Mills Ellen Iwamoto, Bob Scholl, Jennifer Holder Lois Winkewald, Tom Frederick Ellen Iwamoto Gai Eggers Chris Todd Ben Bigler, Ken Contis, Scott Hooker, Dave Kraus, Drew Tarres Amily Hollowell, Ted Lickeig, Bill Meneses, Scott Faust, Fred Markham, Susan Schoenmaker, Gail Eggers Jae Batt John Jinks, Michael Wunsch, Breton Brolon Chuck Howland, Dan Torcha, Shawn McKay Kevin Cooper Nancy Clausen John Leibt Classified Manager Trace Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wendrott Judy Seiler Brian Walker Tafta Sheetter Anthony Tilson, Raye Wiseup, Susan Birnbaum General Manager and News Adviser Rick Musser General Manager and News Adviser... Rick Mussel Kannon Adviser... Chuck Cownis University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Page 5 From page 1 Pre-enrollment several groups within the University and opinions of students and faculty would be con- David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said it was important that everyone involved should understand the consequences before enrolment is instituted at KU. He said that over the three years he had been vice chancellor, he had heard mixed reactions to his tenure. "If there had been a lot of commitment we probably would have had it by now," he said. However, he said, a pre-employment system would help improve the quality of advising at the job site. ACTING CHANCELLOR Del Shankel has also expressed concern about advising at KU and he hoped to emphasize its importance to faculty members during his time in office. Ambler said the system also would allow the would be less free time before class starts. there would be less free time before class starts. "It would help the University identify students who are having difficulties and are considering "We could locate them at a point where we can provide some assistance to them." preliminary termination of their college career," Ambler said. In contrast to its benefits, however, pre- cedent claims can burden or on- family by increasing their responsibility. Because students would be deciding on schedules before finals for the following semester, Timetables would have to be printed by that time. Faculty would have to decide which classes they wanted to teach, what time they wanted to teach, and departments would have to make room assignments more than a semester in Robert S. Hoffman, acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that the Academic Council was concerned about Timetable scheduling. Hoffman said there were many problems that would have to be dealt with, such as putting the floor so low that the person could lie on it. "we have the capability to do a pre-enrollment system." Mann said. "It's just a matter of time and opportunity." From page 1 teaching. My family certainly will be delighted about it." DAVID WAXMAN, executive vice chancellor for the College of Health Sciences, has named Kasumi Arakawa, chairman of the department of neurosurgery, to head the search committee for a new dean. Resigns A replacement will be found by Nov. 1, Wax- kings will eliminate the need to appoint an actu- ing dean. "Dr. Lowman will help in the transition if you don't anticipate any problems." *Waxman*xm An internal search for Lowman's replacement will be conducted, with notices placed in the Oread, a University Relations publication, at the University of Kansas Medical Center and at the University of Kansas School of Medicine-Wichita, he said. Lowman received his medical degree from the University of Arkansas School of Medicine, Little Rock, in 1958. He came to the School of Medicine from the University of Minnesota, where he had done his internship and later taught. Spencer show exhibits drawings by sculptors By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The exhibit will be on display through Sept. 28 in the White Gallery of the museum. A Spencer Art Museum exhibit, "From Drawings to Sculpture: The Creative Process," shows how 12 contemporary artists have transformed preliminary drawings into sculptures. Douglas Hyland, curator of Western art at b寨博物馆 he would be arranged the exhibit to include works by artists including It's always a mystery to me, how the final product works. My island has arranged the food around it, like a map. He said items for the exhibit were taken from Spencer Museum or borrowed from private collectors, art dealers and the Nelson Art Gallery. Kansas City, Mo. Many artists sketch their ideas for a sculpture before doing it. Hyland said, and the exhibit demonstrates how their first ideas were altered in the actual sculpture. "They work out some of these ideas long in advance," he said. "There's always the prospect of having changes of shape and form." Hyland said The Sheep Album, which contains 12 etchings of sheep drawn by British sculptor Henry Moore, was an example of the differences between the drawings and the sculpture. Moore's sculpture was a bronze abstract bearing little resemblance to the realistic etchings. The exhibit also contains James Rosati's drawings for the steel sculpture that stands in front of Spencer Museum. One of the drawings shows the sculpture in a horizontal arrangement instead of its present view. A set of three 6-foot, welded-steel abstract dog sculptures by American sculptor Richard Gillespie is one of the more unusual works in the exhibit. 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Please include filing form PLUS $3.00 filing fee OR Petition with 50 freshman signatures Paid for by Activity Fee MANHATTAN United Artists Thursday, Sept. 11 7:30 $1.00 Friday—3:30, 7:00, 9:30 Saturday—3:30, 7:00, 9:30 Friday and Saturday, Sept. 12-13 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium—No Refreshments allowed ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Presents SUA FILMS "One of the sexiest movies around" "Marvelously funny" - Toni Maginnis JOSE ANIMO'S DONA FLOR and her two husbands R RESTRICTED Directed by ARMING BARRETO Starring Genea Brown, Jena Walker and Miuka Wendebona Music by Dino Bargone ACRAMA VAL NEW YORKER FILMS RELEASE Call SVA indoor recreation iR Organizational Meeting Foosball, Table Tennis, Pool, and Bowling. September 11, 7-8 p.m. Regionalist Room Kansas Union SUA iR Rent it. Call 864-4358. Lawrence Book ALL NEW FOR YOU 131 GREAT VALUES SEND IN TODAY FOR YOURS — SEE BELOW CLIP THESE SAMPLE COUPONS AND SAVE! ALL THESE AND MORE AVAILABLE IN LAWRENCE BOOK FREE! NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS with two or more toppings PURCHASER MAY USE ONE DISCOUNT COUPON PER PIZZA EXPIRES 12/31/80. $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 off off off small medium large Original Hickory Pi V Q OLO GARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE lemon tree FULL SIZE 11 WEST 9th Featuring Famous Submarine Sandwiches The Classic Sub $149 OFFER EXPRES 9.20.90 LIMIT ONE COUPON PER OFFER FIFTY CENTS OFF ANY PIT BBQ SANDWICH MISS STREET DELI MAIL MASSACHUSETTS FIFTY CENTS OFF ANY FAMOUS DELI SANDWICH EXPIRES 12/15/80 NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS TWO DOLLARS OFF LARGE SUPREME PIZZA PURCHASER MAY USE ONE DISCOUNT COUpon PER PIZZA. (COUPON EXPRES 9/30/80) MASS STREET DELL OAKI MASSACHUSETTS Smoked Sausage Sandwich $1.50 SEND A STAMPED (30c min. postage) SELF-ADDRESSED RETURN ENVELOPE TO: A Schumm/Longhurst Production Lawrence Book 719 Mass. Lawrence, Ks. 66044 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 HOME SWEET OHM. SWEET OHM. OHM. 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Only a handful of students are walking around searching for required texts. Most students are finding what they want. Sandy Williamson, Lawrence graduate student, said she had found only two of her seven required books, but she was blaming only herself. "It's my own fault," she said. "That's what I get for bawning late." She said her teachers were reordering the books. Grace Wan, associate professor of East Asian studies, said two of her students had complained that there were no books left for their elementary school. Unexpectedly high enrollment in some classes is the major cause of book shortages this semester, several instructors said. Wan said the shortage of books was caused by a higher enrollment. Jeanne Steffey, department of mathematics office manager, said that enrollment in pre-calculus, algebra and trigonometry classes was 100 to 200 students. Steffey said that in the past few years, department members could usually guess within 20 or 25 students what a particular class size would be. She said she did not know why they were so far off this semester. She said the mathematics department hated to order extra books because of complaints from bookstore management about the problem of returning overstocked books to publishers. Ted Wilson, chairman of the department of history, sent a letter last fall to the bookstore outlining the department's grievances about text-book ordering procedures. Wilson said that although there were still difficulties, the situation was much better this semester. LAST FALL, WILSON criticized the bookstore for failing to notify instructors when books for their classes were going to arrive late or not at all. Late notification of books that are out of print has not been as severe a problem However, Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science, said he did not discover until two days before classes began this year that a book he had ordered could not be sent because its publishers had changed. Francisco said the bookstore told him that the publishers had not notified them. "It's a little exasperating. I had to switch books and change the whole syllabus, Francisco said But the teacher is telling me that Francis and Francisco now has the new books. Steve Word, who became the Union bookstore's manager Aug. 11, said that the company is in high demand. than a month, he had heard that it was that he was the only one who said that that there had no bad many complaints. Word said the manual system that the bookstore used was one of the most elaborate he had seen. Although it had a number of built-in safeguards, he said, the paper work was still handled by people and there would be mistakes. **WORD SAID THAT after the bookstore received a book order from a professor, the bookstore would first go to get it, get as many used books as possible.** Although this may take from one to three months, Word said, the time was not long. up to 25 percent of the price of a new book. "We like to have the orders in, processed and on the shelf by the first day of classes, but freight lines and the service play a part in that," he said. Word said he was planning a computer Textbook Information System that would aid in determining the number of books to order. He said it would be some time, however, before it would be in operation. The computer system would compare class enrollment figures with books purchased by students during the past several years. 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19900 19920 19940 19960 199 All you can drink! $3.00 for guys — $2.00 for girls 8th & Vermont 841-8830 IT'S STANDING UP AND YELLING FOR THE BLUE. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! K. U. Football gives you five great home games! --- Sept. 20 Pittsburgh Sept. 27 Louisville Oct. 11 Nebraska Oct. 18 Iowa State Nov. 8 Oklahoma ou es! NTS! ets ATTENTION STUDENTS! Season Football Tickets Still Available Sept. 9-20 - Satellite Union - SUA Office - K.U. Ticket Office, Allen Field House STUDENT SENATE KU Also, for your convenience, Sept. 9-12 from 10-4 p.m., a table will be set up in front of Wescoe. Footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbank's Deer) Classified ads get results SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARINGS investmental budget hearings request forms are now available in the Student Senate Office. B-105 Kansas Union. The forms are due by 5:00 p.m. September 12. Look what we've got for you Try our new menu soon. H.B. Quirks Market Restaurant Sandwiches Soup and Sandwich...2.95 Today's soup with a chicken or tuna salad sandwich Paid for by the Student Activity Fee Tuna Melt . 2.95 Two half English muffins tuna salad topped with melted cheddar The following are served with your choice of cole slaw or steak fries Chicken Salad ... 2.95 On wheat, toast Breast of Turkey ... 2.95 Kaiser, roll or wheat bread Hamburger ... 2.25 Cheddarburger ... 2.45 Crock of Soup...1.75 Today's soup served with cinnamon rolls and honey butter Soup and Salad Bar...3.25 Today's soup with your salad creation Odds and Ends Salad Bar...2.75 Make your own creation Bacon Quiche... 2.75 Dinners --- 2600 Iowa St. 842-2292 Barbecued Chicken . . . . . 4.50 One-ball Chicken "Our Specialty" Country Fried Chicken...4.50 One-half golden brown chicken Chopped Beefsteak... 3.95 Chopped to your liking Country Fried Steak. . . 4.95 Fried Shrimp...6.95 With our own delicate heading Sirilou Steak...7.95 Aloes cut. Dutch Apple Pie...95 a la mode...1.25 Pecan Pie...1.25 Youngsters 10 and under Beverages Hamburger and Fries...1.25 Fried Chicken...1.50 Fried Shrimp...2.25 Children's Salad Bar...95 With any of the above Soft Drinks...50 Free refill Milk...50 Iced Tea...50 Hot Tea...40 Coffee...50 Sanka...50 Bottled Beer...85 Tues.-Thur. 11:30 a.m.- 9:00 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Sun. 12:00-9:00 p.m. Closed Monday Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 0 Towers under KU Parking Parking at the Jayhawer Towers Apartments, 1608 W. 13th Street, is now under the jurisdiction of the KU Department of Housing, director of housing, said yesterday. Jayhawk Towers residents will be issued free parking permits when they move into the Towers, and cars without them be given tickets or lowed. Wilson said. Jayhawk Towers were privately owned until the apartments were purchased by the University of Kansas April 1, 1979. Wilson said. Lawrence police were responsible for patrolling the parking lots until recently, he said, when ownership was transferred to KU. Enroll Now Enroll Now at the University of Oz! 50% cotton 50% polyester yellow T-shirt printed in three colors plus a diploma signed by the old.wizard himself UNIVERSITY OZ It's Easy to Graduate Just say "there's no place like home" click your heels three times and send $6 95 plus 50¢ postage To BARE ESSENTIALS Rt 3 Box 49 Savannah, Mo. 64485 Address_ City___ State___ Name___ Adult sizes Adult Sizes: Sm___ Md___ Lg___ Xlg___ Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery Also available `15 x 15` natural tote bag printed with the UO sea bag (plus diploma). $4.95 plus 500 postage. 50c postage Researcher speaks bees' language Buzzing sounds filter through the door of 614-A Snow Hall. Inside the tiny, cubby-hole of a room are complicated contraptions and strange machinery. Many black and yellow bumblebees crawl and fly around their artificial home. The bees are part of the research that Sydney Cameron is doing to help them find a new home for her PhD in entomology, Sarah Lyle, Wichita junior, is her assistant. Only a few of Cameron's bees are kept in Snow Hall. Most of them are in an annex of McColum Lab, where the scientists are conducting bee research. "Bumblebees are one of the few social bees," said Cameron. "They are not as social as honeybees, but just below." Honeybees dance to direct other workers to where flowers are, she explains. She is trying to find out how bumblebees communicate. queen bees from underground nests to begin her project. The queen bees were given a lump of pollen into which they laid eggs. Each queen gave birth to workers and began to build a hive. AS EACH BEE was born, it was painted with a black-on-yellow number to identify it and its age. This number enables Cameron to eat and drink, and foraging for food and to observe its actions when it returns to the nest. Plexiglass containers holding hives are connected by a small wire mesh tube to a screened-in foraging area. A worker can fly into the screened area and drink a nectar from one of two glass p尼ettes. use chemical markers or leave chemical messages on their bodies or in the nectar they had collected. Cameron said that she had not discovered any communication among the bees and that one bee seemed to have been for weeks, even if the nest began to become depleted. She had thought that the bumblebees might IN CONNECTION with her research, Cameron has advertised for bumblebee nests on a local radio station and has received a few responses. Last week she sent a tweet that had been disturbed by a builder. The bees, upset at being moved, stung her, Cameron said. Cameron, a native of California, received a BA in Biology from Mills College and earned a Masters degree in entomology from the University of California-Berkeley. He received his Master's from Heinrich, professor of entomology, from 1979-1979. Her research there also involved bees. At KU, Cameron is studying under Charles D. Michener, professor of entomology. She said that she chose him because her叔's reputation in the study of bees. Desserts From Village Inn We Suggest Our Special . . . Banana-Nut Crepe One of our very special crepes filled with ice cream, crowned with sliced bananas, luscious hot fudge, a special whipped topping and chopped nuts $1.75 Cheese Cake -- "European Style" Topped with strawberries or blueberries plant with topping $1.25 $1.50 $1.50 Deep Dish Pies — Fruit or Sundaes Deep Dish Rice Cream filling ... $1.35 Dessert Blintze choice of fruit toppings and crowned whipped topping ... $1.35 Dessert Crepe choice of fruit toppings and crowned whipped topping . . . . . $ . 95 Strawberry Shortcake shortcake topped with strawberries, blueberries, peaches or cherries $1.35 Hot Fudge — 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream under thick 'n smooth hot fudge, whipped topping and chopped nuts ... $1.25 Carrot Cake ... $ 95 **Strawberry** — Luscious strawberry topping and whipped topping over 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream topped with nuts . . . . . $1.25 Chocolate — For those coco-nuts who say "any flavor as long as it's chocolate." 3 scoops of vanilla ice cream topped with chocolate syrup and whipped topping, and sprinkled with nuts . . . . . . $1.25 Ice Cream — Single scoop . . . . $ . 55 Milk Shakes Thick and Creamy. Milk Shakes — Thick and Creamy, Chocolate, Strawberry or Vanilla . . . $1.15 Jello ... $ .50 Come and See Us! Village Inn is located at 821 Iowa 31415927 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 31415927 - 03 TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-56 2.75% These two TI calculators can help you handle courses in math,in science,or business. Now and in the real world. A Texas Instruments professional calculator will help make your study time more productive. And it can also help you move into the world of a professional. A world where knowing the concept is only part of the solution. Bringing out the answer requires a working knowledge of a powerful personal calculator. One real-world lesson you'll learn in school is the importance of productivity. Time you spend doing the math part of the problem is time you can't spend learning concepts. Calculus Displaysing Functional Mathematics Aero to Displaying Mathematics economical TI Business Analyst-I with Statistics and advanced business functions. Pre-programmed with business functions for time-value of money, statistics, profit margin. And other problems you'll encounter in business school. Other capabilities include percent, squares, logs, and powers. Its 140-page book, "Keys to Money Management!" (a $4.95 value), has step-by-step instructions plus sample problems. It's an extra value with every BA-I. Texas Instruments technology - bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips problems you'll encounter in This capable calculator has AOS™ easy entry system, statistical functions, 10 memories, 9 levels of parentheses, trig, powers and roots, plus programmatability. Its book, "Calculator Decision Making Sourcebook" (a $4.95 value), helps you get all the power pre-programmed into the TL-15$ The T1-55 advanced slide rule with statistics and programmability. See the whole line of TI calculators at your college bookstore or other retailer. "Trademark of Texas Instruments TEXAS INSTRUMENTS Future holds promise for medical sciences Fifty Years of Innovation Looking ahead to the 1890s and beyond, Fred Samson, director of the KU Medical Rehabilitation Center, said yesterday he was optimistic about "remarkable" improvements in medicine. samson, a national leader in the field of neurosciences, spoke on "Health and Diseases in the 1980s" at yesterday's event. Dr. Samson is by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries. "The good news now is that a child born today has a life expectancy of 75 years," Samson said. "But the bad news is that your body is basically made for 100 years." Specialized emergency medical care teams will be used more in the future to treat accident victims, he said. The teams will enable a physician to spend more time researching and treating more sophisticated diseases, he said. "These teams could be trained at a lower level than medical trainees." Sampson said. SAMSON OUTLINED several new ideas and techniques in areas including emergency medical services and genetics. The teams would be better equipped to deal with a wide variety of emergencies because many medical 45731 "We cannot predict the future," Samson said, "but we can invent it, and the university is the most important institution in determining what we invent." STRONGER DISEASE and drought-resistant strains of plants could be developed and the world could be fed more cheaply and effectively, he said. "The [artificial] creation of DNA makes possible a new form of life," he He also spoke of rapid advances in the area of genetics. He said genetic engineering would have the greatest effect on agriculture. centers cannot always efficiently address patients in a dinner, Sandra said. Universities are vital to the future research and development of medicine, It also is possible, Samson said, to develop insulin made from human genes by placing them in laboratory bacteria and allowing them to grow. Insulin is used in the treatment of diabetes. Most insulin is taken from swine, he said, which poses sanitary and financial problems. Human insulin could be cheaper and easier to obtain, he said. S Fantastic Sam's the original Family Haircutters © 1980 Texas Instruments Incorporated new hours Mon Fri 9-6 Tues Wed Thurs 9-8 Sat 9-5 - adult style $12.00 - perm $40.00 INCORPORATED - color $26.00 Students: - Henna Lucent $20.00 - luminize $20.00 take advantage of the (includes cut) NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY. coupon for $2 off any service in the PeopleBook MQ Social Media 841-1877 1422 W.23rd Lawrence LUSTRIUM RING Take Advantage of Our Ring Days! Special Price—$78.00 September 10 and 11 High School Ring Trade-Ins Accepted! EVERYTHING YOUR COLLEGE RING SHOULD BE AT A PRICE FAR LESS THAN GOLD. BRIAN BREWER AMC STATESFIELD Bob L ANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Main Store Level 2 Main Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students. YOUR SCHOOL & MARKETS BEAMS JUNION YOUR KANSAS JUNION BOOKSTORES CORPORATE BREWING *The Midwests Finest Live Entertainment Every Wednesday thru Saturday. We bring you the Quality Entertainment and Surroundings you deserve . . . At the Pladium you won't have to settle for second best! The Latest Game Room, Featuring Pinball and Video Games. Hear, Top Rock Sounds, By Your Favorite Artists. At Lawrence's Finest Rock Palace. - Reserved Sections For Special Group Functions *Tuesdays—Happy Hour, 8 pm to Close—$1.75 Pitcher, 50* Draws *Wednesdays—Are Always Ladies Night—Plus Live Entertainment *Thursdays—All You Can Drink—Plus Live Entertainment. *Fridays & Saturdays—Live Entertainment, Rock 'n' Roll Weekend* Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta Upsilon 901 Mississippi Open at 8 pm 841-4500 Watch For Parents Day Specials At The Pladium 4 1 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Page 9 I am a yoga teacher. I teach yoga in many countries around the world. My students love my practice and I always want to help them achieve their goals. Yoga is a practice that can help you improve your flexibility, strength, and balance. It is also a way to relieve stress and anxiety. I am passionate about yoga and I want to make it as enjoyable as possible for my students. BEN BIGLER/Kansen staff Bob Luder, Caldwell sophomore, checks his watch to see how much more time he can spend relaxing on a bench near Dyche Hall. Kansas farmers of the future will plan their crops based on information from a satellite developed with the help of KU scientists. Satellite to measure moisture The satellite, scheduled for orbit in the late 1980s, is being developed by a team of 15 KU scientists, in conjunction with other universities and federal agencies, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. THE SATELLITE will gather information on soil moisture content that will be more accurate than information gathered on the ground, according to Fawarwah, professor of electrical UK's Remote Sensing Laboratory. In addition to research, the KU group formulates the research goals and integrates the technology with the needs of the people who will use it. Ulaby said recently. Gerald Bradley, a research associate at the Remote Sensing Laboratory, is assisting Ulaby as program manager. Ulaby also has been instrumental in developing the mathematical formula that will translate the satellite signals from clouds to showing varying levels of soil moisture. The KU team was chosen for participation partially because Ulaby is the only researcher in the United States with the types of radar used in the project. THE NEW MAPS will be similar to those now produced from optical signals returned from NASA's LANDSAT satellites, which have been orbiting the earth since the early 1970s. LANDSAT satellites provide information on topography, geography, and weather, and provide insight into patterns of pollution and urban growth. The significance of the new satellite is that it carries microwave radar sensors, which enable it to measure soil moisture content. Ulaby said. THE LANDSAT satellites, which carry only optical sensors, are unable to collect soil moisture data, Ulaby said. "Our satellite will measure the amount of energy the earth puts out, and will feed those measurements into antennas on earth. You might say it will measure the reflectivity of the earth. Different tones or frequencies of radar respond to the moisture in different wavs." Ulabv said. KU SCIENTISTS have been working for years to find the proper radar frequency by refining a mathematical formula that will accurately measure soil moisture levels. The formula must account for variations in the shape and elevation of the land formation being studied. Ulaby has been a leader in this formula research, and with the KU research group, has tested proposed formulas throughout Kansas by comparing information gathered from aerial surveillance and ground stations with that from more conventional soil analysis techniques. METEOROLOGISTS WILL use the same information to predict the weather, and water resource managers will apply it to the management of rivers and reservoirs and to other river management, such as flood control. Once the mathematical formula is perfected and the satellite is in orbit, the information it provides will have a variety of uses. Ulaby said. The satellite will transmit its information to a network of receivers on earth, similar to the ones now used for the LANDSAT system. Some of the receivers will be in Europe, and although the information will belong to the United States, it will be available to all countries. Ulaby is working with Kansas State University researchers on a similar program aimed at predicting crop yields. It is based on crop moisture measurements, rather than moisture in the soil. During the next two years, airborne ear tests will be conducted throughout the U.S. Ulaby said he expected the new satellite to carry instruments from that project, in addition to those aimed at measuring moisture in the soil. Fall 1980 Leagues ... All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 6:30 Dormitory 6:30 All Star Scratch 1,000 K.U. LADIES 8:30 Greek Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Friday 4:00 TGIF Sunday 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) P.M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 Bowling - Billiards Amusement Machines Cold Beer Join A Fall League NOV Hours Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Sat. & Sun. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM BOWLING IS FUN! MKULT Jay Bowl 3 For Reservations/Info, call 864-3545 KANSAS UNION T Jazz Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club Don't Miss our Happy Hour, $ \frac{1}{2} $ price drinks week days 5-7 p.m. Check out our new 5 foot T.V. screen for ball games and Jazz Shows. Join us with no cover charge for a Jam Session this Sunday 6-9 p.m. Sandwiches & Drinks available!! Live Music! Friday Saturday Tommy Johnson experiment Fri. & Sat. 1/2 Happy Hour Live Jazz 12:30-2:30 Special $3.00 cover total for whole group Paul Gray and the Gaslight Gang Admission $2.00 ALEXANDRA BURGESS AND RICHARD M. MILLER fall '80 in clothes from Mister Guy . . . Lawrence's only complete specialty shop for Gentlemen and Ladies we at Mister Guy believe in "style" not fashion . . . clothing from Mister Guy is timeless and becomes even better and more personal the more you wear it . . . MISTER GUY M-T-W-F-Sat.10-6 Th10-9 Sun.-1-5 920 Massachusetts KJHK 91 The Sound Alternative WEEKDAYS Presents its Fall Lineup 6:00a.m.-9:00a.m. Good Morning And All That Jazz 9:00a.m.-12noon Crossover 12noon-6:00a.m. Progressive SATURDAY SHOWS 10:00a.m.-2:00p.m. Old Wave with Doc Roc 2:00p.m.-6:00p.m. Down Home (country) SUNDAY PROGRAMS 12midnight-9:00a.m. Progressive 9:00a.m.-12noon Jazz Special 12noon-4:00p.m. 4:00p.m.-7:00p.m. Soul Voyage 7:00p.m.-10:00p.m. Reggae 10:00p.m.-2:00a.m. London Calling (best of British New Wave) Blues Partially Funded By Student Senate Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 11. 1980 Strategy key in bank contest By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Five KU graduate students who advanced to the finals of a national banking content last week could week banker Isaac Manhattan Bank a run for its money. The students are officers of a mythical institution called the Jayhawk State Bank, and they are the only finalists who are not professional bankers, Nancy Buschman, assistant professor of business, said yesterday. THE BANKING GAME, called the Buschman acts as an adviser for the students, who receive one hour of credit for their participation in the content. ROCK ROLL September 10, 11, 12 and 13 US Mon. and Tues. $ 99^{\circ} $ pitchers all night! Wednesday—Ladies Night free beer for ladies 7:00-9:00 PM Thursday Drink and Drown $4.00 guys $3.00 girls G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa National Asset-Liability Management Competition, pits 100 hypothetical banks against one another for the largest share of customers and assets. has given us a chance. The KU team was one of the eight teams to advance to the finals. "They're all excited about making it to the finals," Buschman said. They've been in and out of my office all along, talking about new strategies." One of the members said he was even more excited about the possibility of winning the top prize, a trophy and a free trip to New Orleans. strategy. "Basically, we tried to keep our costs low and our revenues high," DeCoursey said. “It’s been fun and I learned a lot about banking,” said John DeCoursey, Kansas City, Kan., law and business major. “I’ve got to New Orleans— Since last May, DeCoursey, Larry Baughman of Fairway, Dave Fisher of Parsons, Karen Wehner of Eudora and Sue Weaver, all business graduate students, have planned their banking strategy. (1979) (1977) When was the last time you saw a movie where the most mature character was a woman? She was born to the neurotic, narcissistic Manhattan style both of film and traveling and living with Michael Ingway. Diane Keaton, Michael Murphy and Marytie Stuples. Plus, "Pinklows Go." is a film in which she plays (1977) The Grateful Dead Movie In each of the games's three rounds, the students made management decisions such as setting interest rates Friday, Sept. 12 Manhattan Dona Fior is prepared to settle down with her calm second husband until her first wife takes over, and she returns, death comes, back as a ghost. Based on Jorge Amado's acrostic novel, this sexy thriller follows the story of Sonia Barga as Dona Fior, Directed by Bruno Barret (106 min.) Portuguese Supervised by Jerry Garcia, the Grateful Dead Metal captures the unique music and vibe of 20 of their greatest numbers; the film also features a stunning animation sequence based on the album Sam." Directed by Garcia and Leon Gast. "A film" (141 mln.) Color: 12-20 Midnight. Saturday, Sept. 13 Manhattan The Grateful Dead Movie Sunday, Sept. 14 Pinnochio Thursday, Sept. 11 Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands percent of the trips last year, Eden said. SNA FILMS Don't be put off by the Disney name, this is a work of art animation, bold, colorful and scary, and much more than Ward Kiballia, Carmine Carroll's story of the puppet who wanted to be a real boy. Plus, he becomes a brilliant fantasy. Plus: "Gertie the Dinosaur" and "Good Deed." (841/372 mil). Color: 200. Unless otherwise noted; all will be shown at Woods Hall; woodshop hours are 10 a.m., $1.00, Friday; Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Mining Hall films are $2.00. Tickets are $25 per person, as Union, 4th level, Information 864-3497. No smoking or refresher admissions at 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 12:00 Midnight students were informed approximately two weeks before the spring break trips to Padre Island, Daytona Beach and Winter Park last summer. They would pay an additional fee because of an unexpected bus fare increase. Last summer, the officers of the Jayhawk State Bank had five-hour meetings at least twice a month—all for one hour of credit. There were personal benefits. "You can learn everything in academic terms," he said. THEIR STRATEGIES were then fed to a computer in the Maryland office of the Business and Management Foundation, the consulting firm that provides the machine for a week, the machine delivered a financial statement and strategy rating. "I couldn't guess how many hours they worked for that one hour of work." NEXT WEEK, the students will meet to plan their final strategy. Dcoursey said it probably would include an innovative 5 percent saving rate that stunned the competition in the first two rounds. "Our strategy has improved in every round," Buchman said. "We have as a whole a good work ethic." and buying advertising. They tried to beat the other banks in their hypothetical consumer market. However, DeCourse said that the course was worth all the work involved. THE TRIP to Padre Island, originally priced at $165, was increased by $17.41 or 10.6 percent; the trip to Daytona Beach, originally priced at $192, was increased by $19.86; the trip to Winter Park, originally priced at $215, was increased by $10.75 or 5 percent. The SUA Travel Committee is negotiating with three bus companies in hope of gaining a guaranteed fare so the cost of the Christmas and spring break trips does not increase as it did last year. However, he did not expect another price increase before Jan. 1, he said. "The spring break trips are the ones that have a greater chance of an increase." Eden said. Negotiations with Continental Trailways, Greyhound and Jefferson Lines, Inc., a Kansas City, Mo. based company, have reached an impasse with the Elden, SUA professionals in Idaho and an "unresolved problem." By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter Eden said that SUA wanted the companies to guarantee bus fares for student trips, but that all three had refused to do so. The chance of a significant increase for the Christmas trips to Cozumel, Mexico or Breckenridge, Colo. is doubtful, he said. brochure prices for the Christmas trips, Eden said. The Getaway trips that SUA has scheduled for the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs, Kan., a Kansas City Royals baseball game, the Winfield Bluegrass Festival and the State University be affected because they are scheduled before the Sept. 1 increase, he said. Transportation usually accounts for 20 to 30 percent of the trips' total cost, but, because of the fare increase, it accounted for 35 to 40 CONTINENTAL, TRAILWAYS, which SUA has dealt with in the past, did announce an increase in its capacity to carry freight that might might be a slight change in the SUA seeks guaranteed bus fares Students who signed up for the Padre Island or Daytona Beach trips were sent letters explaining the situation and were given the option of canceling and receiving a refund, Eden said. Last year Continental Trailways verbally agreed to a set rate with SUA, but later backed out, he said. SUA HAD NOTHING to back its claim because Trailways said its new rates had been filed with the State Commerce Commission, he said. Students were not able to cancel if they had signed up for the Winter Park trip because there was a clause built into the contract stating the student was obligated to pay the 5 percent increase, he said. THURSDAY LADIES' NIGHT Ladies—get in FREE and receive a coupon for two FREE drinks after 8:00 pm! W GAMMONS GAMMONS (Guys get in for $1.00) 23rd and Ousdahl (Southern Hills Center) Tired of the Check Cashing Hassle? Want your money when you need it? Having an impromptu party? Making an early morning bookstore purchase? Maybe you need fast cash for a last minute date. Whatever your reason for needing cash in a hurry, you can get it at Capitol Federal's Money"Matic terminal in the Student Union or at the one located in the Satellite Union. You can even use the system to cash a check. For your extra convenience, we have Money"Matic locations in the following Lawrence supermarkets. 1740 Massachusetts 1312 W. 6th Street 2108 W. 21st Street 23rd W. Louisiana Rusty's Hilcrest Rusty's Northside Rusty's Westridge Dillon's Plaza Dillon's W. 6th Dillon's W. 27th St. Rusty's Food Center 901 Iowa 608 N. 2nd Street 6th & Kasold If you run short of cash on a weekend trip, you will probably be close to one of the Money*Matic locations in Manhattan, Emporia, Topeka or Salina. All six of our Johnson County offices and our new Wichita office have an automated teller machine, Passcard Center, that allows you to make deposits, cash withdrawals or cash a check, 7 a.m.-11 p.m.-7 days a week. To earn $1 ½ %$ interest on your easily accessible money and eliminate unnecessary check cashing hassle, come into any Capitol Federal office and open your Passcard account. It will only take a few minutes—you may save those the first time you use it! The Capitol Federal Passcard—it adds interest, subtracts hassle, and equals the greatest $ convenience you have ever had. Sign up—Today!! Capitol Federal Savings 11th & VERMONT / IOWA & HARVARD. Phone 843-5850 / 841-0700 Lawrence US FORCES Com First Jump Course $56.00. Groups of boremore—only $45.00 per person. Price includes: los book, all training, all equipment, first jum- nage. Students required to show proof of age. Located 4 miles west of Wells, wife on the Cart Coffman farm. For either informational call. SKY DIVING Some Fly With Us Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tuesday.-Sun. CCCWC 1000 W. 45th St. Milton Ave. 312-789-6000 KC 883-4210 or 883-2535 BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE SULFATE INDICATOR SLANT COATING TITLE LABEL MULTIPURPOSE CLEAR SOLID COATING PRODUCTION THIS STANDARD WITH CHROMium BASF 2995 CASE of 10 or 3.49 EACH Super Chrome Tape BASF II C-90 FILL UP $100 D3 to discwasher Enhances cleaning performance Aids in maintaining the health of your dishwasher Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th CRAIG Language Translator 1/2 price 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 SINCE 1 1/2 price 9995 only 9995 Hurry, Limited Quantities. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN THE RESISTANCE PRICES IN THE MIDWEST University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Page 11 VINCENT MAYER DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff BSA MAKRUMAHRAI BSA MAKRUMAHRAI Fred, Sherman, Sr. Brushdrill, Frides a homemade unicycle on his way to practice with the Lawrence High School band. K. U. WEEK AT THE OPERA HOUSE Documentary chronicles opera house renovation FRIDAY KUID Night KELLEY HUNT & THE KINETICS $1.00 Cover Between 8 & 9 With KUID 50* Bottles And Cans All Night With KUID Other ID Specials Throughout The Night By GREG RICHARDS Staff Reporter SATURDAY Buck Night Two Great Pop-Rock Bands THE CLOCKS and FRED'S WALLET $1.00 Adm. All Night Long $1.00 For Your First Pitcher Or Drink A film examining a massive local effort to restore the historic Brown Grand Opera House in Concordia, directed by KU assistant professor of English at Charles Berg, made its local debut at the Lawrence Public Library last night. "Behind the Grand Door" documents the community's restoration of the building and its attachment to the town's cultural past and future. Coming Events September 14 JON PAUL 19 LUMOUSINE 20 LIVERROCK 24 LYNCH AND MCBEE BAND 28 JOHN HARTFORD 29 ULTRAVOX 30 ALLEN GINSBERG WILLIAM BUURROUGHS THE THUMBS Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House "The community wanted to do some kind of film that would deal with the role of the theater in the social and natural fabric of Concordia," Berg said. The Brown Grand Opera House was built in 1906 by one of the town's wealthiest and most influential men, Colonel Napoleon Bonaparte Brown, and provided live entertainment in the early part of the century. Shooting for the film started in March 1978 and editing was completed last spring. Last night's showing was one of the film's first. IN THE 1920s the theater was converted to a movie palace, Berg said, and was used as such until the city moved its building in the early seventieth. The thirty-minute color film looks first at the history of the building and Production of the film was sponsored by the community restoration organization and funded by the Kansas Committee for the Humanities. "KCH regards the use of media presentations as catalysts for discussion," Berg said. "It's getting people to think about a number of personal concerns—how people raised history, how people encountered such landmarks as the Brown Grant." Berg said that approximately $500,000 was raised for the project through KCH, in cooperation with the Humanities. Endowment for the Humanities. "One of the valuable things about a project like this is that it gives students 'real-life' shooting experience," Berg said. BERG WAS ABLE to fill many film crew positions with students at KU and drew assistance from RTVF professors Bruce Linton and Peter Dart. Berg credits much of the film's success to student editor David Dart. He said that because only one foot of film was used for every fifteen feet shot, it was an immensely complex task. its builders and then examines local residents' memories of the theater. "Behind the Grand Door" will also be shown at the Manhattan Public Library September 22 and at the Brown Grand Theater September 24. THE ISLAND IS COMING!!! NOW'S THE TIME LET'S GET SERIOUS! BLACK AWARENESS SEMINAR - SYMPOSIUM Featuring: BERNARD FRANKLIN, CHAIRMAN KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS and GILBERT PARKS, M.D. PSYCHIATRIST, TOPEKA, KANSAS "The result is a very subtle erosion of human rights we don't see," he said. Biology Club Beer INGREDIENTS: PETROLE WATER VISCO ACIDE SINAPECE PINEAPPLE ALOMANI SEPTEMBER 12, 6:30-9:30 PM SEPTEMBER 13, 1-5:00 PM KANSAS UNION SPONSORED BY B.S.U. Funded by Student Activity Fee PLEASE ATTEND! Find Out More About the Biology Club. Come to Talk, TGIF and Meet Faculty Members on an Informal Basis. Fridays 4:00 p.m. Sunflower Room Kansas Union Partially funded by Student Senate viewpoint was that a non-producer has no value. The film, by Francis Schaeffer, a Swiss author and theologian, and C. Everett Koop, chief surgeon at Children's Hospital in Philadelphia, is an error of the gradual loss of brain tissue and human value, Makin said. Film offers viewpoints on human rights, human values The series titled, "What Ever Happened To The Human Race?" sponsored by New Perspectives, a campus organization that was formed to schedule speakers and films that deal with current philosophical topics on the 7th floor at 319 West Charge. There is a $24 admission charge. The group's next activity will be a free lecture by Harold Slusher, astrophysicist at the University of Texas-Eli Paso, titled "The Age and Origin of the Universe" at 7 p.m., Sept. 30 in 3139 Wescoe. Although abortion, infanticide, and euthanasia may be thought by some to be pragmatic answers to difficult questions, a film series currently on campus presents them, including an Orwellian "1840 society" The film centers on a conflict between the traditional Judeo-Christian belief that people were created by God in his image and the secular-humanist view that people are a product of time and chance and not created by God, according to Kahn, events coordinator of the group. "The Judeo-Christian view holds that people have value because they were created in God's own image," Makin said. "The secular-humanist view, however, says that a person is only worth what he produces." "What happens when the individual can no longer produce or if he is born deformed and cannot function? Do we let him die?" he said. Makin, Lawrence graduate student, said that the logical conclusion of the secular-humanist Roller Skate outdoor/indoor ROLLER SKATES From $5995 RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence KS Bicycle AT $ \Omega $ - X $ \Omega $ DANCE MARATHON SATURDAY, SEPT. 13 THE ENTERTAINER A BOVE MR.BILLS 12 NOON-12 MIDNIGHT 50¢ DRAWS 1.00 DONATION AT THE DOOR SCHOLARSHIP & PRIZES WIN A WEEKEND IN - DALLAS · THE PUBLIC WELCOME TO PARTICIPATE All Proceeds Go To The American Cancer Society Sunday, September 14, 1980 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall The Guarneri String Quartet Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general admission For reservations call 913/864-3982 V The Arts Meat and Cheese Specials Cello Reg. Special Roast Beef...4.59 lb...3.99 lb. Turkey Breast...4.29 lb...3.79 lb. Corned Beef...5.29 lb...4.59 lb. Pastrami...5.49 lb...4.69 lb. Hard Salami...4.99 lb...4.39 lb. Kosher Salami...4.19 lb...3.79 lb. The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents One of the World's Finest Chamber Ensembles or Cream Sauce ... 3.99 lb. ... 3.29 lb. Lox... 13.95 lb. ... 10.95 lb. Baby Swiss ... 4.29 lb. ... 3.89 lb. Parmesan ... 5.19 lb. ... 4.69 lb. Smokey Cheddar ... 3.99 lb. ... 3.39 lb. Brie ... 5.19 lb. ... 4.89 lb. Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEN Cheese Emporium Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa Sun.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. & Sat. 11-10 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Jo Jo becomes King today By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer Former KU basketball standout Jo Je White will be a member of the Kansas City Kings for the 1980-81 season. White, a two-time All-American at KU in the late 1980s, will become the third guard on the Kings, backing up Phil Ford and Osi Birdsen. The Kings have been in dire need of guard since losing Billy McMacky to the Dullas team in the expansion draft as the start of the summer. White, an 11-year NBA veteran, spenit second season with the Golden State Warriors. He was released by the club at the end of the season after a near-empty roster was free to talk with any club about his services. He said late last week that he wanted to stay near his Lawrence home. "I'm excited about the deal." White said yesterday. "Actually, I'm bubbling. I've been working out here in Lawrence in hopes that Kansas City could work something out. "This area is where a lot of my roots are." "This area is where a lot of my ideas come to. To obtain White, the Kings promised. White the Golden State future cash considerations. White will sign a contract with the Kings at 1 p.m. today in Kemper Arena. The club opens its training camp in ST. Joseph, Mo., tomorrow. "The Kings are my type of people," White said. "Cotton Fitzsimmons is my type of coach. I'm in a super situation." I'm a super situation. "Whatever he wants me to do and whatever I can do I'll do to help this club. It's like coming home." A seven-time NBA All-Star and the most valuable player in the 1978 league championships with the Boston Celtics, White spent an unhappy season and a half with Golden State. He was publically critical of a team that won only 24 of 82 games. or 82 games. While he has a career scoring average of 17.4 points and his disallowed 4 outscams in his nine and half years with Boston and one and a half with Golden State. He also has played in 80 playoff games and on two world championship teams. "I'm happy to stay home," he said. "And I'm happy to play in front of people who love me." Wa to buy in the morning. Why Big Eight player to ever be named the most valuable player in the Big Eight Holiday Tournament three times, said that he would decide at the end of this season whether to continue playing or retire. He has expressed a desire to coach someday. And the possibility of coaching at KU? "Sure, I'd love to coach," he said. "But nobody has offered anything to me yet." ___ "That would be to be one of my goals," he said, "This is my home." BETICS Jo Jo White California takes 3rd straight from KC Kansas City Royals' Magic Number Magic Number 6 From Kansan wire service ANAHEIM, Calif. — Amos Otis' two-base error led a series of mistakes as the slumping Kansas City Royals lost to the California Angels 8-3 last night. nighthawks, the Royals, who committed three errors and left 11 runners on base, lost for the seventh time in their last nine games. It was the third straight loss to the sixth-place Angels. Batt the Royals moved closer to clinching the American League West because the second-place Texas Rangers lost their second straight to the Oakland A's. The magic number is six, which means that they will win Kansas City, Paris and Texas defeats totaling six will clinch the division for the Royals. OTIS, WOY HAS led American League outfielders with the top fielding percentage for the last two years, dropped Rod Carew's routine fly ball to center field at the start of the seventh inning. Royal pitcher Renie Martin, who had a three-hitter and a 1-1 tied game entering the inning, became unmerved and walked Jason Thompson and Dan Ford to load the bases. Carew scored as Bobby Grich bounced into a force out. Pinch runner Ben Campaneris came home on a single by Bob Clark. Jeff Twitty relieved and struck out Rick Miller before Dave Skaggs singled to score Grich and put the Angels ahead 4-1. KANASS CITYT had its best offensive effort since George Brett and his .368 batting average were sidelined last week with a hand injury. The Royals nailed California's three pitchers for 13 Brett, who missed his fourth consecutive game since he injured his right hand Saturday in Cleveland, is scheduled to be re-examined. He told that he would not play until he was 100 percent. Brett needs 54 plate appearances to qualify for the batting championship. The Royals have 22 games left. Team officials said that he has 18 games left, and still get the necessary plate appearances. needs. HARTTN, 8-9, was the losing pitcher. California reliever Don Asele, 8-13, picked up the victory and former Royal Andy Hassler recorded his seventh save. the New York Yankees held their three-game advantage over second place Baltimore. advantageover secalon, the Yankees, who had dropped a game and a half in the last two days, beat Toronto 7-6. Baltimore also won, beating Detroit, 8-4. THE KANSAS CITY Royals announced yesterday plans for ticket sales for the American League Championship Series and World Series. For games in Kansas City, fans can purchase two tickets for either an American League Championship series game or a World Series game. Tickets will be sold on an individual game basis only. In the other American League pennant race, Games one and two of the championship series would be played in Kansas City at 2 p.m. Oct. 8 and 7 i5p.m. Oct. 10. For the Foyers game, would be played in Kansas City, our four, five, if necessary, would be in Kansas City. 0435H Ticket requests must have a Sept. 15 postmark and should be mailed to: Championship Baseball, 1980, P.O. Box 1000, Kansas City, Mo. 6441. Envelopes specify the type of tickets desired in the lower-left hand corner and should include a completed return address. A self-addressed stamped envelope also should be included. Woodard scores 9 in victory By PATTIARNOLD By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Despite playing on an injured ankle, KU senior Lynette Woodchard in nine points and dished out an assist to help the Kodak All-Americans defeat the Women's Basketball League champion New York Stars last night in Salt Lake City. Woodard was undercut in practice Tuesday, according to KU basketball coach Marian Washington. She did not play a serious game but stop the three time All-America from starting and playing about half the game. starting and playing basketball. Washington and her team watched the game on television last night and the coach said Woodard played "fairly well." "She missed some short shots," Washington said, "but they all did. I was pleased with the defense she played. And her teammates were here cheering her on." ALL OF THE All-Americans played, Washington said, and Woodard was in about 18 minutes. Washington said the All-American looked tight but played with intensity. Two-time Wade Trophy winner Nancy Lieberman, now with Dallas of the WL, started at guard. Old Dominion's Inge Nisson and Louisiana Tech's Pam Kelly were double posts, with Woodham and UCLA's Denise Curry at forward. The Jayhawk was 3-for-9 from the field and 3-for-4 from the free-throw line. A member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team, Woodard is this year's leading candidate for the Wade Trophy, which is given each year to the country's top woman player. SHE IS ALSO just 390 points from passing Carol Błazewski as the nation's all-time leading woman scorer, and could also become only the second woman to manatee a record of 455. Only Ann Myers, who tried out with the Indian Pacers of the NBA last year, accomplished that feat. Dark Solstice a theatre piece based on Celtic myth and magic 8:00 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12 Swarthout Recital Hall Murphy Hall Tickets available at Murphy Box Office Admission: $2.75 Sponsored by International Theatre Arts Committee and International Theatre Studies Center FACETS PERFORMANCE ENSEMBLE directed by Nicole Dreiske Spirit Squad and Mike Person AUDITIONS Monday, Sept. 15, 5 p.m. Allen Field House Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Sept. 15, 16, 17, 5 p.m. Informational Meeting Clinics Tryouts --- All requirements for the spirit squad, mike person will be explained at the meeting September 15. No previous experience necessary. Minorities encouraged to participate. Thursday, Sept. 18 HOURS 8 00-8 00 MON-FRI 9 00-3 00 SAT 12 00-3 00 SUN COPIES 1½¢ EACH COMMERCIAL PRINTING PHOTOTYPESETTING LAYOUT AND DESIGN Headquarters for Thesis Copying and Binding HOUSE OF USHER 838 MASSACHUSETTS | LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 | 913) 842 3610 More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a free blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 841-4488 Saturday 9-3 TRUE BLUE PREPPIE A. Cuddly lambwool angora cardigan from Cuddly in white only. $31. B. Button down oxford shirt. In red, white, blue, pink and maize. $16. C. To top an authentic tartan kit. $29. D. Cable knit knee socks in all colors. $3. E. Classic circle pin with the sparkle of gold. $4. F. Assorted tartan headbands. $6. carousel CHARGE VISA carousel CHANGE VISA carousel 711 W. 23rd Mall's Shopping Center Hours: 10-6 M-S 10-8:30 Thurs. BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 7 31 New Hampshire 9 am-5 pm "Say it with a Song 841-6169 ASTA Singing Telegrams Flowers by Alexanders ViN Meisner- Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING **$2.49...AND GET A FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAR-BAKE AND GRATED BY A PRIESED HIGH ON A GOLDEN BU SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES! (Expiration Date) Sept. 17th, 1980 2214 YALE ST. BREWER UNIVERSITY CAMPAIGN NAME 842-6121 VALUABLE COUPON BOBBY BELL'S BAR·B·QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING $2.49...GET A FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAR-B-QUE BEEF AND GRATED SLAW FILED HIGH ON A GOLDEN BUN SERVED WITH FRENCH Fries! (Expiration Date) Sept. 17th, 1980 2214 YALE ST. BEER PRESENTED BY VALUABLE COUPON 842-6121 BOBBY BELL'S BAR-B-QUE COUPON SPECIAL! --- TJ 15 E. to M T W T F F F pl ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ ARE YOU FEELING LIKE THE FASTER YOU GO THE BEHINDER YOU GET? Let us help you get it together. Attend the Academic Skill Enhancement Workshop Workshop Topics include Textbook Reading, Notetaking, and Testing. Topics include: Time Management. Thursday, September 11 6:30 to 10:00 (p.m.) 300 Strong Hall For more information call or come by the Please bring along one of your textbooks. Student Assistance Center, 864-4064. 121 Strong Hall. ★★★★★☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆ Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 J Sports Calendar Page 13 11 9 p.m. — Kansas City Royals at California Angels 10 a.m. — San Francisco — Kolley injury in Kansas State invitational at Mahat 12 3) p: p.m. - Kansas City 4) p: p.m. - Kansas City 5) p: p.m. - KKPK, PKF, 2 and 3) 6) p: p.m. - Kansas City State International at Manhattan k -mu -KUJRug vs. Kaua City PIScR at RC23 at King Island PIScR at RC23 k -mu -KUJBassel vs. Barbion County Community College at Oglueigh Golf Club k -mu -Duckton University at Orange Ducks (KANF1M) d -km -Kaua City d -km -KKAM -KKKFM k -KUJmen -KKKFM -kUJ men cross country -kKMZAB -KKKFM -w Ciccleda at Wichita 13 1 p.m. - KU baseball vs. County Community College 3 p.m. - Mt. Zion vs. 3:00 p.m. - Kansas City Royals at Oakland KY 4 p.m. - Texas A&M - KU men's play in Golf Clastic at Lake Geneva, N.J. Sports Quiz 14 Q ★★ —KU women's golf team in the Berming Golf Classic at Oklahoma City. In 1969, the Pittsburgh Steelers won the right to the first selection in that year's NLA draft. The Steelers chose Terry Bradshaw out of southwest Louisiana, who has since led the Steelers to four Super Bowl championships. What KU ballplayer was chosen second in the '69 draft and what team drafted him? Major-league Baseball Yesterday's answer— A Today's question— AMERICAN LEAGUE In the 1948 Orange Bow, Kansas was on its way to upsetting Georgia Tech in the final minutes, but tumbled on the 2-footline. However, when the jayhawks did score their two points against Wisconsin, they were beaten by guard, Don Fambourg, made good on the conversions. EAST | | W | L | L2 | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 87 | 62 | 528 | .41 | -- | | Baltimore | 84 | 61 | 504 | .39 | -- | | Seattle | 79 | 61 | 525 | .30 | 10 | | Milwaukee | 74 | 67 | 515 | .24 | 14 | | Cleveland | 71 | 67 | 514 | .24 | 15 | | Detroit | 71 | 68 | 511 | .24 | 16 | | Pittsburgh | 59 | 80 | 434 | .19 | -- | | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 87 | 53 | 1.02 | 17% | | Oakland | 87 | 53 | 1.02 | 17% | | Atlanta | 69 | 70 | 408 | 17% | | Minnesota | 69 | 70 | 408 | 17% | | Chicago | 58 | 79 | 429 | 27 | | California | 55 | 79 | 429 | 27 | | New York | 55 | 79 | 429 | 27 | NATIONAL LEAGUE W 78 L 47 Pct. GB Montreal 79 63 547 Philadelphia 72 63 143 Boston 73 62 341 St. Louis 72 60 424 New York 59 68 434 N.J. 59 64 153 Miami 59 64 153 Los Angeles W 7 L Pct. GB Houston 79 60 Pct. 568 Houston 79 60 Pct. 568 Atlanta 77 62 Pct. 311 Atlanta 77 62 Pct. 311 San Francisco 75 78 Pct. 482 San Francisco 75 78 Pct. 482 The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve十三 words of Power $ .25 $ .75 $ .75 $ .35 $ .35 $ .35 $ .90 $ .85 $ .60 $ .50 13 words of Power $ .25 $ .75 $ .75 $ .35 $ .35 $ .35 $ .90 $ .85 $ .60 $ .50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday ... Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday ... Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday ... Monday 9 p.m. Thursday ... Friday 9 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can ta- KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4258 ANNOUNCEMENTS Wanted to learn more about the Bible of fellow Christians. Send us your name and phone number. p.m., Parting in Christ, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. One dollar picnic—Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday at 8 a.m. gcm.; Friday, Weds. at 8 a.m. gcm.; Saturdays at 9 w22rd. Yoo-hunh Sqt, Sept. 19-23) is *Blue Grass Time* *Written by Writter Elaine Grass Dance*. Tickets are $10. **Includes** a free lunch. Toronto is the CLUB LOUSE SPECIAL HAPPY BOUR from 7-10 p.m. Highballs are (by) $1 Start off the right night at the Clubs; $2 Louct. $8 Locust. our business." 9-11 ENTERTAINMENT 75c. schoolers of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAKER, 109 Mass. tt Looking for something new on Sundays @kathryn.mcguire 9429. Care out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS Open from 8 p.m. til 3 a.m. Membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 **BIRINGH' IT ALL, BACK HOME.** This week we're heading back to the beach. Hitch a trip on our ever loved plane. Fast boarding is easy at Roger Bain. Dry Jack and rovere Wed. and Fridays at Roger Bain. 13:30 p.m. Only on Cable 6 - 9-12 OPUS prows supports Barry H堡基姆 soli com- panions to offer special packages. Bring over two pies with a crisp chair. Support your local underground customer! Available now at your favorite, headline FOR RENT For rent, nice apt. For men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 862-4185. ff 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting. now, 12'b, attached garage, all appliances, you'll like ourooks to Southern Parkway Townhouses, 20th and Kainold, 812-880-7900. 3 bdm. towheeze with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 813-7333 tf 3 bdrm. apt $350 month. All utilities paid. $100 deposit. No pets. 8-13-2440. 8-5 ask for Julie. Nice 2-bdrm. furnished apt close to KU. $500 mo. 841-9247. 9-12 Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic window locks, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455.m-5.8 a.m. 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. 1 bedroom apt. and comfortably comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 847-569-3000. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bedrms, study, room. 6-bedroom apartment with central carement control. No pet. For more information call 841-4435. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-10. Office space | Arena | 321 Masse | 650 m² Office space | Arena | 321 Masse | 650 m² Reloading also | certificates | GFZ73 Reloading also | certificates | GFZ73 3 bbm, basement amp $290 month. All util- ities 180 days in dockpit. Call 843-444-7844 ask for dike. Beautiful home elder in heart of Lawrence, family elder 4 bdrs, kitchen, dining rm, living rm library, utility rm, and 2 full bedrooms. Call 817-593-4858 or call 817-593-4858 p.m. 9-30 call 817-593-4858 p.m. 9-30 Villa Caripi Apartments. Unfurnished & 1 2 bedroom apartments available. Central air, wall to wall ceiling, closet, 24% blocks south on drive. Dishwasher, 494-793 and 8:30 am/weekly an internet works. Available now larger age range. by career center for 180-299 years old. by career center for 300-499 years old. 1968 Myerwoodsutte $360 per month. Bid # 857-607 857-607 For fall or spring, Nailsmith Hall offers you the best of dorms. You can eat good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room, cleaning services, softening coats and much more. If you're home or on an apartment isn't what you want, you'll find a room at HALL, 1600 Nailsmith Drive, 843-8559. tjhall@nailsmith.edu BRAND NEW FOUR-PLEX! For only $259 per month. You can live close to shopping, beaches and attractions, or distance to KU. And you'll be the first to live in these extra nice apartments. Dick Edmondson Real Estate at 841-874 or Rob Phillips at 842-993 or Dick Edmondson at 842-993. 2 bdmr. clean, quiet, close 764-5207. Collect. 9-17 Wardent or 1 or 2 Studentis to assay 9 t.80- Wareed or 1 or 2 Studentis to assay 9 t.80- $mote $mote Modern, air conditioned large 2 dabt, apt. Unfurnished. $235/mn. 3 only blocks from campus. Available Sept. 10. Call 842-024 or 864-3909. 9-12 KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished 2 bdm. carpet, draps, parking appliances Beautiful housing! Call 913-381-2878 10-3 Large 1 bdm. unfurnished apt., water paid dishwasher, AC. stove, refrigerator, east- west sun exposure, on bus route 841-7472 9-15 Large modern unfurnished 1 bdr. apt. large modern unfurnished 2 bdr. apt. Oct. 1. Walk to wall carpeting, central air vent, carpet, stairs, street parking for alyp 900m and street parking for allyp 900m and no other absolutely no pet allowed. 9:11 to 6:42 pm. For Rent-1. bbm airt. Nice location, 2% blks. So. for Frualls CA. C wall to walk carr. First 2 mths. rent FREE. 841-5337 after 3.30 p.m. anytime on Webline. Non-smoking roommate 10 share Non-smoking roommate 10 share Male, Gold Engagement $259.00, Credit Male, Gold Engagement $259.00, Credit Old West Lawrence 1 bbmr, apt. utilities 84-933-934 deposit. Available inmate 9-17 84-933-934 3 bdm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across 50m. swimming pool and tennis courts Roommate wanted for a 3 bdrm. house. $117 mei $ utilities. Call Kim at 84-760-2952. Room close to Union Utilities paid $90 and I call evening rooms 1, 2, keep trying. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialist. Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-969-3900, 3900 W, 6th. tt WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843- 1386. 2 bdm. bungeal, reextent recent remodel- ment of the main building $830.250. Call 843-3241 or George Waters, 842-9043 or keith Stanley, 843-7967 Mass. 843-3241 Hafel Real Estate, 9-12 Mass. 843-3241 1077 Dataun pickup. 4 speed, excellent comm- partment wifi. Excellent maintenance; bake 849-1073 after 5 p.m. with maintenance. Bake 849-1073 after 5 p.m. new excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding in 39-inch mattress, Ivory Furniture. 1200 New York Bldg. 841- 605-8788. (312) 256-0600. Drawing Table 30" x 42" and padded stool for sale. Barely used, like new condition. $135. Insult 842-0250 after 5. Dalpin Senior. 14 ft. Sailboat. Good condition. Dolphin, lifejacket, paddles, instructions. Priced to sell. 842-9927. 9-11 WANTED TO BUY-Camera, any year considered. Individual -no dealers. Could need repair. Call after 5:00. 379-0798 or 379-5033. 9-12 75 Mustang 2, 4 cyl, new radials, luggage rack, inspected, excellent condition. $2,300 call Tom after 6 p.m. at 843-5112. 9-11 78 Mazda GLC, ex. cond., best offer. 842- 5152. 9-11 Good food—All you can eat. Country Inn. 1350 N. 3rd, Lawrence, Kansas. (1 block N. of Earl turpentine entrance.) 9-12 Snow skils 195 cm with boots. Must sell. Call 841-8574 or 864-3627. 9-12 1988 Honda Hawk 400. Still in warranty. Good condition. Info. 884-7631. Build Free dachshund to loving home. Healthy. huggable gentle. Red two year old doggie. Pingong tangle. like brand complete with net and paddles 94-110-16 www.pingong.com Brand new Smith-Corona electric type- er and a stenographer machinist 542-3838 Small air conditioner, $25 and a 41/2 cpm foot refrigerator, $125. Call after 6:00 p.m. 843-4877. 9-12 1976 Cutlass Sup. Salon, 2 Dr. PT, AC, AM- 18k. Blue with white interior. 2124. 9-12 Like new large plush blue darm carpet. 9760 condition. Must see. Call 9-15. CARPET for dorm room. $75. CURTAINS must sell. 748-1777-6477 Must sell. 748-1777-6477 9-16 PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS pro- positive, laminated in hard plastic. For replicates, coat with a cotton-stamped envelope to; D & J Productions, Dek K1, Box 252, Tempe, Arizona 85281. 88 mpg Honda Hawk II 400 cc. street motor- racing car. Supercharged. Crave hale, faring and with hat- tles. Same as the other models. '75 Honda ST 90. Good Condition, Great Gas Milage. $300, Call Sarah, 841-2511. 70 V.W. convertible. Very good mechanical 1977 YAMAHA RD 400, like new, $750. 1978 YAMAHA RD 400, like new, $750. Watson Bulk Filk Ladder and 100 feet Bulk Filk Ladder Artist Strobe 103, 535 Call 864-6933 9-11 *long size* Waterbed-heater, liner, liner, brick-faced frame, 1 yr old, 84-12 after 5 p.m. Black Waterlily recliner, oversized arm chair, waterlily (no heater), cash only $9 9-17 Raleigh 10-speed, good condition, worth $115. Asking $75; Roller SL-81 Movie Camera. $100. $843.0983. 9-16 1974 Chevrolet Malibu, PS, PB, AC, AT, Book price $1400. 749-5099 after 5 week- days. 9-12 Musical Instruments. 1939 Gibson L-4 Musical Instruments. 1939 Gibson L-4 with case has $25. 1912 Nelson Upright Concert Guitar. 1912 Nelson Upright Concert Guitar. Jun. 2012 New toy top for concert guitar with bow and box. 1990 Serious inquiries guitar with bow and box. 1990 Serious inquiries Old couch and 2 easy chairs; $10.00; various clothes; pillow; $8.50; mattress and box springs; twin bed; 2 matching dressers, excellent condition; 864- 864, after 5; 842-1950, ask for Brien- 9-12 Unicycle with Free lessons. Call 844-6859 and ask for Hammer or call 843-1485. 9-17 Water Beds, hybrid bed -n- water type. Water Beds, hybrid bed -w- water type. Shopping Center, 482-2606. 9-17 MATTRESSES. Orthopedic sets from $39. Furniture, one side west of 9th and Iowa. Furniture, one block west of 9th and Iowa. Must sail ... 74 Javelin Nirest around-PSS. Skipped ... 84 Javelin Nirest this weekend. Cabin -6709 -5923 -5923 Greek paddles, jewelry, rings, ceramics, sports balls. Varsity Sports Shop 924 Mass St. 9-11 1978 280Z Datum 5 speed all Lux. pkg. 1878 1300 Datum 4 speed all Condition Must. 1878 642 B-8220 1975 TRT, perfect condition, low mileage, cash must, sell. 843-9334. 9-17 1. Ciaramayo in excellent shape, new paint, 2. Ciaramayo in very fine, new, very clean 3. on back of 5. 841-1839 4. on front of 5. 841-1839 Head Comp. 1 Tennis racket - 4 S 5 L grip excellent condition $25 - 9$ 841-8522 841-8522 75 Fiat 190 Convertible for sale, Mag. Mags. up to 30 mg, sharp. Priced: 9-12 duced. 88-127-110 FOUND A set of keys with the inscription of "sincerity" are displayed. 9.5. Call 843-8255, ask for Chris M. 911-8255. Magnifying glass on Crescent Rd. Thurs. 9/4. Describe and claim. 864-3549. 9-11 HELP WANTED Needed Immediately—School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student with a disability. Live in Boston, MA. Call Dana Wray 931-842-2783, 843-101-31. The University of Kansas Audio-Reader Community community program specialist. This person organizes volunteer activity, assist and identify community activities in cities across the state of Kansas, Person Audio-Reader Community Development Committee. College degree required. Graduate education and graphic design experience, editing and grant writing skills to interface with Hourly salary. 10-16 hrs per week. Applicant must be a graduate of an hourly job. Contact Hurwitz, Audio-Reader Network, 150 W. 11th, Lawrence, MA. We are an equal employment employer. VENDING MACHINE ROUTE PERSON. Part-time to work 7:30 a.m. to 13:30 a.m. Workday from Monday to Friday, day evening 6-10 p.m., Sunday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Workday Monday through Saturday heavy lifting and valid Driver's license. Prefer some sales service experience. Good reference. Apply in person at Kumasi office 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Opportunity for Action Employee. 9-11 Alkido Sensel wanted. Brown belt or higher. 841-0892 or 843-4325. 9-12 BabySaiting for our 4-mon, old in our home. Mon, thru Fri. 8:45 am - 12:45 pm. 100-hour. Must have own transport. Must be devote to device this time to child. 841-7433. 9-12 Salesperson (male or female) needed at Mortis Sports. Hours needd 12-6 M-F. Expe- rience used. Call Dane Morris 843- 9412 PERSONAL GARE ATTENDANTS. To meet personal time, 5-20 hours per week. Duties may include bathing, transfers to and from wheel chairs. Call 892 Kentucky, 841-333. An A9 at 11:25. Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must have genealogy background. Average 12'rs. hours per week. Must be eligible for work study. Contact Brentney 864-5733 864-6647 or 9-15 864-5733 Wanted-Person with artistic ability and automotive knowledge to do cut-away drawing, Ford Roadster Street. Roadside招贴册, Ford 379-0789 or 379-0533 Tumecshen, Ksuz. 9-12 Applications being taken for kitchen workers, bus people, dishwashers. Apply in person. Country Inn Restaurant 1850 Srd. N. Durham, NC | (1) black block of 9' trumpet entrance) 9-12 Fair-time- Local Building Cleaning Services locally for 8 hours per week, 5 days per week. 842-5300 www.localbuildingcleaning.com WANTED: Intramural Football officials. Apply in 208 Robinson. 864-354-16. GRADUATE ASSISTANT, ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE ANSWERING TO QUESTIONS OF KAWANAS, Lawrence. Assist with special duties of conducting ordinary activities of several committees, coordinate activities of several committees, and perform routine month Position available immediately to the Executive Office of the Executive Desk description contact Office of the Executive Chancellor 221 Strong Road 451-934-6844 An affirmative action, equal opportunity employment. Research Asst Wanted. Three-Quarter time experience, ability to work independently with library research techniques, and typing ability. Elementary bookkeeping and chemistry or a related science are desirable, pending on qualifications. Apply by 3 p.m., Monday, February 24, 2016 at Chemistry 2010 Malott Hall. Phone 864-4673 Employer-Equal Opportunity player. LOST Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Inside blue backpack, taken from my apt at 1339 Abbey Road, with phone number 864-1723 or 843-96. No questions asked MISCELLANEOUS XENOPHOBIA. Lawrence's finest amusement magazine. On sale now at White Light Paraphernalia. 9-16 NOTICE NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CLUB TO ALL Guests membership card gets a $1.00 highball all night long. Only at your place, THE CLUB LUOUSE WHERE "Partying is our bus" will be available. DRINK AND DROUNT every Monday night of the week. Make sure to bring McDonald's on 6th $4 - gift card to Chick-fil-A. SOLAR ENERGY International Club will hold its First Public Meeting - Saturday April 10th at 11am. We will participate with the Karnas Solar Society at 645 New Hamptons. Theme will be "In WIND IN KANSAS" Guest speakers will be in WIND IN KANSAS. Guest lights will join us at either meeting, lighted. Please join us at either meeting. CONGRATULATIONS on your engagement Farn and St. Gook Luck! Love Steph. Steph. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday for $10 and $15 lunch, 7th and 8th. "Darting with $11 pizzas." FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions Control, Consulting. Tubal Ligation, Foetal Control. Surgery. Tubal Ligation, Foetal Control. W100 W100 LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially for the ladies of our family) and there's a power charge, only at The Ladies' Club. SUPER TOIF at THE CLUB LUOUSE 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern base company, our part-time information officer at the company, our information Opportunity Employee M.F. In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more fun, she's TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the drinks are available only $4; only $6 adds only $5. Drink and drown at a club! THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 LOUest. Memberships available "Falling for You" is our member gift. TGIF AT LOUIS' BAR with $1.25 pitchers, 65c sechooners and 50e draws. Every Friday from 2 tilt 6 Be. There-Aloah! tt Head Start Needs You To volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher aide for one day each week. Located close to campus Call 825-215-15. Singing messages for all occasions. Delivered and received by audiences. ASTA Singing. 841-6160 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've made a list of the best Moffett Beers Band in new holdi- gues auditions for female vocalist. Serious injur- ies only. Call 842-508-845, 843-934-9 9-12 Portable Dialwasher. Excellent condition 1-841-644-3920. Call 841-644-3920. 841-644-3920. Keep trying Take a break after classes at LOUISE's afternoon晚会 every day day until 6 [FRESHMAN LADIES] Are you alone and ready to sit back and relax? Find Sid at the Main Union - 8 p.m. Saturday. TENNIS PLAYERS: There's still a lot of games to play, but the best strings will last it out. Call David at 814-854 for great prices on good string and bass sets and K.U. Varsity Tennis Stringer. 9-18 I'd rather have bottle in front of me than local laboology Gavern Tavern. 8-12 234d 9-12 SIA Indoor Recreation, ORGANIZATIONAL SIMA Room, Kunzai Room, Foothill Table Tum- room, Kanata Room, Foodbank, Table Tum- room SUA Indoor Recreation BEGINNER'S NIGHT. Sept. 11, 8-6 p.m., Satellite Union. Programmer. Bridge, Brick, Scrabble. COME and learn to play or teach each COME. 9-11 The Motif Beers Band has an immediate opening for road crew assistant. Call 844-2933 or 842-5068 or 843-9324. 9-17 Attractive, partying female invited to Queen concert Friday, Ticket, ride, and party provided. Call Mike. 864-2872. 9-11 Skidvie. Look before you leap. Learn about an alternative in first law jump instrumentation. Discover the proper posterior record. 7 year history. Contact Toni Topkis. 025-8235. 144 N W 58th St. Topeka, KS 66411. ATTENTION: Established brass band in now holding auditions for talented drummers. Serious inquiries only Call 812-7137 9-10 Experienced skydivers enrolled in 12 hours and浸浸届 forming a forming SKSRC NSCR, I dive carrier Rich (91) 268-1254, 144 W. 89th St. (Tampa), Ks. 6617-6145 11th to the commodore's CRAZY QUART 12th to the commodore's CRAZY QUART 13th to the commodore's COURTS OF OARS are only 10% from 7-10am. I hit the deck with the crazies at THE HAUNT LIFEES, 1031 Massachusetts. 9-11 Joy. I got my Indian Earth at the Atite Joy. I got my Indian Earth at the Atite Joy. I got my Indian Earth at the Atite Joy. I got down there. 9-12 Will buy baseball cards, 1079 and earlier. Will receive information call: 843-0530. For handy, call: 843-0530. 9-12 Diners and Friends will be played during the Beginners' night tonight from 6-9 to the Satellite Union Conference Room. Students will play with SUA 9-11 recreation SERVICES OFFERED Job resumes required a personnel pro- fessional background and an off-campus interviews. 841-5664 9-12 THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reimbursed for all taxes and "Total Overwarnings" Call 841-2781-1981. T. tld. offers billing discount to店 customers. Offer valid in Lawnware, Guaranteed tan, no burning, no dehydration, no grinding. g.p.gment. Monday thru Sunday 841-2781-1981. Instant color passport photos. Imigration. image & B-W. Tom 841-729-1960. 9-16 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2½¢ EACH HOUSE OF USHE: 1620 MAMACHAHAN CIRCLE, NEW YORK 10036 Kegs and Case Beer. Long neck Bunch Bottles—85c deposit. Greens Tavern. 810 W. 23rd. 9-12 For the finest complete service on most imports, STRAIGHT ARROW AROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Daimler, Fiat, Honda, Toyota. 843-242-442. Banjo and guitar lessons with Chris Biggs, 3rd place winner Natl 'Flatpacking Championship in 1978 and 1979 Call 841-0817. 9-12 Instruction in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu. Monkey, Preying Manis, 841-7450, 9-12 ENSTEIN'S TUTORS. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call Bauer 841-7033, English, grammar, computer research, typing, call Randy 841-7040. TUITOR LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes with other students. Beginner, Advanced sessions start Monday day Sept. 15. Desired C. Guit. 842.-3558, 841.-355. 9-12 VOULEZ-VOUS PARLER FRANÇAISE* about French if you are* might want about French and France (Grammar culture, or why not cooking!) or small group meeting or small group* or call 843-6249, dimm RESUMES PREPARED to suit your budget. Professionally written and typed. Call 749- 2978 evenings. 9-16 Patient tutor available for Germ 104, West Civ, and Eng 101, 843-8908. Use war- 9 to 17 Have you had troubles losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are unmotivated in areas such as school or work. Help Call 843-1955 for more information. TYPING Typing, prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6897 after 5 and weekends. if Experienced tqint-term, papers, thesis, experience in the field of computer- spelling corrected *MRS. Wright* Jr. (7) Experimented K-U, typal IBM Correcting Experimented K-U, typal IBM Correcting Sandy, Sandy, and weeks. 7/26. Sandy, Sandy, and weeks. 7/26. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selective; Call Ellen or Jeannie, 841-2172. 12-8 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4740. ft Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Solectric Call Donna 842-2744. ft Typist Editor, IBM Pica Elite. Quality Work, reasonable rates. Thesis, disclosures welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan. 842-9127 200 ENCORE COPY CORPS 316 & 195 - Holiday Plaza 041-2001 Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations, term papers, masters and selective lectures. M82- 282- 309- 316- 325- 344- IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. HCM elite. N25-507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrna. Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gagle at 842-19-109 Thesis, Dissektations, etc. IBM Selectric . entered on computer via your account 841- 6394, after 5:30 9+12 WANTED Buying gold. Paying $50-$100 for men's shirts. Buying a $25 gift card to 120- $250. Wishlist, Holiday Plaza, 924-892-9000. Professional couple w/ 4 children seek non- smoking student with own transportation to 120-$250. Wishlist, Holiday Plaza, 924-892-9000. 3 or 4 months w/ any week or T & Th after- payments $24.98 per Call Marty Ruhls at 888-766-4311. GOLD - SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. 42 - 88. Free pick-up. 441-76 42 - 88-96. Free pick-up. 441-76 Female roommate to share twice 2 bdm. apt. $17.50 plus 2 utilities. Furnished except for 1 bdm. Call Sara at 749-0946 9-12 RIDERS depart Wichita Monday A.M.depart Lawrence for Wichita Wednesday 9:15-10:35 The University Daily Female roommate wanted at Jayhawk Towers. $93.75 a month. Utilities Pd. Call 749- 2263 9-11 2 nite, roommoking, roommate 3 brom 4 brom, roommate 5 brom Call 749-1017 849-1743 Site Gs Alarm Site Gs Alarm Roommate for 2 bdmr apt. jaykahwet West 12+ $12; calls Call Brit. 739-586-316 Nonsmoking roommate for apt. near cam- ger station. Call Brit. 739-586-316 Jeanio. 841-6838 or 844-3424. 9-12 ROOMMATE WANTED Responsible K.U. student, male, preferable Geology or Geo- onomy. Must have at least 2 yrs fully furnished apt located at 1012 Emery Rd. Rd. $mo - 3 sltiles 穴 841-843-8127 Female roommate for nice apt. close to campus. Pool, AC, utilities. $79 month. 9-12 749-2489. The University of Kansas, McColumb Labor- failure-time Laboratory Equipment Repair Institute has a successful program that have completed the eighth grade grade, and must have at least 28 years of experience or, in other than correspondence study, in the field (other than correspondence study), in the laboratory equipment or; a combination of laboratory equipment or; a combination of laboratory equipment. Starting salary is $798 per month with registration candidates should contact Personnel Manager for information. Application deadline September 17, 1980. An Affirmative Action-Equal Opportunity Statement. Routemaster • Beautiful spacious home houseboat • Sleek, modern design • $100 plus, plus 1/6 of utilities • Cable service • Wi-Fi Roommate to share 2 bdrm apt $105 mo+ plus half utilities Call At al 842-1691- 1-94 Roommate for spacious 2 new b2m, apt room; 1² utilities. Contact Julee: 0170 0170 -KANSAN CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write Ad Here: ORDER FORM Dates to Run: ___, To RATES: 15 words or less 1 times $2.25 2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 additional words 02 03 04 05 08 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 AD DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY ... Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY ... Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- rage 14 University Daily Kansan, September 11, 1980 Sports MERCY ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff Tracee Hamilton, Kansan sports writer, contemplates where she's been. Hamilton leaves the airplane with her static line, the umbilical cord for beginning sky divers, ready to pull her chute open in a matter of seconds. Hamilton skydived for the first time last weekend at the Greene County Sport Parachute Center, south of Baldwin. The plane was flying at approximately 28,000 feet when Hamilton took the plunge. N40GC CHRIS TODDIKansan staff Sports writer 'chutes' for sky with parachute By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer The musty air inside the plane hung like old clothes in an attic. The cabin was tight and cramped even for two passengers, their bodies tensed "Cut the engine," yelled the first passenger, looking like a giant grasshopper in his green The roar of a single engine muffled all other sounds. Eves met, then quickly looked away. THE PLANE SLOWED, and the noise died slightly. The door of the plane flew open, the wind blew, and Coultier chased the stuffiness out of the cabin, and the passengers greedily gulped the air. sit in the door," the larger passenger in green shouted. The second passenger silently obeyed, her band tightly grasping the edge of the door like a lion. "Ready," the first cried. It was a command, not a question. The figure in the door heard the shouts, the engine's hum, the wind slamming against the fuselage. She dived suddenly, as though to escape the din. Then, there was silence. Ears rang with the rare sound of no sound. She didn't look up or down, but hung there, suspended over the patchwork countryside like a dotted toss on a careless child's hand. There was no sense of time and motion. The moment was timeless. It was freedom. THIS FEELING HAS been shared by skydivers from all over the country. The Greene County Sport Parachute Center, south of Baldwin, has initiated more than 5,000 people into a world of diving from airplanes, free-falling and parachute manipulation. The name of the center is as misleading as the myths surrounding skydiving. Greene County is actually in Kenia, Ohio, and eight branch drop sites across the country are named after it. "It's kind of a franchise," Manley Paulos, jump master, says. "Usually, guys will start jumping and enjoy it so much that they make a business of it." Paulus, who has been jumping for four years, said that of the 90,000 skydivers trained by the Greene County Centers, not one ever bounced on the first jump. That sounded good to a first-time jumper like me. My training session began in the noonday sun on one of those September days that feel like July. Manley Paulus and I sought shade on a picnic table under an old tree, and I, with three dogs of various sizes, listened to his strange narrative, entwining horror stories about jumping accidents with confident reassurances of success. AND THE SUCCESSES have been many. Only one person has been killed in a jump at the center. She maneuvered her chute over a 36-foot wide pond, and landed there. She made no attempt to use her flotation device, built into every reserve chute. Manley's instruction was broken only by an occasional moan from a passing train. Railroad traxie locks lie to the jump site, and are to be avoided. We discussed our parts in the upcoming performance, then rehearsal began. One of the most important lessons was the skydiver's chant, the dumy ripcord pull, a routine that makes the pupil pretend to pull a record even though he actually doesn't. "Stand up, legs spread, arms back, arch the go, g!!" Manley ordered. "Arch-thousand, look-thousand (look for the imaginary ripcord), reach-thousand (reach for it), pull-thousand (pull at the air), five-thousand, six-thousand, seven-thousand, check canopy," I shouted at full volume. Manley wants to hear the divers shouting even though he went and whenever Manley shouts go, his pupils repeat the chant. It's part of quick thinking. "Your main chute doesn't open. What do you do?" he shouts. AS LONG AS you think, Manley says, and don't panic, you'll be fine. And to test quickness in thinking, he throws emergency situations at his pupils, who must rifle back immediate answers. Silently I act out emergency procedures—left arm in air, right hand pulls ripcord of reserve chute and drops it, right hand punches chute to make sure it comes out and opens quickly. "Mae West."he cries. Mae West is when the suspension cords leading to the canopy are draped over the canopy itself, making two or more huge bubbles. Just thinking about the nickname has taken too much time. Disgusted, Manley cries, "Hey, Mae West, to the right." Over and over, I repeated emergency procedures, steering techniques, and the chant. Manley kept after me a drill gerriless testing a troop, until he was sure I knew what to do. LEARNING TO LAND after a jump was the most difficult skill Manley taught, but the right landing can prevent a number of broken bones. Manley has a platform for pupils to jump from. Knees and feet together, crouch, hands in air. "I'land!" "Ready to land." he yells. Jump, land, roll to right side on calf, knee, thigh, hip, roll over 180 degrees, swung legs behind body, and drop feet, still together, on the opposite side. Over and over, with Manley screaming out the direction to fall. I rolled around in the field, raising a cloud of dust on every landing. The sun snuck toward the horizon, and thin blue clouds sheltered it for a time. The joking died down. Manley lent me one of his jump suits, bright blue, and about five sizes too big. I dilt into the smallest pair of combatlike boots I could find, and chose a green helmet. MANLEY STRAPPED the gear to my back and helped me tighten the straps. We trudged across the worn runway to the small, camouflage-green Cessna 180. Heat waves quivered off the craft. Manley held the door and I backed in with my 35-pound gear. Then came the standard skydiving question. "Yes." Manley replied. “Can I check it?” I asked, and gave my static line several yanks to be sure. Manly smiled and nodded, and I looked away. I felt like an actor in a play, as though it wasn't really me going up in that plane. We took off. Rusty Young, pilot and owner of the center, said something, but it was lost in the excitement and engine noise. We flew over the drop site, and Manley threw out what looked like a roll of yellow paper towels. This marker tells the jump master the direction he needs to take to help him determine the best site to drop his divers. I TRIED TO THINK of the lessons I'd learned, and especially how to maneuver the chute. But when the door of the plane flew open and I clutched the strut, everything was flushed from my mind. There was no sensation of falling, but of floating, no feeling of fear, but of wonder; it was hanging above the world, and, unlike being in a vacuum, there was nothing between the earth and me except air. I felt as though I belonged in the sky, like a bird. I steered the chute over a plowed field, and reluctantly began my descent. I've heard stories of people who land and kiss the earth, glad to be safe. I didn't want to land. It was a feeling like watching a good movie. I wanted to crawl inside the screen and live the script, not walk away when the lights come up. Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa Use Your Pr SAVE UP TO 75% AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts 530 Memberships available Wisconsin Thursday Initiation Night! Get Initiated into the clubhouse, All the Beer you can drink 9-1 members—guys $3.00 gals $2.00 their guests—guys $4.00 gals $3.00 Happy Hours Mon-Thurs 4-8 2 for 1 drinks Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTELRESERVATIONS - CARRENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE - ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 RETAIL LIQUOR EAGAN BARRAND ROCKYALK DON'T WAIT. Until halftime to check your beverage needs. Our unparallel- ed selection offers you one-stop convenience whether it's for game time or evening pleasures! Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardoe's and next to Safeway 23rd & Iowa 8d1-0409 9:00 a.m..11:00 p.m. PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND PEOPLE BOOK USE THEM OVERLAND PHOTO phone 841-0780 Refreshing and Refined Plush sweaters, pleated skirts, and popular pants set the stage for fall. Mix and match. choosing from a variety of colors and styles. Clothes Encounter in step with your style Holiday Plaza 843-5335 25th & Iowa The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Friday, September 12, 1980 Vol.91, No.15 USPS 650-640 ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff KU electrician Bob Perkins, Oskaloosa, spends a tremulous morning removing chairs from a storage area at Hoch Auditorium. The chairs were moved to make extra room for storing unsused electrical fixtures. Petitioners want bus service restored By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Five residents of Wood Creek Apartments yesterday presented a petition signed by 62 Wood Creek residents to the Student Senate transportation board urging the board to resume bus service to the north Lawrence apartment complex. Steve McMurry, board chairman, said that although he was sympathetic to the Wood Creek residents, there was little the board would be able to do this semester. The board voted last March to eliminate Wood Creek Apartments, 255 N. Michigan St., from the Wood Creek route, incorporating the remainder of the route into the Frontier Ridge route. It is now called the Trailride route. The board then added a new East Lawrence route to Ninth and Massachusetts streets and Pine Tree Townhouses, 149 Pinecone Drive. "We wouldn't have signed a lease out there if we had known there wouldn't be any bus service." Alan Wells, Hutchinson junior and Wood Creek resident, said. Wells said that he was told by the manager of Wood Creek and someone in the Student Senate office that Wood Creek would have bus service this semester. "It's too far to ride a bike, especially when it gets cold, and if I walk I would have to leave an Another Wood Creek resident, Tim Jacobs, Pfeifer friend, said that the distance from his Wood Creek parking place to O-zone parking lot on campus was three miles. In response to board members who said that Wood Creek residents did not have to live that far from campus, the residents said they chose to live in the community because the least expensive places in Lawrence to live. Reiterating the board's reasons for its decision to cut service to Wood Creek last spring, McMurry said population and ridership surveys indicated that fewer students would be riding the bus on the Wood Creek route on an East Lawrence route. He added that the Wood Creek manager, Alta Weems, had said the number of students residing in the neighborhood was 136. McMurray said that in the two weeks the buses had been running this semester, there had been 30 percent more people riding the East Lawrence route during the same period last year. Wischa Braun, Wood Creek resident and Wichita junior, argued that there were more little kids at the school. She said that in circulating the petition, she visited 50 of the complex's 225 apartments and got signatures of 62 people who said they would ride the bus at least three days a week. Several options have been mentioned, including the possibility of running a bus to Wood Creek once in the morning and once in the afternoon, taking some time away from another route to run to Wood Creek, and using one of the service's extra buses. "KU on Wheels" uses 14 buses a day and has two extra buses in case of breakdowns. McMurray said the board had to look at a few students attending KU as possible. To as many students attending KU as possible. "I don't care if we can serve 2,000 or 2,000 students at Wood Creek, if we can serve 15,000 at 24th and Ridge Court, that's where we need to run the bus," he said. McMurry said the board would look into alternatives. In other board business, McMurray told me in April up 1,328 over the last 177 days; from 40 RPG titles to 42. He said "KU on Wheels" finished the 1980 fiscal year with about $10,000 remaining in its budget. The surplus was applied to the summer bus service. McMurry said serious consideration would have to be given to discontinuing bus service next summer because of increasing costs. He said there were only 9,000 riders during the eight-week period. Revenues totalled about $3,000, he said. He also reported that service requests had been received from Quail Creek Apartments, 29rd and Kasad streets, Hillcrest Shopping Center, and the rest be considered in future route changes, he said. Mc Murray also said there had been fewer passes reported missing this year than last. A 48-hour notice is required before a replacement pass can be issued. Beginning this week, a replacement pass can be bought for $20. From Oct. 6 to Oct. 31, replacement passes will cost $15, and from Nov. 3 to the end of the semester the cost will fall to $10. Turkish army overthrows government ANKARA, Turkey (UPI)—The Turkish army, apparently seeking to end widespread political violence, seized power early today, overseeing the government's handling of Syrian Denyment Dagen, Turkish radio announced. The announcement said the constitution had been suspended, the Turkish Parliament had In Washington, the State Department said the military chief of staff, Gen. Ken Evern, led the been abolished and members of Parliament had lost their immunity from prosecution. Diplomatic sources said the chief of the military general staff took control of the government. The diplomatic sources first confirmed that the government later confirmed the government's overthrow. Jumping The coup followed reports of political violence several Turkish cities during the last several de- cades. Turkish authorities said left-wing activists hung about 20 body-trapped banners across the capital city of Ankara to mark the 60th anniversary of East Berlin-based Turkish Communist Party. The sources confirmed that parliamentary immunity apparently was canceled. Gunmen shot and killed a man kidnapped in the Mediterranean city of Tarsus, where two houses were bombed and four workshops were burned down by suspected terrorists. Almost 1,800 people have been killed so far this year in political violence in Turkey, authorities said. A bomb expert was slightly injured trying to remove one of the devices, police said. Weather 2 draft protesters convicted; 1 freed Another member of the group charged in the same incident was acquitted. Two KU students, members of the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization, were convicted yesterday of criminal trespass charges brought against them. They are also in anti-draft leaflets at Lawrence High School April 18. Found guilty by Lawrence Municipal Court Judge George Catt were Doug Bradley, Cedar Rapids, Ia., junior; and Juliet Matumau, Lawrence, Ia., junior; and Idid McCullough, Lawrence law, was acquitted. Staff Reporter Catt granted a request by Jack Klinknett, defense attorney from Lawrence, that the three have separate trials. Before the trials began, however, Catt sequestered the witnesses and the prosecution out of the courtroom. He told them to him in the hall and not discuss the case among themselves. Bradley was tried first. His trial began after Catt admonished the crowd of 30 spectators, who nearly filled the courtroom to be quiet or they would have in leave. "I will not preside over a circus." he said. Bradley's trial began with Colt Knott, city prosecutor, calling Bred Tate, Lawrence High School principal; Max Rife, division principal; and Jeffrey Hearn, division officer, to give their versions of the incident. Tate, who has been principal of the high school for seven years, said he was informed that several anti-draft members were distributing literature on school property and in the building. Bv RAY FORMANEK He said he told Bradley and McCullough, who are outside the building's northwest side, to stay on the board. Tate said he then went to the parking lot in the rear of the school to help remove other anti-draft barriers. He said he saw Bradley again in the lot with the other members. Under Klinkett's cross examination, Tate said the group did not have his permission to be Max Rife, who has been division principal at the high school for 10 years, took the stand next and identified Bradley as one of the anti-draft members he had seen in the parking lot. Tate said about five minutes had elapsed from when he told Bradley to leave the grounds and the time he saw him with the other anti-draft members in the parking lot. Jump, one of three officers at the scene, also identified Bradley as one of the group, who were told by police not to leave the parking lot until their names had been taken. When Bradley testified in his own defense, he admitted being in the parking lot. He denied, however, that Tate told McCullough and him that he was the principal. He said he thought Tate was a teacher or an assistant principal and did not have the authority to supervise. on school property nor did they leave when asked to do so. "I don't recall anyone identifying himself," he said. Bradley said he was trying to organize the members of the group to leave when the police were called. Klinknett then called Brian Shulte, a Lawrence sophomore and anti-draft member, who said he had attended the meeting between Kuby and Tate. Schulte said that although he had arrived early, he was in a hurry to impression that the group had received permission from Tate to distribute their literature. Tate was then recalled to the stand by Knutson. Tate denied telling Kuby and Schultz that they could pass out literature on school property. He said they discussed the use of public property such as the street, surrounding the school and any possible problems that might occur. The judge refused to consider Klinknet's closing argument that the group had permission to file a lawsuit. today sales. The high Saturday and Sunday should be near 80. to the KU Weather Service. The high today should be near 87. Tonight should be partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of sunning from 10 to 15 mph and a low near 59. There is 20 percent chance of widely scattered thunderstorms today and tonight. A mild weekend is expected, with fair to partly cloudy skies. The high Saturday and See TRIAL page 5 Today should be mostly cloudy with southerly winds at 10 to 20 mph, according Branson spoke last night at the first meeting of KU's Commission on the Status of Women. She said her decision to run for state representative was based in part on her observation that Kansas had more women than combined chambers of the Kansas Legislature, there are nine men for every woman, she said. During the 25 years she has lived in Lawrence, Branson has been an advocate of programs designed to help handicapped and senior citizens. Branson, 800 Broadview Drive, is running in the newly structured 44th District, which was created by the Legislature's reapportionment last year. The district had included the KU campus and most of its surrounding student facilities. The former Rep. Mike Glover, a Lawrence Democrat. Advocate for disabled campaigns for state rep IN THE REAPPOINTMENT, the 44th District was moved to the west and a new district, the 46th, was created in East Lawrence. The KU campus and the Oread neighborhood now belong to the 46th District, and the 44th has the Republican districts in west-central Lawrence. Even as a Democrat running in a predominately Republican district, Branson said she was not discouraged. Many of the district's candidates have state independently of party affiliation, she said. By KATHY BRUSSELL Jessie Branson, 59, who takes on Republican Wint Winter Jr. this fall for state representative from the 44th District, describes herself as a "professional volunteer." She serves on the board of directors for Kansans for Improvement of Nursing Homes and is a former member of the Governor's Committee on Nursing Homes. Staff Reporter When the Kansas Legislature refused to act on see WOMENRATE 5 JESSIE BRANSON of Branson's goals over the past few years has helped improve the quality of care in nursing home. 1987 College cheating, plagiarism rampant, officials say By CHICK HOWLAND Staff Writer As professors prepare to give the first examinations of the semester, students will be taking different steps to assure good grades. At this point, they should come before the exam. Some will wait until the last night. According to Vern Stadtman, vice president of the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement of teaching, cheating is a big problem on college campuses. "The thing that is disturbing is that we think colleges and universities are places where moral standards are high," he said. "Any cheating is shocking." Some will cheat. The Foundation, based in Washington, C.C., did a study last year of cheating on college examinations. James Gowen, head of KU's freshman and sophomore English, said cheating had done the bulk of it in recent years. It was a bigger problem in the early 1970s when students were more cynical, he said. But Chuck Baer, who taught at Wheeling University, Gowen said some freshman English students cheated without really knowing what they were doing. "Some will read the book and Cliff Notes and then we leave some of those notes into the tapestry of their own story," he said. "They are uncertain as to extent to which the material is borrowed." Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said stronger punishment was needed for those convicted. Section six of the University Senate rules and regulations says that any instructor may, with the written permission of the university, teach any student work that is a product of academic misconduct, such as cheating or plagiarism. "Usually their reaction is, 'Well, why don't you at the student?' my reaction is, 'Well, he's flummery!' my reaction is, 'Well, that's not right.' If the faculty member or student still is not satisfied with the outcome after the dean's If an instructor thinks further action should be taken, or if a student wishes to proclaim a grade based upon work judged by an instructor to be a product of academic misconduct, the case is reported to the dean of the school in which the course is offered. The section goes on to say that each school should establish, at the department level, and in other ways, the procedures. David Ambler, vice candleholder for student affairs, said most departments set up a hearing in these cases. The department usually will answer that the student failed in the course, he said. Bricker said that the faculty member had to initiate the action against a student. hearing, the case may be brought before the University Judiciary. "It is quite awkward for a faculty member to get a student brought to trial," he said. It would not guarantee the due process if the faculty member could expel a student." "The problem there," Amber said, "is that individual faculty members cannot impose an expulsion on a student. But I would have to go along with that." Ambler said the reason most students were in school was to practice solving getting a student answer was for them. Students may bring in their lawyers and the case takes on too many of the elements of a court said he made sure he had a solid case SEE CHEATING page 3 Page 2 University Dafy Kansan, September 12. 1980 O News Briefs From United Press International Reagan pursues energy policy attack ERIE, Pa.—Ronald Reagan held yesterday to his contention that there is no energy shortage, and he charged that President Carter has used half-truths and distortions to rewrite his own energy record. "It's no surprise to me that Mr. Carter is trying to distort his record on energy." Reagan, the Republican presidential nominee, told several people at an outdoor rally at City Hall. thousand people and thousands of economic and foreign policies, his energy policies have been so dominant to this country that he doesn't want to talk about them," he said. maging in California, an independent presidential candidate John Anderson was in California, where he drew a big crowd to a Wednesday night rally in Claremont. He said yesterday that Federal Judge Board Chair Greg Vollrath's criticism of tax cuts could be by both Board and Carter reinforcing individual tax reductions. On Wednesday, Reagan said in Cleveland that the United States had abundant energy resources, untapped only because Carter's policies stifled discovery and production. discovery and production. Carter responded that Reagan had "again made an accusation without cheating the fact." "Mr. Carter says I spoke without checking the facts," Reagan told the Erie audience yesterday. "The truth is, it is Mr. Carter who didn't check the facts, because most of the facts in my speech came directly from the U.S. government." government. Regain focus Carter of reverting to "half-truth" in his claim that the coal and production increased this year. crude oil and coal production increased this year. Crude oil production increased from last year, Reagan said, but was still below that level. Panel poses record defense budget The House Appropriations Committee has recommended a record $156.9 billion defense budget for fiscal 1981—$18.8 billion more than the present military budget and $2.4 billion more than the one proposed by President Carter. Included in the committee's proposal is $175 million for the development of a new manned strategic bomber "with low radar reflectivity," such as a much-publicized "Seattle" aircraft. The budge includes two turbofan engines, a hydrogen gas plant at Arkansas' Pine Huff Gardens - a project opposed by the Carter administration. The committee also released a 392-page report this week stating that, contrary to popular opinion, "there is no cause to be alarmed" about the quality of the nation's defense capabilities. It suggested that too much has been said about America's defense problems and that little or nothing has been said about the Soviet Union's "very major problems." "very major problems. Among them, the committee cited Polish labor unrest, and said such difficulties may spread as the rest of Soviet-dominated Eastern Europe "grows ever more restive under the yoke of foreign domination." Militants' demands reflect power fight Joining in the mounting criticism of Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, the militants holding the 52 American hostages vowed yesterday that their captives would not be released until the United States apologized to Iran and returned the shah's wealth. Iran and reaffirmed the sadr's wealth. Their demands were not new, but the decision to reiterate them on the 13th day of the hostage crisis appeared to reflect mounting opposition to the moderate and increasingly isolated Bani-Sadr. The bitter political fead between Bani-Sadr and the fundamentalist forces who control Parliament indicate yet another power struggle within the Islamic government, with the hardliners backing Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Raijal. MOHAMMAD: Radio quoted Tehran radio as saying that the militants would not release the captives unless the United States apologized for its past “behavior” and returned the wealth of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who died in a Cairo hospital in July. Poles desert Communist labor unions WARSAW, Poland—Alarmed at the large number of workers joining the new independent trade unions, Romulad Jankowski, the head of Poland's Communist Party labor organization, went to the press yesterday to do some campaigning and to assert that both groups could exist side-by-side. However, a public opinion poll prepared by a weekly newspaper showed that Poles overwhelmingly preferred the new unions. The poll reported that Poles rejected the official line that "ant-socialist" forces were responsible for economic decline and won labor winning labor concessions unprecedented in a Communist state. In Moscow, a Polish delegation led by the government official who negotiated the settlement with the strike leaders in the Baltic port of Gdansk met with Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev and other top Kremlin officials. The talks, in their second day, apparently were aimed at seeking assurances from the Soviets that they would accept the terms of the settlement by, in turn, assuring the Soviets that certain limits would be respected, observers said. 2 suspects arrested in jewel heist Two suspects were arrested at Chicago's O'Hare Airport yesterday, just twelve hours after two well-heeled bands pulled off a 60-second $2.4 million heist at Graff's jewellers in London. But the two men had "no goodies on them—no weapons, no jewelry." FBI agents said they thought the jewels were left in England. Among the stolen jewels was the 45-carat Marlborough diamond. About 20 diamond rings, necklaces and other jewels also were taken from the jewers' window showcase as clerks and customers lay face down on the store's carved floor. "They knew exactly what they were looking for," said Laurence Graff, who has developed a reputation for scouring the world for large and exotic animals. One employee described the Marlborough jewel as 'an actual ball of fire', and said that after Greff bought the gern at an auction 18 months ago he had purchased it in a bank. Sioux suit to reclaim land dismissed OMAHA, Neb. (UPI)—The Oglala Sioux suit to reclaim its share of "sacred" Black Hills land ceded to white settlers more than a century ago was dismissed yesterday by a federal judge. Police said the gunmen and an accomplice burst into the elegant showroom and, after pulling what witnesses said was a hand grenade from a bag, forced five employees and two customers to lie on the floor while they took the jewels. Attorney Marion Gonzalez, representing the tribe, said he would appeal the decision. The trifecta sought to prevent the Bureau of Indian Affairs from distributing $105 million that the U.S. Supreme Court awarded the Sioux Nation in compensation for 7 million acres of the Black Hills, which extend from the Rocky Mountains to extreme eastern Wyoming. The land was ceded to white settlers in 1877. The suit contended the Ogiala Sioux never were part of the Sioux Nation suit that resulted in the catawba award. In addition to a demanding return of the tribe, the court held that the tribe had no rights under the treaty. The tribe said the land was worth "500 times as much" as the $160 million award and was "deemed priced, sacred and inreplaceable by the Oglala The judge noted that in 1946, Congress passed the Indian Claims Commission Act as a "special and exclusive remedy" for claims such as those raised in the Oxlala Sloux case. However, U.S. D.J. district Judge Albert G. Schatz ruled the district court had no jurisdiction in the case. His ruling was released simultaneously in Omaha and Tulsa. The Sioux Nation of Indians encompasses more than half a dozen tribes in the Black Hills area, including the Oglala Sioux. McHenrv emphasizes U.N.'s importance UNITED NATIONS (UPI)---'I continue to believe in the value of the United Nations to us,' U.S. Ambassador Donald McHenry said firmly after a year of ups and downs for himself—in the world organization. "The U.N., in a sense, is like an iceberg," McHenry said in an interview marking the end of his first year as chief U.S. representative to the United Nations. "The bulk of its work is not seen." Diplomats, he added, "would have a very difficult time" carrying out their orders if what goes on at the United Nations didn't go on behind closed doors. Exactly 12 months after taking over from the more flamboyant Andrew Young, McHenry discussed his experience, his problems and his ideas. The 38th General Assembly is to convene Tuesday and may see fireworks on issues like the Middle East, Afghanistan and Cambodia. At least two more countries are many as 100 foreign ministers are expected in New York for the occasion. confessed he suffered from periodic "foot in mouth disease." In running his diplomatic shop, McHenry said he wanted "to maintain as rational and unemotional an atmosphere as possible" in negotiations. BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 11 New Hampshire 9 am-5 pm more emotional—and, adding to that the religious and ideological overtones—exists in dealing with the Middle East." McHenry will be the top go-between for the United States, except for two weeks when Secretary of State Edmund A.杜勒斯 (Ryan Zink) ataza Hotel opposite the United Nations. Mehenry's style contrasts sharply with that of his predecessor, who once His biggest headaches? McIlenny smiled and said, "There is a little competition on that one. Iran has been very difficult, very frustrating. . . . I run the training of Iran. It is the question of the Middle East." Alluding to New York Mayor Edward Koch's criticism of McHenry's alleged "anti-Israel" voting in the Security Council, the ambassador said an ad-forward problem was the "small email of domestic politics" right here in New York." "Iran has its revolution and long history that has to be dealt with in trying to carry on communication with the world," he said. "The same history, only much longer, On Iran, McHenry said he saw "some signs that the Iranians have moved closer to dealing with the hostages." But, he added, the country is "still some way from a stable government" with which the United States can deal. footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbelt's Dell) SAVE UP TO 75% TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. You've worked hard all week. 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Lawrence, Ks. 66044 Flc University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Page : On Campus BLACK AWARENESS SEMINAR THE BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold a Black Awareness Week beginning at 1 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas University. Gilbert Parks, Topka Eberhard and Bernard Franklin will speak on "How to Get Involved in Campus Activities." GRAND ROUNDS SPEAKER Richard Jenkins, University of Iowa, will discuss technical developments in the education of students at Center Clendening Library classroom. SCORMEB will meet from 3 to 5 p.m. in 2007 Learned THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Hotel DuPont. TONIGHT INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. OBSERVATORY OPEN HOUSE will be at 7 p.m. in 500 Lindlev. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will sponsor an evening of international folk dancing in Robinson Gym. Beginning classes will be taught from 7:30 to 9 p.m., and requests will be taken from 9 to 10:30 p.m. TOMORROW TOMORROW Leon Fleischer, artist in residence, will teach MASTER CLASSES IN PIANO at 9:30 a.m. and at 1:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recall Hall. KU SOLAR ENERGY INTERNATIONAL CLUB will hold its first public meeting at 10:30 a.m. in the public library. At noon, the group will participate in the KANASS SOLAR ENERGY SOCIETY "TELE-NET" Kateeney School. Academic Exhibition Building, 645 New Yorkshire. The theme will be "Utilizing Wind in Kansas." Call 843-9808 for more information. THE BLACK STUDENT UNION will hold a Black Awareness Seminar from 6:30 to 10 p.m., in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. SUNDAY An ART FILM, "The Pioneers: Masters of Modern Sculpture," will be shown at 3 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium, third floor. Leon Fleishar, artist in residence, will teach MASTER CLASSSES IN PIANO at 9:30 a.m. and at 1:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. CIRCLE K will meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in 401 Murphy. The Kansan welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus." Organizations should submit written information on scheduled free activities to the campus editor at least two days before the events. against a student before accusing him of cheating. From page 1 "I make sure I have an iron-clad case," he said. "I never have had a student deny that he cheated. They always have admitted it." Cheating Most of the students he has caught cheating were under tremendous pressure to do well, Bricker said. But some are on their way out and figure they might as well give cheating a try, he said. It is a rare semester when at least one student is not caught cheating in the School of Business, said John Tollefson, associate dean of the school. Tolleison agreed that evidence is a big factor in cheating cases. The professors do not always win. "They have gone both ways," he said. Charles Himmelberg, professor of mathematics, said overcrowding of classes and the lack of picture identification cards had led to some cheating that was difficult to prevent. "There are 40 to 45 students in a class where there should only be 30," he said. "It's impossible to catch people looking at each other's papers." Himmelberg said students were basically anonymous in the large lecture classes. Some will hire students who will take the test for them. The mathematics department usually catches one student a semester long. "By some bungle on the student's part. we will discover it." he said. "Out of 2,000 students, I'm sure there are more than that using rings," he told reporters. Himmelberg said instructors occasionally made spot checks for student identification cards. But because pictures no longer are required on ID cards, it is harder to catch them, he said. Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science, said he had not seen much cheating on exams lately. He has, in fact, been more pluggular on term nancers. The department has made a request to the University that pictures be required on all ID cards, Himmelberg said. "They (students caught cheating) tend not to be the best students," he said. "The good ones could get away with it." Plagiarized papers usually have a lot of material copied directly from time to time. "The person will take out the old staples, put on the new title page with his name and then put on the new staples. But the old staple marks are still there." Ketzel said. He said he is unusually failed those caught plagiarizing. Some, however, he did not. A former KU student, who asked not to be identified, said her opinion of cheating had changed since she left KU last year. "I wouldn't consider it now because I don't think it's morally correct," she said. "My conviction wasn't as firm when I was in school. I think the fear of being caught is what stops most students." Not all of the blame for cheating lies with the students, she said. "I felt as if some professors made it easy. But it was too much of a risk to throw my whole college career down the drain," she said. A Kansas City sophomore, who also asked not to be identified, said she noticed some cheating in her classes last semester. There was a lot of on on other papers and talking when the teacher left the room, she said. Despite the relative ease with which some students appear to be getting away with cheating, she said she would not consider cheating. "I don't trust that many," she told the man, cheft off someone who isn't that smart. 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Supervised by Jerry Garcia, the Grateful Fish have a strong musical uniqueness like the presence of a Dead concert as part of 20 of their greatest numbers; the film also features a stunning animation sequence in which Garcia plays "Sam." Directed by Garcia and Leon Gast. Plus: "Merry Manneliques," (141 min). Band: Aerosmith. Saturday, Sept. 13 Maphattan 3:30,7:00,9:30 The Grateful Dead Movie 12:00 Midnight Sunday, Sept. 14 Pinnochio (1940) Don't be put off by the Disney name, this is a brilliant work of animation, color, scary and scary, and much too good for a movie. And Ward Kimball, Carnine Collie's story of the puppet who wanted to be a real boy, is also superb. And by a whale becomes a brilliant fantasy, Plus: "Garlic the Dinosaur" and "Garlic the Good Deed" (8/12) 217, color: 2.00. (1945) Monday, Sept. 15 Blithe Spirit Rex Harrison sells out to debunk a medium—and ends up with the ghost of a comic," he says. "In the hands of director David Lean, becomes a wily, hilarious larcen. Constance Cummings and Margaret Levine star in "The Violinist" (68 min) Color 7:30. Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodstock Auditorium in January and February. See the schedule for Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Sunday films are $150. Midnight films are $200. The Cinerama Theater is a Union, 4th level. Information 884-907-0300 or no smoking or refreshments allowed. WELCOME BACK KU STUDENTS FROM LAWRENCE'S ONLY FAMILY STYLE SERVING RESTAURANT "A TRULY UNIQUE ATMOSPHERE & EXPERIENCE" Bill of Fare Country Inn Chicken Dinners (4 pieces) Country Inn Fried Steak Country Inn Pork Chops (2 chops) Country Inn Cotton ALL DINNERS INCLUDE ALL YOU CAN EAT OF THE FOLLOWING: Homemade Mashed Potatoes, Chicken Gravy, Homemade Biscuits, Honeypun Butter, Homemade Preserves, Bean Salad, Cole Slaw, Vegetable of the Day, Choice of Beverage: Milk, Iced Tea, Hot Tea, Coffee, Lemonade. Choice of Dessert: Homemade Cherry or Peach Pie, Hot Fuddseud, Sherbet. 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It appears to be a digital image containing some form of graphic or pattern, but no legible text can be discerned. Senate, heal thyself The Student Senate's ironic failure to muster a quorum Tuesday night illustrates a long-term problem at the University of Kansas, not one that is just beginning, as Student Body Vice President Matt Davis evidently would have us believe. Davis said that the lack of the quorum to vote on whether the number of senators should be reduced supported those who favor the cut and that the cut could prevent a loss of Senate credibility. "If we don't improve our efficiency, no one will have respect for anything we do," he said. "Student Senate will begin losing its legitimacy." Making the Senate a smaller group of people does not necessarily ensure easier administration for him or leaders who will follow him. Nor does it ensure better Davis is missing the point. representation of student concerns, the essence of whatever legitimacy the Senate has left, considering its members were put in office by 15 percent of the electorate. Who is to say that the 60 or 65 senators remaining after the cut would be those who now come to the meetings? Rather, it would seem that about half of the smaller number also would have better things to do than their duty. Whatever the decision, Davis and Greg Schnacke, student body president, would do well not to scold us piously from their open letter posted on bulletin boards across campus. The letter, which tells students their apathy is responsible for Senate ineffectiveness, makes no mention of more than half of the "public-spirited" Senate, which historically does not care enough to vote on many issues—including its own survival. Enjoyment outweighs trials on canoeists' trip down Kaw Letters to the Editor To the editor: As tired but happy members of the last-place team, River Ratz, we would like to express dissatisfaction with the story on the canoe race between the University of Kansas and Kansas State University by Jennifer Liston in the Sept. 8 edition of the Kansan. The story did not mention any of the good points of the race. Sure, there were grats, tired bodies and dirty water. But nothing was said to express the camaraderie felt by teammates after two days of experiencing life in the wilds of Kansas. The area along the banks of the Kaw River is beautiful. There were many new friends made as teams banded together in times of crisis. The local residents along the way even helped lost teams find checkpoints. Impromptu parties were started by teams as we waited for our lagging canoes to pull in. The enthusiasm felt by an infant team like the River Rats was not to be dampened by 23 hours and 15 minutes on the raging Kaw. Sure we were last, and no one is more tired or sunburned than our loyal Rats. There was not even anyone other than us at the finish to chew our canes as we nulled in. Vicki Beiriger Lenexa junior Shane Garrett St. George senior However, teams, we'll see you in the spring! To the editor: Harmlessness of pot has yet to be proved Amy Hollowell presented many important facts in a well-documented editorial in last Friday's Kansan. She favors decriminalization of marijuana. She said that when California decriminalized marijuana in 1976, the state cut its court costs that year by $25 million. She also said the United States government spent nearly $100 million a year to prosecute marijuana cases. I agree with Amy that the United States would save millions of dollars in court costs if marijuana was decriminalized, but I don't believe it should be decriminalized. Here's why: Hollowell said that "there are findings that indicate harm to the lungs, brain, reproductive system, and there are equally as many findings to the contrary." This is the problem. From May, 1979 to January, 1980, I read more than dozen books and 100 periodicals (almost all of which are available at the University) of cannabis studies and cannabis takers. For every account in which there was evidence of the harmlessness of cannabis, I can show you a cannabis is harmful. Researchers have debated this subject in America for longer than 15 years, and they are nowhere near presenting a definitive report to the American people. Researchers are unsure about cannabis, and no American can expect his representative to move on decriminalization or legalization until all parties are correctly informed. We must encourage research and patiently await the before legalizing or decriminalizing cannabis. If research is stopped before the long-term effects of cannabis are known, one of two things will happen. Either popular consensus will draft and ratify a law to approve the use of a drug that may contribute to damaging the lives of millions of Americans, or an unpopular law that outlaws what may be a safe, recreational activity will needlessly and dangerously continue to create Pat Flanagan Kansas City, Kan., Senior disregard for cannabis laws and law enforcers in cannabis society. Congressmen ignore many gay constituents To the editor: There is a large number of gay voters in Lawrence, and they might be interested to know what their congressmen think of them when they go to the polls this November. On July 23, the House of Representatives passed the Legal Services Corporation Appropriations Bill, a bill to appropriate money to maintain legal aid groups for the poor and needy. The governor's office is located in Douglas County Legal Aid Society in Green Hall is funded by these appropriations. On July 22, Rep. Larry McDonald, D-Ga, added an amendment to the bill which reads: "That no part of this appropriation shall be used by the Legal Services Corporation to provide legal assistance in promoting, defending or protecting homosexuality." On a voice vote, the amendment was defeated, but McDonald called for a recorded vote and many congressmen reversed. The amendment failed to pass, 65 of the bill and sits in the Senate waiting for action. It is outrageous that gays should be singled out as the one group that doesn't deserve public defense. Gays pay taxes that go to support the Legal Services Corporation. Yet, the House has decided that gays should not receive the benefits of those taxes. Gay people in Lawrence and throughout Kansas should know that all five of their representatives voted to deprive gays of their rights. This includes Larry Winn of the 3rd District, in which Lawrence lies. Not one Kansas congressman voted to protect poor gays by allowing them to use legal aid services supported by their taxes. Gays must let their congressmen and now their senators know that this amendment is a discriminatory affront to gay people. Let them know in letters, and let them know at the polls. They can do that by Douglas County Legal Aid Society doors closed to them will have only themselves to blame. Kathleen M. Conkey Lawrence, KU graduate The University Daily KANSAN Lawrence, KU graduate Remarks to Council incorrectly recorded University Senate executive committee For the record, I would like to point out that I did not make a remark attributed to me in the article headlined 'New withdrawal policy shelter for fall semester' in my Sept. 5 issue. To the editor: I did not tell the University Council on Sept. 4 that "there had been no response" from the administration to the Council's proposed withdrawal policy. What I did say was that the initial response from the administration was negative. Like my colleagues in University governance, I hope that we shall be able to persuade the administration of the merits of the prolonged study over a period of several months by three student-faculty groups: the Committee on Academic Procedures and Policies, the Senate executive committee and the University Council. George Worth, chairman (USPS 689-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Sunday, Saturday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas $53 or second-class postage paid at Topeka, Kansas $84 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hlth. The University of Kansas Editor Business Manager Elaine Brushner Carol Beer Coryd Hughes Managing Editor Harry David Lewis Editorial Editor Jody Woodburn Campus Editor Jeff Devyn Associate Campus Editor Kevin Konter Retail Sales Manager Nancy Claussen National Sales Manager Betsy LaMik Campus Sales Manager Trecy Coon Classified Manager Tracy Coon General Manager and Newa Adviser Rick Musser Xanthea Gorman General Manager and News Adviser...Rick Musser Kansan Adviser...Chuck Chowin REAGAN TAKE 6 Dolton KANSAN '80 Reagan act flops without cue cards Stage presence has always been a valuable commodity in presidential candidates, but especially in the last two decades, when the word campaign has meant media event. Kennedy had his quick wit and boyish charm; Nixon, his head-shaking sincerity and victory signs overhead; Carter, his smile and naive enthusiasm. With Ronald Reagan, stage presence has been a life project. Never before has a candidate for office so clearly been a product for sale to the American people. The fact that this is all he is sadly has been overlooked by millions of American voters. This glistening-haired actor turned P.R. man turned Nicecaster and the Nicecaster now shows through his hair how she's shaped him. He has trained since the '30s to do well on camera, to speak dramatically. And yet his "aw shucks" embarrassment at the adoration he receives from crowds seems more characteristic of a man who has never known the public eye. Ronald Reagan is clearly coachable, and his staff of advisers mold and shape him to fit the wants of American voters. A Reagan campaign staffer made this clear last week when he said, "If we want to shift gears, either in terms of what the candidate is saying, or in the political strategy we're pursuing, it has to be decided by committee." Reagan is not guiding his campaign, but is, rather, its tool. The haunting question remains—who's behind him? What group of powerbrokers will have their thorns on him by the gun they choose to exploit against gun control; for prayer in schools; for escalation of the arms race; against the windfall profits tax and against the minimum wage? Reagan's slips-up occur when he ignores the notecards of statistics and one-liners prepared for him by "the staff" and speaks that it's what's behind the real Ronnie shines through. The real Ronnie is a good after-dinner speaker who likes to watch TV. He used to The real Ronnie is not the learned ex- version of California who has a firm gap between them. come home from work in Sacramento at 5 p.m. and watch it, in fact. He finds Reader's Digest a valuable store of knowledge and what astrologer Jeanne Dixon has to say. He sends his running mate, George Bush, to China and then contradicts the man's statements by saying he would like to see the re-establishment of some formal relations between Taiwan and the United States. He also questions the War on Terror causes questions the theory of evolution, implies Carter favors the Ku Klux Klan by campaigning in the Alabama town of its founding—and isn't even right about what town it is SCOTT FAUST The propulsion of Reagan to the leadership of the Republican party is the result of a life consistent with the image someone was always searching for. The real Ronnie is the man whose thin knowledge of domestic issues forced him to tell Kansas formers that he didn't know what price parity meant and who admitted last November, on the Today show, that he didn't understand them in President Vail Gorsich D'Estinge was. With Reagan, that image has always been based on homespun truths, belief in the need to keep government under control and fear of communism. Reagan, whose childhood was raised up in a Southwestern Illinois town where he developed his passion for small-town values. A job as a Chicago Cubs radio announcer led Reagan into the movies in 1937, when he constantly played the nice guy. The political Reagan emerged in his work as president of the Screen Actors Guild after the war, and in his rabid hatred of communism. He was raised a New Deal Democrat, and first voted Republican for Eisenhower in 1952. Reagan was rescued from a rapidly sinking acting career in 1954, when General Electric chose him to host its weekly "GE Theater" TV show and tour the country to give to GE employees what was to become known as "The Speech." He still gives it. Neil, Reagan's brother, who was in advertising, used him in a series of Borax commercials. His potential as an actor on the political stage was recognized when women to whom Neil showed the commercials, according to Neil, "said they'd buy anything from him. They even said they'd vote for him, and we didn't even ask that." Reagan, the commodity, was born. Nell arranged for Reagan to work for Goldwater in 1964, which brought him enough notoriety that powerful Republicans wanted him. He lumped him up then California Gov. Pat Brown in 1968. Reagan won by a landslide and was able to manage the state for eight years with the help of capable people around him—largely recruited by California corporate men. Reagan delegated authority to these advisers, avoided the details of issues and decisions and was regularly supplied with four paragraph 'mini-memos' summarizing policy issues. The draftman was crutch supplied by a bureaucracy accommodating a man of limited abilities. Urged to run in 1968 as California's favorite candidate for President, Reagan became forever a symbol of conservatism in the Republican party. His time finally came in 1980. Call it "soap salesman to president in five easy lessons." Call it what you will. The danger is that a reactionary cue card reader could be our next national leader. If Reagan wins, a puppet, not a leader, will stand before America to give his inaugural address. The question will be: Who's pulling the strings? And it will not be Ronald Reagan himself who will be guiding U.S. policy, if the California experience is any indicator. Rather, his mini-memo preparers and others behind the scenes will determine the direction of the nation along a course of conservatism. Candidates put University before resumes Student Leader goes to Student Meetings too, to which he brings the handshakes and the chatter and, quietly, University Administrator's policies. Student Leader and his friends don't always agree with their constituent, Student Body. But Student Leader believes that Student Body is apathetic and really doesn't care about anything anyway. Student Leader wears a blue oxford button down and attends a lot of meetings where he shakes a lot of hands and chats with University Administrator. So Student Leader goes to luncheons and dinners, and occasionally, a class. See, Student Leader always has office hours or meetings or appointments to keep, leaving little time for classes. He doesn't have much time for studying either, but he does enough to get by. Student Leader is exactly contrary to the vision Mark Bernstein, Lawrence graduate student, and John Gullory, Spring Hill junior, have of these missions. Last week, Bernstein and his team met with the president, the first student body president and vice president, for a team to file for the November contest. They say they are non-political and have only one "real" commitment, which is to the students of the University of Kansas. At the base of the Bernstein-Gullery candidacy is a dedication to quality higher education, a desire, as Bernstein or "make the University a university again." Oh, yeah, Student Leader does have this treasure that he has cultivated for years. He has strategically nourished it into a flourishing specimen, a truly blooming resume. Quite unlike Student Leader, Bernstein and T As Bernstein and Guillory see it, the problem has been that students haven't given the opportunity to be heard, to have their special needs and concerns aired. They become alienated. The answer, according to the candidates, is to supply a kind of leadership that will Gulluill believe that students genuinely care about their education and the University. Low voter turnouts and poor Senate attendance are reasons for the problem, leading to frustration and, finally, to resignation. AMY HOLLOWELL --- Bernstein is one for working through the system, a system in which he has great faith. He has been a participant in the system for 10 years, as a student senator, as a representative on the University Senate executive committee and the University Council, and as an appointee to numerous Chancellor advisory committees. Through it all, Bernstein has surmised that the most powerful group at the University of Kansas is the student body. give students a reason to get involved, that will draw voices from everyone with something to do. "If they (students) really care about something and really want to have an effect, Gullory agrees with Bernstein. But having never served in the governance system, he thinks he brings a freshness and an open-mindedness to the campaign. He views himself as a diversified candidate, a student with "no set group or background" but a skilled "organizer" of diverse people "in a positive way." "I'm not brilliant, and I'm not the best man. I can't represent to represent my myself and my cohorts," he says. So the candidates want to bring, through their unique melange of experience, government to the people in an almost populist manner. The question is what the Senate is all about, they say. Therefore, a current move in the Senate to cut the amount of representatives in half is a case for doubt. "How can cutting out senators because they're not interested stimulate interest?" BERNstein said. If anything, Bernstein and Gullory say they would increase the number of senators. In addition, they would like to improve communication between the senators and their constituents. "We believe in the free exchange of ideas, between students and students and students and parents and parents," she wrote. Because of this conviction, Bernstein and Guillory say they aren't running against anyone, but that they just want to be heard. They just want everyone to be heard. As Bernstein puts it, "We just want the women to be treated with regard, regained, and we take care of all the students." Let Student Leader put that on his resume --- g c, E. i- x e. o- c- g, a, or th ed a to p ly d- nd th ing a- c- e- the in ave he er elf the or ors on ill ial ang University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Page 5 Trial From page 1 to be on the property and that the group couldn't be sure they heard they had been told by someone else. After a 45-minute recess for lunch, Matamaus's trial began. An agreement between the court and the defense attorney allowed testimony in the previous trial to be used. Knutson called Rife back to the stand to identify Matamana as one of the anti-draft members in the parking lot and to establish that Matamana was involved. He asked the members to leave school grounds. After Knutson called Kenneth Fisher, assistant superintendent of Lawrence's schools, to clear up a question about the division principal's authority on school grounds, Jump returned to the stand and identified Matrasa as the people whose names he took in the school lot. The judge again refused the argument that the defendant thought she had permission to be on the jury. Immediately after Matanauu's trial, McCullough was brought into the courtroom. Again the court and defense agreed to use the previous testimony in the two trials except for Tate's contention that he identified himself to Bradley and McCullough when he told them to leave the front of the building. McCallough corroborated Bradley's earlier testimony that when Tate had confronted the two in front of the northeast corner of the school he did not identify himself. Before closing arguments were heard, Catt ruled the city could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that McCutlough realized she had been charged by the court to leave the grounds. He found her not guilty. Klinknett said he did not know whether the defendants would appeal. I feel there is a likelihood the cases will be appeased, but there is no final decision yet," he From page 1 Women complaints about nursing homes in the state, Branson was one of the committee members who traveled around the state monitoring nursing homes and documenting their conditions. "The results were pretty appalling, and they helped us get our foot in the door of the laboratory." Patronize Kansan advertisers. LAST SESSION, the Legislature passed the Abuse of the Elderly bill, which required all cases of abuse in nursing homes to be reported to the responsible health department. However, the bill was weakened at the last minute by the deletion of two key points, she said. The approved version of the bill states that all physicians, nurses and administrators in nursing homes must report cases of abuse. The original version also would have required nurses aides, who probably spend the most time with the patients, to report abuses. Also, the approved bill contains no penalty for institutions with confirmed cases of abuse, Branson said. Backers of the original proposal did not file the bill in the next legislative session, she said. Another of Branson's major concerns has been the lack of adequate programs to benefit获益 Proper housing for the handicapped is greatly lacking in Lawrence, she said. She spoke highly of Independence, Inc., a referral and resource center for physically handicapped Lawrence residents, and of the Jitney transportation service for handicapped and elderly citizens. KU is the only school in the state to provide a transportation service for handicapped students and even that system desperately needs more vehicles, she said. Branson said she also was in favor of developing a more equitable tax structure in the set. PROPERTY TAXES are a tremendous burden on elderly citizens with fixed incomes and on farmers, whose incomes may fluctuate from year to year, she said. A bill introduced in the last legislative session called for the elimination or reduction of the state's reliance on property taxes and a 2 percent increase in the sales tax. Branson said she would not support the proposal unless the sales tax was removed from food. Otherwise, the bill would be amended so that it will spend larger percentage of their income on food and necessities, she said. Branson said that she was a wholehearted supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment, and she believed abortion is a "de facto" law that should be made by the woman involved. Branson, whose husband is a pediatrician, said the issue of adding a birthing room at Lawrence Memorial Hospital was a "bott potato." She said she certainly would support the idea of a birthing room known to be equipped with adequate safeguards. "What a woman should want most is a healthy baby and as few risks as possible in having that baby." Branson said that she had a handicapped son because of a premature birth and that she was extremely conscious of the need for proper care and equipment to be available during birth. BRANSON GREW UP on a farm in Aitchison County. She attended Kansas State University for one year, then transferred to KU and graduated from the School of Nursing. She has served on the Governor's Committees for Mental Retardation and Mental Health, Health Planning and Nursing Homes. She does work for the Lawrence Salvation Army and is a volunteer nurse for Red Cross Blood drawings. In 1972, she founded the Lawrence Chamber Players. She has been a coordinator for the program ever since. Branson was been campaigning door to door since July 15, and she said she had found her answers to be widely varied. If elected, Branson would devote full attention to the post. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 We trust it will be encouragement to all the true and sincere people of God to be reminded of several long periods of time in the earth when men dwelt without fear for their families, loved ones, and property, due to kings, rulers, and governing authorities who would not countenance their crimes, or "beasts," or "humans," or in whatever category you may belong who claim to believe that the "death penalty" does not prevent crime. Did you ever see a dead man commit murder? Did you ever see a dead man rape a woman or girl? Do you reckon there was any rage, cruelty, or insane behavior at this morning shortly after Lot went out of the City and God raised fire and bristled from heaven upon it? The following statement is made not for the purpose of offending any man, but rather for the purpose of the writer not offending God Almighty: From my knowledge of The Almighty, I am afraid that we do not restrain and prevent, I make God out to be a liar many times in His Word, and in fact reject the entire economy of The Almighty revealed in John 3:16: "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever heard Him was filled with life." Maybe we need to meditate on these words of The Lord Jesus Christ: "Ye do er not knowing The Scriptures, nor The Power of God" Meditate on them, AND REPENTI Regardless of what others do, or profess, you continue to *FEAR GOD AND KEEP HIS COMMANDMENTS; FOR* THIS IS THE WHOLE DUTY OF MAN. "Be not weary in well-doing, for in dues season we will reap, if we不腻才." Continue to pray as Christ taught us, "THE KINGDOM WITH HER SHEPHERD WITH HER ARTH," AS IT IS IN HEAVEN. DELIVER US BE AT EMILY." "Democratic institutions exist by reason of their virtue. If ever they perish it will be when you have forgotten the become insurrection to the present and utterly racked with the future." "The future," Th. Ewatson on the Capital grounds in Atlanta. "For nothing should the people of God more devotion pray than that their great men might be good and God-fearing." 1383 YEARS AGO: in the year 617 A.D. Edwin was crowned King of Northumbria, one of the seven divisions of England. He was a strong warrior and kings. It was said first of him that in his days "a woman with her babe might walk scatheless from sea to sea." The people tilden their fields and gathered their harvests under their shield. They clashed with a civilizer, had already begun its work in Teutonic Britain." What is the trouble? The answer is as plain as the nose on your face: We have forsaken the Commandments of our God! There is almost no end to the numbers of our churches, but righteousness is about as scarcity as "then" righteousness. What is the difference? Questions, situations, church and secular, but it takes us as we are "tools for want of sense!" God help us! P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Kinko's... $35.00 House of Usher... $35.00 Encore Copy Corps ... $26.25 (We also feature typing, editing, and binding) "Your One Stop Thesis Shop" Why pay more? That's why you'll say Encore Discounts Lawrence Printing... $35.00 Somerset Camp Life Lowrance Attention: Thesis Copiers Please include filing form PLUS $3.00 filing fee OR Petition with 50 freshman signatures Below are the comparative prices for July 1980 making 5 copies of a 100-page thesis onto 25% rag paper-collated. We called and found: ENCORE COPY CORPS Paid for by Activity Fee 25th & Iowa (Holiday Plaza) FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS 842-2001 FILING DEADLINE TODAY 5:00 P.M. September 24 & 25,1980 OUR BREAD IS DELIVERED FRESH FROM BUTTERKRUST! IT'S OUR GALA 19th ANNIVERSARY Bucky's OLD FASHIONED SALE HAMBURGERS WE SERVE ONLY 100% BEEF DELIVERED FRESH DAILY FROM HARWOOD'S WHOLESALE MEATS! TO CELEBRATE OUR 19TH ANNIVERSARY, WE'RE HAVING A SPECIAL EVENT! STOP IN AND JOIN THE FUN DON'T MISS IT! Three Big Days: Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Sept. 12-13-14 Don't Forget These Great Menu Items: • DOUBLE CHEESEBURGERS • DELUXE BUCKEE (1%, 1b. Cheeseburger, Lettuce, Tomato, Special Sauce) • PORK TENDERLOIN • ROAST BEEF SANDWICH --- Hamburgers . . . 25c French Fries... 25c}$ $Cheeseburgers ... 35^{c Shakes... 35^{c}$ Visit Bucky's Dairy Shoppe Bucky's WE SERVE THE BEST DAIRY PRODUCTS FROM MEYER'S DAIRY! HAMBURGERS INTH come as you are... hungry ALL OUR PRODUCE IS THE BEST - FROM GARRETT'S MARKET! 2120 WEST NINTH Entertainment Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 080233 DREWTQRRES/Kansan sta JUNG KWON Pidekin (Laurie McLane Sanders) battles Pynty (Rence Franceschiello) for a sorceress' hat in "The Continuing Adventures of Nyfrm the Snirte." Purple people-eaters populate theatre By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter There aren't many opportunities in Lawrence to see a one-eyed, one-horned flying purple people-eater or to play hassle-free hopscotch with an anti-bully assistant. In fact, the one and only opportunity may be the September children's theatre performances by the Seem-To Be Players at the Lawrence Arts Center on the corner of Ninth and Vermont streets. "One of our main goals is to explore the imagination," said Ric Averill, artistic director of the Seem-To Be Players. "We believe that kids play, they don't need a lot of sets and props." "in a way, what we're saying is that you can be warned," he said. "be if you use your imagination." he said. Every performance by the players has two short plays, Averil said, separated by short acts which he called "vauduelle for children." The purple people-eater and the haste-free birds both fall into Averill's yodelery category. The people-eater sings a song about wanting to be a rock star. The hosecastop game uses children from the audience, who are automatically guessing the players' names while a third player knocks away bullies. Averil said he decided to form the players in because he was dissatisfied with the current thesis. "In 1872, it was the time of alternatives," he said. "I wanted an alternative to the big, mostly concealing theater where every kid in the world sets bored but enjoys the costumes." The Seem-To-Be Players were his solution. They have been performing in Lawrence for part of the year ever since they were formed seven years ago. One of the plays they will perform this month is an episode of "The Continuing Adventures of Nyfrm the Sprite." The players have been presenting Nyfrm episodes since they first began. I "wanted an artichoke in the back yard," he said, "when I saw this sort of vision of a sorceress coming down." Averill said the episodes were not original. He said the sorceress gave him scrolls containing the stories about Nyrfm, and he translates them year after year to find out how the story continues. Children and adults both seemed to enjoy the Seem-ToBe Players. The adults joined in the sing-along musical numbers as enthusiastically as the children, and they were definitely louder. "I know there's children's theatre and there's a theatre, but essentially there's just just theatre." Benson's latest effort is less jazz, more soul Bv DAN TORCHIA Money and audiences are often scrutinized with a double standard in jazz. A little of both is fine for a jazz musician, but get too much and the purists yell "selout." Staff writer The purists forget that money and audiences are what a musician plays for. You have to eat. And if a musician snubs his audience he should play in a closet. Musicians shouldn't pander their audiences, but their preferences should be kept in mind. The audience is the musician's constitency. Review This is important because George Benson's new album, "Give Me The Night," has been released, and the usual statements about his work have become more obvious commercialism, etc., will be reheated. What almost always is overlooked is that what was expected of Benson five years ago is different from what is expected of him now. Ever since he was born," he has decided to pursue a big audience. "rine. 'Give Me The Night' is the best thing he has done since "Breezin". To settle the jazz question, if you consider jazz to be based on fluid rhythms (usually swing), a lot of improvisation and an advanced harmonic sense, then "Give Me The Night" is not jazz. But it still is good music. It is possible for a jazz musician to achieve a mass audience and reach a large number of people. Whether he is playing jazz, as he used to, or soul-funk, as he is now, good George Benson is still good George Benson. Forget the nagging 'Give Me The Night' is an enjoyable album. There are problems—the same ones that have plagued his last few albums. Benson's guitar is not as smooth as it used to be, and he No matter how good his singing is, Benson is still primarily known as a guitarist. Now that he has found a wider audience, they should be given the chance to hear how well he can play. For melody and structured improitation, there are not many guitarists who can match him. The album's strengths and weaknesses are apparent on the first side. The singing is very good. Benson sings with more conviction than he has in a long time. The guitar work, when it is tuned up, is melodic, and just right for the funk tempo. The side's instrumental, "Off Broadway," is good, up tempo bpm, but Benson never takes off and soles until the end. Producer Quincy Jones has tampered electronically with the guitar, but the devices do not add anything. The guitar's sound feels like a piano, adding the identity that usually marks Benson's playing. The best vocal performance is on "Moozy Mood." a mainstream jazz ballad written by saxophonist James Moody and vocalist Eddie Jefferson. Benson shows he hasn't lost his jazz ability. His vocal owes much to Jefferson, as he swings and sakes with ease. The second side does not work as well as the first, because the person who acts in the instrument also acts when the people letehrg. The guitar problems surface again in the instrument, "Dinorah, Dinorah." Again, it is melodic enough that Benson could easily solo and play this song. The best-tuned guitar is used iris and sounds out of place. The last song on the album, "Turn Out The Lamplight," shows Benson as a crooner. The tempo is sensuous, and Benson does some good work. The melody is continuous, unstoppable scatting that is becoming his trademark. Benson has found the right producer in Quincy Jones, another jazz expatriate. Jones, who produced Michael Jackson's "Off the Wall," has applied the same touches that made Jackson's album so good—tight arrangements, a rhythm section that sounds well rehearsed but spontaneous, and a lush sound that does not smother everything. Benson finally sounds comfortable as a soul singer. His interpretation of the songs and vocal lines is flawless. Rod Temperton, who wrote several of the songs on "Off The Wall," has written half the songs here. Catchy and sophisticated, the songs enable Benson to sing at his best. But the problem with the guitar probably will plague Benson as long as he pursues his present direction. The guitar is missed and there should be some way for it to share equal time. But that doesn't ruin the album. The singing more than makes up for the lack of guitar, "Give Me The Night" sounds fresher and has more depth. Robinson and Jones should continue their partnership. If you are dissatisfied with Benson's playing in the past few years, you might pass this up. Benson has played some phenomenal guitar in the past. If that is what you want to hear, get "Concert-Carrighe Hail" or "Blue Benson," two albums that show his playing at his best. Guarneri quartet back for encore KU session The Gauneri String Quartet, a world- renowned chamber music ensemble, will return to KU Sunday, Sept. 14, to open the 1980-81 Chamber Music Series. Jackie Davis, director of the KU Concert and Chamber Music Series, said the Guarneri Quartet has become a "regular" on the Chamber Music series. The most popular concerts on the yearly series. "There is a real Guarrier cult in the Lawrence area, as well as the world," Davis said, "and we are fortunate the quartet is willing to return to Lawrence." The guarrier culture is always one of the highlights of the series. Time magazine has hailed the quartet as "the world's master of chamber music." Members of the quartet are Arnold Steinhardt and David Soyer, cello; Michael Tree, viola; and David Soyer, cello. For its KU performance, the quartet will perform three major works, including Quartet in F Major, opus 15, no. 1, by Beethoven; Quartet in G Major, opus 16, no. 2, by Quartet no. 10, a A minor, opus 13, by Arsenyev; Formed in 1665, the Guarneri quartet is now at the pinnacle of chamber music ensemble. Each season the quartet performs more than 100 concerts, including 20 sell-out performances in New York City. Last season, the quartet was invited by President and Mrs. Carter to perform the Minister Begin of Israel at the White House. While the quartet plays works of such 20th century composers as Berg, Webern, Sessions, Barkt and Hindemith, their repertory is not restricted to the modern. The quartet has an exclusive contract with RCA records and has more than 25 albums available. In addition to playing as a quartet, the Guarmeri members are also members of the music faculty at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphi, Pa. Tickets for the 1980 concert are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats are general admission at $6 for the public, $3 for KU students with ID, and $4.50 for other students. Reservations for the concert may be made by calling 864-3982. members of the group play 18th and 19th century instruments, including an original violin made by Joseph Guarnieri in 1728. Spare Time TODAY MUSIC: Opus presents Barry Bernstein, solo concert of involved music, 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center. US, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West The Debs, 9 p.m. at Off the Wall Hall Kelly Hunt and the Kinetics, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House ART: "Benton's Bentons," "Americana from the Collection," and "From Drawings to Sculpture: The Creative Process" at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art Colleate Bangert, painting, and Vernon Brejcha, sculpture, at the Kellas/7E7 gallery THEATRE: "Dark Solstice," by the Facets Performance Ensemble, 8 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall, Workshop at 12:30 p.m. in the Robinson Dance Studio MUSIC: Leon Fleisher, master piano classes at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. In Swarthout Recital Hall US, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Gaslit Gang, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place The Debs, 9 p.m. at Off the Wall Hall The Clocks, and Fred's Wallet, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House THEATRE: "The Sword and the Stone," children's theatre by the Seem-To-Be-Players, 1:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center SUNDAY MUSIC: Leon Fleisher, master piano classes at 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. In Swarthout Recital Hall Guarneri String Quartet, 8 p.m. at the University Theatre Jam Session, 6 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Jon Paul, 6 p.m. at the 7th Spirit Club TROUSSEAU Celtic ritual is evoked in the Facet Performace Ensemble's offering of "Dark Solstice." Celtic mythology brought to stage in 'Dark Solstice' Celtic myth and ritual form the cornerstones of "Dark Solitude," a theatrical work created and performed by the Chicago-based Facets Performance Ensemble. "Dark Solstice" will be presented at 8 a.m in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The Faeces Ensemble's appearance is special and the International Theatre Studies Center at KU. Before the performance, Facets members were from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. in Robinson Dance Studio. Celtic scholars collaborated with director Nicole Dreisek and the actors to form "Dark Solistice." Robert Graves' book on the Celtic goddess Odioddes, provided the basis for many rehearsals. In the summer of 1979, Dreiske and the actors researched and rehearsed in Brittany, France, amidst 3.000-year-old Celtic ruins. "To remain honest to the sources of the theatre piece we were developing," Dreisie explained, "the only way to deal with the mythical and supernatural world of the Celts was for us to work in the immediate place where the Celtic influence still remains strong." Using a 16th century stone house as their base, the actors travelled through Brittany working on islands, peninsulas and in fields covered by monolithic stones thought to have been places of worship, sacrifice and astronomical observation. "Sleeping and working inside Celtic tombs and burial places thousands of years old forced the actors toward new revelations and toward drastic changes in 'Dark Solstice,' Drielae Much of the ensemble's time in Brittany was spent studying the goddess figure in Celtic religion, Dreske saith she "triple-godess," a woman of the Celtic archeology, is a central in "dark Solstice." "In Brittany, the presence of the godess, in inscriptions on the tombs and in Breton mythology, is everywhere, he said. "The earth mother, as goddess of the dead," she added. Celtic influence can be found in contemporary society, he said. Halloween, the Celtic new year's day, originally marked the day when spirits from one world were free to cross the other, and so the Celtic tradition of mistletoe dates back to its use during the Celtic celebration of the winter solstice. "Dark Soliste" premiered in Brittany on a stone-covered field in Carmac, France. Tickets to the KU performance of "Dark Solice" are on sale in the Murphy Hall box office and will be available at the door. Admission is $2.75. Tickets for the workshop are $ 60 cents if purchased with a performance ticket or $ 25.00 purchase. University Dally Kansan, September 12, 1980 e e e e n n t t b Page 7 of d at ne y id ill in or work the ers se, ere red and to tic es on by of ob the seke and the seke itic a s a in the southe arth new when then the n of litic on a break pur- Ad+ pur- pur- RIVER CITY JAM I RIVER CITY RADIO'S GRAND OPENING FRI., SAT., AND SUN.!! Featuring the World's Finest in Car Stereo! RIVER CITY BLAZER Alpine 7307 tape deck-tuner 340 watts Audiomobile amplifier 1 15" Altec subwoofer 4 Seas mid-ranges 4 Polydax tweeters 2 electronic crossovers 1 graphic equalizer 2 level controls D PICK-UP TRUCK RIVER CITY BLAZER Alpine 7307 tape deck-tuner 340 watts Audiomobile amplifier 1 15” Altec subwoofer 4 Seas mid-ranges 4 Polydax tweeters 2 electronic crossovers 1 graphic equalizer 2 level controls FORD PICK-UP TRUCK Alpine 7307 tape deck-tuner 100 watts Audiomobile amplifier 2 12” Emminence woofers 2 Polydax mid-ranges 2 soft dome tweeters 1 graphic equalizer HONDA ACCORD Alpine 7327 tape deck-tuner 180 watts Audiomobile amplifier 2 8” Pyle woofers 2 4” Seas mid-ranges 2 Phillips tweeters 1 10 band equalizer CHEVY CITATION XII Alpine 7307 tape deck-tuner 180 watts Audiomobile amplifier 4 6½” Polydax woofers 4 Seas mid-ranges 4 Polydax tweeters 1 graphic equalizer 1 level control SEE AND HEAR THEM ALL IN THE BIGGEST BLOWOUT DISPLAY OF CAR STEREO IN KANSAS! Alpine 7307 tape deck-tuner 200 watts Audiomobile amplifier 1 10” Phillips subwoofer 4 Peerless mid-ranges 4 soft dome tweeters 1 electronic crossover network 1 graphic equalizer AUDI 5000 Q FREE BEER • FREE POPCORN • FREE MOUNTAIN DEW RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd Phone: 913-842-4587 "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" New Hours Mon.-Fri. 10-9 Sat. 10-5 OPEN EVENINGS MAP New Location RIVER CITY RADIO 23rd St. SUPER X KROGER (The former Dale Willey building) MAP New Location RIVER CITY RADIO 2318 E.I. SUPER KNOODER X (The former Dale Willey building) Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Stephan lists dump violations About 38,000 pounds of arsenic waste product is trucked every year from a Lawrence chemical manufacturing plant to a dump site for hazardous wastes northwest of Wichita—a site Kansas Attorney General. Added to the inventory had been operating in violation of several state regulations. Joel Jeacob, plant manager for the chemical company, FMC Corporation, said yesterday that FMC had chosen the Wichita site to dispose of its hazardous waste because it was recommended by the University and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. "It is considered a state-of-the-art dismal site." Jacobs said. Jacobs said FMC took its supervisor and a technical supervisor to the Wichita site twice a year to inspect the waste disposal. they are following guidelines," he said. "They check records and make sure they are following guidelines," he said. HOWEVER, STEPHAN, in n letter to the department of Health and Environment, said the department was lax in enforcing regulations designed to keep the Wichita site safe. The 80-acre dump site is owned by the Kansas Industrial Environmental Services, a branch of National Environmental Services. In his letter, Stephan said that state officials had failed to monitor air quality around the site, that state employees were not making necessary inspections, that Kansas Industrial Environment Department required reports on time and that Environmental Services was lax in enforcing security. Stephan also said that the reports all industries must fill out concerning the material being dumped contained irregularities. HOWDAY DUNCAN, chief of environmental sanitation of the Department of Health and Environment, answered Stephan's charge Wednesday by saying irregularities did exist but they were because of the complex nature of the regulations covering the disposal of hazardous materials, which are frequently, he said, it is difficult to keep reports up to date. According to Jacobs, FMC ships its toxic waste to Wichita by truck. It is a by-product in the production of foodgrade phosphoric acid. The liquid waste contained in the drums is 1 percent arsenic, 35 percent filter-aid, which is a purification agent, and 64 percent water. Jacobs said waste coming from FMC was stored in vaults at the Wichita site. Jacobs said the arsenic solution coming from FMC was placed immediately in open pits, called drums, and would not be among the drums that Stephan had included as a problem at the site. By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter Kansas emergency preparedness coordinators who examined the Wolf Creek generator have found the nuclear power plant's construction safe. Mike Leonard, Douglas County coordinator, said yesterday. Wolf Creek passes construction test The Wolf Creek plant is being constructed near Burlington, about 60 miles southwest of Lawrence. Leonard and other county coordinators returned yesterday from Burlington after a three-day conference on emergency plans. The coordinators toured the Wolf Creek facilities Monday. Leonard said he was satisfied with the construction of the plant and the thick concrete walls that will house the reactor. "I think a 747 (airplane) could hit it and bounce off." Leonard said. "I don't believe there won't ever be a problem," Leonard said, "but the safeguards seem to have everything covered." rine nuclear reactor should be producing electricity by 1984, utility officials said. THE REACTOR is being built by Kansas City Power and Light Co., the Kansas Gas and Electric Co., and the Kansas Power Cooperative, Inc. Some groups have been trying to stop the plant's construction, fearing an accident like the one that occurred last year at Three Mile Island. In the Three Mile Island did this happen as was released into the air over the surrounding Pennsylvania countryside. Leonard said an accident at the plant would probably affect only a tiny part of southern Douglas County. Some of the residents there might have to be evacuated, but it would be fine if the rest of the county, Leeward, said. MANY PEOPLE objecting to the plant are concerned with storage of hazardous waste from the plant and shipping those wastes, Leonard said. Radioactive fuel rods within the reactor will be changed about every 18 months, he said, and those rods will be sealed inside a vault and buried next to the reactor. Only articles with low levels of radiation—such as contaminated clothing used for inspections and mops used to clean up around the reactor—would be sent by truck to a dump in Connecticut. Those low levels of radiation are no higher than ordinary background radiation in any city, Leonard said. TACO GRANDE WEEKEND SPECIAL Sancho's & Burrito's only $1.00 9th & Indiana G. WEEKEND SPECIAL 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd offer good Sept. 12-14 --a theatre piece based on Celtic myth and magic TRUTH IN ADVERTISING ATTENTION: THESIS COPIERS 8:00 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12 Sponsored by International Theatre Arts Committee and International Theatre Studies Center Swarthout Recital Hall Murphy Hall Tickets available at Murphy Box Office Admission: $2.75 BEWARE OF FALSE AND MISLEADING CLAIMS COMPARE FOR YOURSELF FACETS PERFORMANCE ENSEMBLE directed by. Nicole Dreiske Copy Center "E" will make Thesis Copies for you for 6¢ each, but those copies are, according to their representative, made on a "Shiny-Surfaced" paper. In other words, made on a coated paper copier. Needless to say, "Most People want the real 25% Uncoated Rag Bond which is 7¢ a copy," not 6¢. Copy Center "E" will allow another 10% discount if your order totals over 50 copies. Since it's been brought-up, we invite your comparison of the following (we called and found): | | COPY CTR "E" | HOUSE OF USHER | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Thesis Copying, cost per copy on White, Uncoated, 25% Rag Bond (You don't pay for gathering at House of Usher unless you want it — it adds $1 per copy) | 7¢ | 5¢ | | Cost to make 5-Copies of a 100-page Thesis on 25% Uncoated Rag Bond, including all quantity discounts | $31.50 | $25.00 | | HOW ABOUT THEISIS BINDING? | | | | Let's Compare Again: COST | $66.00* | $30.00 | | Hard-Bind 4-Copies with a 3-Line Title & Your Name Gold Stamped on Front TIME | 10-days | 2-3 days | . Dark Solstice - To be fair, the above is Copy Center "E's" *Rush Service* — their regular service would be "Only" $15.00, but would take 4-6 weeks. And while we're at it 200 copies 8½ x 11 White 20# Bond (including all so-called discounts) ... $8.50 ... $5.00 ... 1000 copies each of 2 originals 8½ x 11 20# ... $55.00 ... $42.00 ... And We Think You Will Agree, The House of Usher is.. - COMPARE OUR PRICES * * COMPARE OUR QUALITY * * COMPARE OUR EXPERIENCE * * COMPARE OUR SERVICE * Headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying in Lawrence HOUSE OF USHER 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE (913) 842-3610 BAT SVA FILMS Presents CITY STREET WOODY ALLEN DIANE KEATON MICHAEL MURPHY MARIEL HEMINGWAY MERYL STREEP ANNE BYRNЕ MANHATTAN' GEORGE GERSHWIN A JACK ROLLINS-CHARLES H. JOFFE WOODY ALLEN...MARSHALL BRICKMAN WOODY ALLEN CHARLES H. JOFFE ROBERT GREENHUT GORDON WILLIS United Artists MANHATTAN I United Artists A TransAmerica Company R RESTORATION WWW.UFTARTISTS.COM NEW YORK, NY 10026 (Plus: "Porklips Now.") Friday- 3:30,7:00,9:30 Saturday- 3:30,7:00,9:30 Friday and Saturday, Sept. 12-13 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium-No Refreshments Allowed University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Page 9 Institute renews a museum grant, ends another By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter The Natural History Museum will receive the $35,000 grant renewal in October from the Institute of Museum Services, but a $25,000 'MS grant for Spencer Art Museum will not be renewed. Spencer Museum has received the grant for the past two years. The Natural History Museum first received the grant last year. "There are a limited number of grants and a lot of people need and want them," Ruth Gennrich, director of public education at the Natural History Museum, said yesterday. Gennrich said grants were given to 45 museums out of more than 1,300 appl The IMS grant is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education and is used for general operating costs of the museums, including education, exhibits and programs to reach the public outside the museum's area. Museums frequently use the money to hire employees to organize educational programs or exhibits. She said three employees at the museum were paid from grant money. They are in charge of presenting some museum programs outside the Lawrence area. Part of the grant is used for traveling expenses for field trips and seminars in local universities. "Unless somebody can come here from Dodge City or Kismet, there isn't much we can do to serve them," she said. "We will give the grant to go beyond the area here." Spencer Museum, like the Natural History Museum, has three employees whose salaries come from the grant. They are Sally Hoffmann, coordinator for programs and visitor services; Ann Wiklund, coordinator for development of new programs; and Larry Schwarm, museum photographer. Doug Tuglman, assistant director for administration at Spencer Museum, said the employees would not lose their jobs. He said the museum was attempting to compensate for the lost money by reorganizing the museum staff. For example, Tighman said, Dolo Brooking, the former director of museum education at Spencer, resigned last August to take a job in Springfield, Ill. Brooking's job has not been filled. The rest of the money is coming from changes in the schedules of student hourly workers and student monthly workers, Tlighman said. He said the museum was not planning to hire new student monthly workers. The time student hourly workers put in will be cut back, he said, because the museum information desk has been eliminated and some volunteers from the Friends of the Art Museum are working in the bookstore. One student said the juggling of the staff had cost her a job at the museum. Stacy Cooper, Kansas City, Kan., senior, said she started working as a staircase worker last May, then went into the hospital in late July because of a virus. She said that when she came back in mid-August, she couldn't get her job "They told me not to come back to work because they weren't sure they could pay me," Cooper said. "I wasn't fired, but they told me we were going to re-allocate student hourly money to support Larry Scharm." Tilgham said precautionary changes were made in the staff organization before they knew for what the museum would not get the grant. A phone call to the IGS had indicated that the prospects of getting the grant were good. VIN Meisner- Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! RICK'S BIKE SHOP MOPEDS ph. 841-6642 1033 VERMONT 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza "WHEN YOU SHOOT A LOTTA POOL IN BARS, THE ONLY THING YOU WANT FILLED UP ARE THE POCKETS." Steve Mizerak Famous Pool Player LITE BEER FROM MILLER. EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED IN A BEER. AND LESS. A PLACE IN THE SUN the island ...IS COMING! the island BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE 29'95 CASE of 10 or 3.49 EACH Super Chrome Tape BASF II C-90 FILL UP $1'00 Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE 2995 CASE of 10 or 3.49 EACH Super Chrome Tape BASF II C-90 BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE FOR USE IN FORGE GRANULES AT SAE TAPE NOT FOR USE IN CYLINDER OR OTHER CONDUCTION WITH CHROMium BRAIDING D3 in disc washer www.d3washer.com 1234567890 Email: info@d3washer.com Phone: 1234567890 D3 Discwasher FILL UP $1.00 Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th CRAIG Language Translator 1/2 price A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1/2 price only 9995 Hurry, Limited Quantities. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN * Page 10 University Dally Kansan, September 12, 1980 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-9708 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 A 9:30 P Varsity Downtown 843-1009 Boogie Man 7:49 A 9:29 WME THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW MIDNITE SHOW Fri & Sat Varsity Theatre Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:15 & 8:15 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3. Urban Cowboy 7:10 & 9:25 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1. Xanadu 7:30 A9:40 2. Oh Heavenly Dog 7:30 & 9:30 Sunset West 81st St 942-9172 The Shining & The Exorcist starts at Dusk Forer's trip still debated by governance By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter The waves of controversy generated by Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham's trip to Iran last December were used to toughen the University government service. 11 response to trip and the administration's reaction to it, proposals for changing the Faculty Code of admission is submitted to the administration. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Those changes, which were approved by the Faculty Council, are being revised again today by the University Faculty executive committee. FacExet in closed session early last week with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel, Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, and Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, to discuss the differences in the proposals. The revisions are necessary because faculty and administration proposals Ambrose Saricks, FacEx member and professor of history, said yesterday that he came from the fact that Forer and Dillingham were placed on leave without pay. Forer, associate professor of social welfare, and Dillingham, a former president of the University. suspended without pay in December of last year during their trip to Iran in an unofficial attempt to help resolve the hostage crisis. He said FacEx members thought the onsite agreement, the two KU professors wished it. Another point of disagreement concerned how much review such administrative actions were subject to. Sarices said. To alleviate the differences, FacEx incorporated the previous proposal and the administration's suggestions into its current proposal. The proposal would delete from the Handbook for Faculty and Other Unclassified Staff a section that deals with the current class attendance requirements and the leaves of absence without pay policy. A change in the document would include protection of faculty members from disciplinary sanctions against them without the opportunity for a transfer to a different position or the Faculty Senate Committee on Tenure and Related Problems. The paragraphs about attendance would be moved to the Faculty Responsibilities section and would specify what is expected of instructors and list situations when classes do not meet. According to the Handbook, if an instructor cannot attend class, he would have to make advance arrangements, which would have to be approved by a chairman or dean. If this procedure was not followed, a faculty member cannot be placed on administrative leave without pay by the chairman or dean. When a faculty member is notified that he has been placed on administrative leave without pay, the instructor would also be informed that the action would cease when he notified his superiors that he had resumed classes or made other satisfactory arrangements. Q Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CAR RENTAL ■ AIRPLANES ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! CALL TODAY! 900 MASS: KANSAS UNION 843-1211 Trombone Player Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Jazz Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass.-Upstairs Tonite A Private Club Saturday Tommy Johnson Experiment Fri. & Sat. 12:00-12:30 p.m. ½ a Happy Hour, Also Live Jazz 12:30-2:30 Paul Gray & The Gaslight Gang Sperry TOPSIDERS 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas - Just back from a 17 concert tour Admission only $2.00 Give the gift of music. Prices Good Through Sunday, Sept. 14. Admission only $2.00 royal college shop 837 Massachusetts PAUL SIMON GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER ONE-TRICK PONY Give the gift of music. 599 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 8.98 PAUL SIMON ONE-TRICK PONY Includes Late In The Evening Oh. Marion Ace In The Hole God Bless The Absentee "Buy It Once. Enjoy It A Lifetime. Recorded Music Is Your Best Entertainment Value." STORE HOURS 9-10 Daily 10-7 Sunday Paul Simon-One-Trick Pony. One of the '60s and '70s most respected writers and singers kicks off the '80s with the sound track LP to the movie he wrote and stars in. Simon's first album since Greatest Hits, Etc., One-Trick Pony features all new, original Simon compositions. On Warner Bros. Records and Tapes Mfr. list price $9.98 (Tapes $8.98) Paul Simon/One-Trick VISA master card master charge Look what we've got for you. Try our new menu soon. H.B. Quirks Market Restaurant --- Sandwiches Soup and Sandwich...2.95 Today's soup with a chicken or tuna salad sandwich Tuna Melt. 2.95 Two half English muffins tuna salad topped with melted cheddar The following are served with your choice of cole slaw or steak fries Chicken Salad...2.95 On wheat toast Breast of Turkey...2.95 Kaiser roll or wheat bread Hamburger...2.25 Cheddarburger...2.45 Odds and Ends Salad Bar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.75 Make your own creation Soup and Salad Bar... 3.25 Today's soup with your salad creation Crock of Soup...1.75 Today's soup served with cinnamon rolls and honey butter Bacon Quiche... 2.75 Dinners "Our Specialty" Country Fried Chicken . . . 4.50 One-half golden brown chicken Barbecued Chicken...4.50 Que-ball Chicken Sirlin Steak... 7.95 A 12oz. cut Fried Shrimp...6.95 With our own delicate breading Country Fried Steak. . . . . 4.95 Chopped Beefsteak . . . . . 3.95 Cheated to your liking Broiled Cod Fillet... 4.50 Served with lemon and tartar sauce All dinners include salad bar, choice of baked, mashed, or steak fried potatoes, vegetable, and cinnamon rolls with honey butter. Youngsters 10 and under Hamburger and Fries...1.25 Fried Chicken...1.50 Fried Shrimp...2.25 Children's Salad Bar...95 With any of the above 2600 Iowa St. 842-2292 Dutch Apple Pie...95 a la mode...1.25 Pecan Pie...1.25 Beverages Soft Drinks...50 Free refill Milk...50 Iced Tea...50 Hot Tea...40 Coffee...50 Sanka...50 Bottled Beer...85 CC Hours: Tues.-Thur. 11:30 a.m.- 9:00 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Sun. 12:00-8:00 p.m. Closed Monday University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Page 11 Nuclear protesters reorganize, regroup By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter Educating the public about possible dangers of the proposed nuclear waste depository at Lyons and alleged construction flaws at the Wolf Creek nuclear plant near Bursting is the subject of an ongoing group of Lawrence nuclear protesters. About 25 people attended a meeting of the Sunflower Alliance last night at the Lawrence Public Library in an attempt to regroup after the failure of the Radioactive Free Kansas group last year. Future protest plans include anti-nuclear lectures, information booths at KU events and letter writing to senators and congressmen, Anne Moore, spokesman for the group, said. SUNFLOWER ALLIANCE members voiced concern about the nuclear waste dumping experiment in Lyons. Moore explained that Lyons is the former site of the nuclear waste which felt the ground full of holes and unsuitable for nuclear waste dumping. The Atomic Energy Commission decided in 1972 to abandon Lyons as a proposed high-level radiation dump site. However, a 1979 request by the Recano Corp. was approved for dumping of low-level radiation waste. The protesters fear that the federal government is thinking again of using Lyons as a high-level radiation waste site and plan to protest if any further federal action is taken. "For a long period of time, there was no federal standard for dumping nuclear waste," Alan Nelson, Lawrence resident, said. "Federal agencies dump and their problems are popping up all over. Kansas does not want a waste dump." Additional concern was raised about the nuclear plant under construction at Wolf Creek near the John Redmond Reservoir at Burlington. The plant is being constructed but not forgotten just because Three Mile Mount, Pat Slack, Lawrence resident, said. "Wolf Creek is the laughingstock of the utility companies because of the poor quality construction," Slick said. "The construction flaws we have heard about are nothing compared to what actually exists. I suggest everyone get the heck out of Lawrence if Wolf Creek ever goes on line, because it has been one of the most poorly constructed plant plants in the United States." THE CONSTRUCTION at Wolf Creek is expected to be completed in 1883 or 1894. Sunflower Alliance members hold a silent vigil every Sunday from noon to 10 p.m. in South Park as a protest against Wolf Creek and nuclear weapons. "I think the people of the state of Kansas are ready for another non-accident," said an accident, then people will act." JUAN MAYORAL Enter The Chancellor's Cup Bike Race This spectacular event will take place on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 10:00 a.m. Entry forms are available in 208 Robinson Center. HAIR BENL Recreation Services 864-3546 HAIR BENDERS . . . We'll give you that new look you want Easy care styles for men & women HAIR BENDERS 24th & Iowa Open Tues. Wed, Fri 9-5 Thurs. 10-6 Sat. 9-2 842-9641 1/2 PRICE PLANT SALE 1/2 PRICE PLANT SALE Entire selection of foliage plants 1/2 price. A Greenhouse Bigger Than A Football Field Thousands of plants to choose from, large and small all foliage plants 1/2 price. • Hanging Plants • Floor Plants • All Foliage We also carry an excellent selection of plant supplies • Fertilizer • Macrome • Soil • Baskets • Pottery • Plant Books and More Pence Greenhouse 15th and New York 4 blocks east of Mass. on 15th 843 2004 A Greenhouse Bigger Than A Football Field ATΩ-XΩ DANCE MARATHON SATURDAY, SEPT. 13 THE ENTERTAINER ABOVE MR.BILLS 12 NOON-12 MIDNIGHT 50¢ DRAWS 1.00 DONATION AT THE DOOR SCHOLARSHIP & PRIZES WIN A WEEKEND IN * DALLAS * THE PUBLIC WELCOME TO PARTICIPATE All Proceeds Go To The American Cancer Society BORDER BANDIDO BUY ONE DINNER GET SECOND DINNER FOR 1c SAT. SEPT. 13 ONLY dinners are combinations of enchiladas, tacos tamales, tostadas, frijoles, and Spanish rice dinners 1,2, and 3 . . . . . value $2.49 dinners 4,5, and 6 . . . . . value $3.10 barbeque dinners 7 and 8 . value $3.90 1528 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas KU-Y sponsors programs by documentary film maker Grassroots America and midwifery in today's world are two of the topics that will be presented Monday and Tuesday nights in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union in a program sponsored by KU-Y. Tona Hoffman, a documentary film maker from Berkeley, Calif., will show taped presentations with discussions afterward. Monday night's session is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. and will feature midwifery, a birthing technique still used today. Hoffman will show a documentary on experimental television from the '60s to the '80s at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Hoffman became interested in the practice of midwifery and made a series of videotapes for some of the women had children delivered by a midwife. This presentation will feature events in grassroots America that the major media have failed to cover, she said. The third topic that will be presented is how video tape program-making has developed during the last 20 years, she said. For example, the Black Hills Survival Gathering last July was a gathering of people from 36 countries and 18 American Indian tribes, which met in South Dakota. They were interested in protecting native lands being ruined by uranium and coal mining companies. The program is being sponsored by KU-Y because the issues are important in such things that KU-Y interested in said Pamela Johnston, KU-Y director. K.U. WEEK AT THE OPERA HOUSE ( ) TONIGHT K.U.I.D. Night KELLEY HUNT AND THE KINETICS $1.00 Cover Between 8 & 9 With KUJD 50* Bottles And Cans All Night With KUJD Other ID Specials Throughout The Night 7th Spirit Members $1.50 General Adm. $2.00 TOMORROW NIGHT TOMORROW NIGHT Buck Night THE CLOCKS From Wichita AND 1942. FRED'S WALLET $1.00 Adm. All Night Logg $1.00 For Your First Pitcher Or Drink Coming Events 504 JON PALL 14 LM OUGINEG 14 LM OUGINEG LYNCH AND M=BEE BAND JOHN HARTFORD LUTRA ALLEN GINSBERG ALLEN GINSBERG THE THUMBS Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Jawrence Opera House Dexter Shoemakers to America WEST IS BEST Pure American comfort and style. It's the best of the West from Dexter. Dexter western styled boots made of the most supple leather's to wear as comfortably as your favorite pair of blue jeans. Arensberg's = Shoes Dexter 819 Mass. 843-3470 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Kansas City ends skid; Leonard hurls 4-hitter By United Press International AHAHEM, Calif. "The Kansas City Royals snapped a three-game losing streak last night and beat the California Angels, 7-2, on a four-hitter by Demis Willeli Alkens drilled a two-run-homer to help 1.204 pick up his 18th victory. The Royals reduced their magic number to five with the victory. George Brett missed his fifth straight game because of an injured hand. He Leonard is now 13.2 against the Angels in his career and has won eight of his last nine decisions. He struck out six and walked two. was re-examined yesterday and received a cortisone shot before the game. He may sit out all or part of the weekend series in Oakland, but the major league team with a .396 needs 55 plate appearances to qualify for the batting title. $ 5.00 OFF WITH THIS AD Kansas City scored three runs in the third and ied the game in the sixth on Clint Hurdle's sacrifice fly and an RBI single by Jamie Quirk. MANUFACTURER'S INTRODUCTORY OFFER JACO II FM / AMMI CASSETTE RECORDER STEREO VCR - FULL PUSHBUTTON CONTROLS * FILL PUSHBUTTON CONTROLS * FLAY / REMOTE / RECORD * FLAY / REMOTE / RECORD * 3-WAY LED INDICATOR (* RECORD BAND / NINGHING) * COUNTER * AUTO STOP AND SLEEP CONTROL * EARPHONE * EARPHONE * WEIGHT 3 LBS * WEIGHT 3000 DAYS LABOR / * YEAR PARTS SPECIAL INDUSTRY PRICE — LOWEST IN U.S.A. PAYMENT BY □ GENERIC BID — Please Send Driver ID # Number CUSTOMER ID Number □ MASTERCARD NO. EXP. DATE TOTAL □ VISA NO. EXP. DATE TOTAL AUTHORIZED SIGNATURE: DATE MAIL TO: SOLD TO: NAME: ACTRA, INC. ADDRESS: P.O. BOX 28545 CITY & STATE: ST. LOUIS 63141 5 Kansas City Royals' Magic Number ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358. M Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS -Part Shop 1209 East 123rd 841-2200 iii Fall 1980 Leagues All Leagues Start The week of Monday, Sept. 8 Monday 6:30 Dormitory ... Tuesday 6:30 All Star Scratch P.M. Specials Till 6:00 3 games/person $2.00 Bowling - Billiards Amusement Machines Cold Beer Wednesday 1:00 K.U. Ladies 8:30 Greek Wednesday 1:00 K.U. Ladies 6/15 All Campus Thursday 6:30 Guys & Dolls Friday 4:00 TGIF Sunday 7:00 Faculty Mixed (Alt. Sundays) Hours Wed. & Fri. 8:30-11:00 PM Mon. Tues. Thurs., 8:30-10:00 PM Sat. & Sun. 1:00 PM-11:00 PM BOWLING KUZ Sunny Day Jay Bowl For Reservations/Info. call 864-3545 KANSAS UNION --ne said. "Everything after that is a bonus." take this ad and shove it... Paycheck take this ad and shove it... INTO YOUR POCKET and go to Kief's, the Sanctuary or SUA for your tickets to the Johnny Paycheck show also featuring BILLY SPEARS Oct. 25 • 8 p.m. • HOCH TICKETS $7.50 and $6.50 less student discount JOHN WARD, SANCTUARY PRODUCTIONS AND our Special Events Sydney believes in KU --ne said. "Everything after that is a bonus." By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Some people call it bragging. Others, confidence. Harry Sydney calls it a winning attitude. Sydney, a 6-foot, 215-pound fullback for the Jayhawks, believes that positive thinking is the key to winning. "Our main weakness right now is that we haven't played a game yet," he said. "You've got to win." "If you go into a game thinking, 'We can win', or 'We might win', then you won't,'' Sydney said yesterday. "You have to think, 'We will win.'" Sydney thinks the Jayhawks' ability he predicts KU will finish 3-1 or more. "We'll probably start with running plays we know. We'll see it goes from there." Sydney, who rushed for 414 yards on definite goal in round before every play. "I try to get four yards on each play." Sydney said the fullback position allowed him to use all his skills. In 1978, Sydney was the wishbone quarterback for the Jayhawks and he brought through took over last year, he moved him to the fullback slot that Sydney held as a freshman. "I LIKE RUNNING up the middle better than going outside. When you run up the middle, you're in the way. When you run to the outside, you have to keep to the outside." Sydney described his running style as exciting. "To be a good back up you have to have peripheral vision and instinct," he said. "You have to see and feel people coming at you." Sydney said he relied on instinct when he ran the ball. "I think of myself as a fan-fetter," he said. "Basketball is an individual sport, but it doesn't require that you be a professional." "I lose my anxiety when I run. And it's more than just running." Liberal Religion is Dead! Sunday-Sept. 14 "On Iran" Jack Bremer Sunday-Sept. 21 "Cultureshock" Cindy Bodle Sunday-Sept.28 U. U. General Assembly James Woeltel & Hildred Cyr No Say We! Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Lawrence 10:00 am on Sundays South off Highway 59, Pleasant Valley Road For further information call 842-3339 In the 2nd grade Mrs. Primrose told us to print clearly. will print clearly will print clearly will print clearly will print clearly will print clearly will print clearly will print clearly We do. Expect a loft from your printer? We're at the top of the class in professional service, creative design and up-to-date typesetting techniques. Whether it's a book or a brochure, we deliver a quality piece—printed clearly. When you start looking for the answers to your printing problems, call on us. After all, not all printers can make the grade. mp MAINLINE | PRINTING, INC. 8th & Vermont • 843-1833 better," Sydney said. "I block, run, catch passes. I give 100 percent." SUNYDEY MUST give his all on and off the field. The 21-year-old senior has been the offensive captain for the last two years. "The guys know I'll do anything I can to win," he said. "They know that if they need help, I'll help them out, on and off the field." Sydney's leadership will be important in the Jayhawk's season opener against Oregon in Eugene. "We'll win unless we mess up," he said. "I don't agree with the polls that pick KU to finish seventh in the Big Eight. Kansas tied for fifth in the conference last year, and Sydney said the Hawks would be stronger this fall. "The writers look at Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri, then I think they throw the other teams in a hat and draw the rest of the order." "My coach knew I had signed with KU, so he didn't want to show me the letters," Sydney said. "But I'm glad I'm playing football." "I'm happier playing football. I can express myself more." SYDNEY HAS BEEN a competitor since age 7, when he first began playing football, basketball and baseball. He was a standout basketball player in high school, and, after signing a letter from the University of Fayetteville, N.C., native received letters from several schools showing interest in his basketball prowess. "When people come to see KU football, I don't want them to fall asleep. I might do anything to make it exciting. "I want people to say, 'Hey, these things I didn't think anyone could do.'" Cello V The Arts The University of Kansas Chamber Music Series Presents One of the World's Finest Chamber Ensembles The Guarneri String Quartet Sunday, September l4.1980 8:00 p.m. University Theatre Murphy Hall Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats general admission for reservations call 913/864-3982 1/2 PRICE PLANT SALE Entire selection of foliage plants $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. Thousands of plants to choose from, large and small - Hanging Plants - Floor Plants - All Foliage all foliage plants 1/2 price. We also carry an excellent selection of plant supplies • Fertilizer • Pottery • Macrame • Soil • Baskets • Plant Books and More . . . --- Pence Garden Center West *914 West 23rd * 842 1596 1 t c d 2 b w c r F 1 University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Page 13 S Fantastic Sam's new hours Mon Fri 9-6 Tues Wed Thurs 9-8 Sat 9-5 - adult style $12.00 e Arts - asus style $12.00 * perm $40.00 - color $26.00 Students: take advantage of the - Henna Lucent $20.00 - luminize $20.00 coupon for $2 off any service in the PeopleBook (includes cut) 841-1877 1422W.23rd Lawrence coupon for $2 off any service in the People Book NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY. Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfoils Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More OPEN BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves. & Sun We deliver! BAG SHOP SPOR SDESK 11 AM- 2 AM GREEK FOOD Pizza 401-736-8256 GRANT ST. TO CITY ST. GRANT ST. AT 736-736-8256 Buy 1 Large Pizza, Get Small Pizza LIVE: THE CLEAN BAND 25c Off Cover Charge with this Coupon Saturday, September 13 9:00 PM The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten times times AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 9 p.m. Tuesday Friday 9 p.m. Wednesday Monday 9 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 9 p.m. Friday Wednesday 9 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kavan 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 ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 E'Flint Hall 864-4358 Warl to Isaac Jones about the Bible or feel warm One dollar pitcher—Monday Tuesday and Wednesday at 8 a.m. Green Tower, 810 W. 21st Ave. at 8 a.m. Green Tower, 810 W. 21st Ave. For fall or spring, Nailshim Hall offers you a room of an apartment. Good food and plenty of H. weekly maid service to clean your room, wash your clothes, and much more if you're looking for a home or an apartment first what you want. In the HALL, 160 Nailshim Drive, 843-8559, tru HALL, 160 Nailshim Drive, 843-8559. 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt 3. family room, and large comfortable furniture. Barely priced. Call 844-715-1010. Yee-hah!, Sept. 19-21, 15. Sklar Grade Three. Windchill, N.J., Sept. 18-20, 16. Sklar Grade Four. Windchill, N.J., Sept. 17-20, 14. Sklar Grade Five. Interested in attending a pre-fast dinner with all the witches on Friday, September 19th from 5-7 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center? Call Hillel at 212-386-5040 to make reservation before Wednesday. ENTERTAINMENT 752 schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOAIR of BUS 1098 Mass. iff Looking for something on Sunday? For $492 see our SUNDAY SPECIALS. 4922 Come out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 5 p.m. till 3 a.m. Membership available. "Partying its business" 9-30 Support your local underground garden腐殖 Available now at your favorite breadshop. OFUS presents Barry Berkstunts solo con theatrical elements. Bring oven, brook, bake cup, dip cup. $12 OFUS presents Barry Berkstunts solo con theatrical elements. Bring oven, brook, bake cup, dip cup. $12 **BIRINGH' IT ALL BACK HOME** This week's highlights from our earliest day. Fast photos of the hotel early. Fast photos of the hotel early. Fast photos of the hotel early. Roger Han Hain. Dry Jack and more! Wed, Jan 13, 10:36 p.m. Only on Cable 9-12 10:36 p.m. Only on Cable 9-12 FOR RENT 3. Bedford Townhouse Renting row. 110 You'll like to own a southern Bedford rowhouse with a courtyard and patio. For hire, nix apt for me, next to campus. For hire, may work out pat of room. Call 841-115 3 bdm. towhee with burning fireplace 4 bdm. towhee With take 2 student 2590 5 bdm. 848-783 2590 Perfect for all students! Climb to bus route shuttle, campus and conditioning all appt. thru campus and airport. All appt schedules in our office. Bedroom Capsil Apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. available. Central air, wall to wall carpet. location 2%] blocks south of bedroom A-447-953 and 5:30 a.m. anytime on weekends. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. 50' x 130' 4-bath home, dimmed lighting, living room with balcony, formal office with laminated wood. formallation call 841-485-68 am - 5 pm 9 - 30 Office space at Aire 1 932 Masa. 629 sq. ft. teicection room and 3 inner rooms. Minor kitchen. Room for meals and nibbles. nibbled 829 sq. ft. call 841-214 or 843-0777. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers roommates with study area, 1½ baths, a kitchen, an opener, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455.85 - 5.pm. Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrence, (amylum) 4 bkts, kitchen, dining rm, living rm library, utility rm, and 2 full formal call 812-4455 - a.m. p-9. 30- formal call 812-4455 - a.m. p-9. 30- BRAND NEW FOUR-PLEX! For only $295 per month. You can live close shopping, with free delivery or distance to KU. And you'll be the first to buy this brand new refrigerator, air refrigerator, dispoil 2. Call Dick Edmondson Real Estate at 841-8744 or Rob Edmondson Real Estate at 931-6745. See 9-15 2 bdm. house, clean, quiet, close. 764-5297. Collect. 9-17 Wanted: 1 or 2 Student to assume 9 mo. lease on house. $300/mo. 814-5415. KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished. 2 KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished. Breathtaking building! Call 013-857-103. 10-3 Large 1 bbm. unfurnished apt., water paid, dishwasher, AC stove, refrigerator, east-west sun exposure, on bus route, 841-7473. 0.15 Old West Lawnware 1 bdm. apt., utilities 842-833-6139 deposit. Available implemen- bility. 842-833-6139 P-17 3 bdm, townhouse, on KU bus route, across north side of campus and tennis court $400 month, 811-6553 Roommate wanted for a 3 bdm. house. 8213 + 1' utilities. Call Kilm at 9-17 milwaukee Room close to Union. Utilities费 $90. 6. Call event numbers 749-19-76. Keeps trying 1 birm, for non-smoking and non-drinking 2 marita, for non-smoking. For information Margarita 841-8576. 9-19 Nice 2-bedroom. furnished apt. close to K.U. $250/mi. 841-9247. 9-12 on-moking female roommate to share a bdmr of a large, fully furnished 3 bdmr, Bath at Male Old English Village Apel. Bath at Male New England Village Apel. 4161. Contact Mary Fewerty. 9-18 PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS proof laminated in hard plastic. For proofing, please see the back of stamped envelope to. Dept K, Box 252, Tempe, Arizona 82581. FOR SALE Altramaster, starter and reporter specialists. ALTRAMASTER ELECTRIC, 843-909-3988, SUNIT OMOTIFOE ELLECTRIC, 843-909-3988. CARPET for dorm room. $70, CURTAINS with rods $35, CARGO PARACHUTE. $80. Must sell. 749-1777. 9-16 WATERBED MATTRESSES $26.99, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. Gauge. $150.00 New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding furniture. Lafayette Furniture. 1200 New York Bldg. 844-789-2665. 1977 Datan glugup 4. speed, excellent companion (360 mph), maintenance call 843-767-93 after 5 p.m. 1968 Dodge Darl-T Automatic Transmission, 1968 Dodge Darl-T Automatic Transmission, runs good, good. $9,12 9-12 9-12 Good food—All you can Eat. Country Inn. 1359 N. 3rd, Lawrence, Kansas. (1 block N. of East tampa entrance.) 9-12 1978 Cullas Sup. Salon, 2 Dr. HT, AC, AM-FM-6 ik. Blue with white Interior. 842- 2124. 9-12 WANTED TO BUY -Cameras any year company, Call after 509: 379-0798 or 379-5092, Call after 509: 379-0798 or 379-5092. Ping Pong table. Just like brand new. Comes complete with net and paddles. Call 841-1100. 9-15 2 bdm. bungalow, recent extensive remodel- ment, 843-7964; Massa Real Estate, 9-12 $320.10, Call 843-7963 or George Waters, 843-7964 or even or Kate Stanley, 843-796 Massa Real Estate, Real Estate, 9-12 Massa 843-7964 Snow skis 155 cm. with boots. Must sell. Call 841-7814 or 864-9237. 9-12 38 mug Honda Hawk II 400 cc. street motorcycle, like new cond. Has luggage rack, crash bars, fairing, and comes with helmet. 000 to 300 ml. CALL 814-7621. 9-16 Like new large plush blue dorm carpet. 7410 conditions. Must see. Calls: 9-15. 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Still in warranty. Good condition. Info. 841-9874. 9-15 Small air conditioner, $25 and a 4½ cubic hour electric动机, $125. Call after 6:00- 8:12, 843-4771. free dachshund to loving home. Healthy, hugable gentle. Red two year old doggie. 841-1094, 843-3353. 9-12 Brand new Smith-Corona electric typewriter and a stenographer machine. Call 542-3882. 9-17 '75 Honda ST 90. Good Condition, Great Gas Milage. $300. Call Sarah, 841-2581. 1974 Chevrolet Malibu, PS, PB, AC, AT, year $1600. 743-589 see P. 9-12 5-912 1974 Chevrolet Malibu, PS, PB, AC, AT. Pack. M420, 540-389, after 5. King size Waterbed-heater, liner, liner, flooded frame, 1 yr, old 14-89- after 5 p.m. 9-12 condition $115.95 - 9th Floor; $75.95 - 8th Floor; $100.00 - 11th Floor; $94.93- 103rd Floor. $100.00 - 11th Floor; $94.93- 103rd Floor. MATTRESSHEN, Orthopedic sets from $39. CARVIN, Orthopedic sets from $49. Furniture, one block west of bith and low. Black Vinyl recliner, oversized arm chair, waterproof (no heater), cushion only 9-17 9-18 Unicycle, $50. Free lessons. Call 864-695-9 and ask for Hammer or call 834-185-9, 17-9 Old couch and 2 easy chairs, $10.00; various end tables; tablecloths Posturee postured double-bed rugs; upholstered chair with matching dressers, excellent condition. 864-3284; after 5, 842-1590, ask for Brueck or Carrillo. Musical Instruments: 1939. Gibson L-4 with case $525. 1940. Gibson Upright Con- ductor with case $525. 1940. Gibson Upright Con- ductor with case $525. 1940. Gibson Upright Con- ductor with case $525. Nice solid top student cello good tone cards $35. Nice solid top student cello good tone cards $35. Nice solid top student cello good tone cards $35. Gibson V-1940. only please. Gibson V-743-675-864. Water Beds, hybrid foam - n- water type, Water Basins, hybrid foam - n- water type, Shipping Center, 822-2698, HIll-107 1975 TR7. perfect condition, low mileage, cheap. must sell. 843-9334. 9-17 condition $1600, 749-1291. 9-12 Must sell: 74 Jawelen. Nisect around-PS, 8-12. Want to sell: 15 Jawelen. Low miles. Priced to sell by this weekend. 379-0798 or 379-5033 after 5. 9-12 1978 282@ Dalam 5 speed all Lux. pkg. 1978 282@ Dalam 5 condition. Might be 9-12. Phone: 842-8240. 17 Camara in excellent shape, new paint 18 Camara in excellent shape, very clean, tom After 5. 841-1838 9-15 Head Comp. 1 Tennis racket - 4 / 5 G l/gt. Good condition. excellent condition. $29. 84-1032. 84-1032. 75 Flat KT-10 Convertible for sale, Magg, 30 mm. thick, 30 mg. padded, Price- duced. KT-621-710 84.99 Second annual Alvamar Request Club, held March 19-23 in families, easy access, proceeds benefit Unit City's library programs. 22 inch Schwimn bike with training wheels, excellent fishing gear, T-VAR, skiploats, ski boards, swim trunks, coats, games, 96-inch fluorescent light bulb, most anything. 34 mile west of Kauld at the 108th Street station. Must sell "73 Maiza Wagon—AT A/C, AM $1200, 943-5835, 9a16 1975 Toyota Land Cruiser $2000 or best (beal) eat's. **$2499** 7-9-18 (beal) eat's. **$3499** 7-9-18 GARAGE SALE: KITCHEN items, toaster, MAKER supplies, microwave MISSURE $232, 8.30 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-12 make sense out of Western Civilization! 1. For guide, 2. 2. For class preparation, 3. For enlivening Western Civilization, available now at town Cali Malls Bookstore and Oread Book Store HELP WANTED Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must wear a mask. Average 12% hours per week. Must be eligible for work study. Contact Bernie Berry 84-5732 or Hodges Berry 84-5732 Needed Immediately—School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student in education or a disability. Live in 9351, 8457, 8241, all Dana Wray Hospital. 9351, 8457, 8241, 1011-817. 9-17 Alkio Klidace Signed wanted. Brown belt . 9-12 higher. 841-0892 or 843-4325. PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS. To meet personal needs of handicapped individuals, caregivers must include assisting with dressing, toileting, bathing, transfers to and from wheel chairs, light cleaning and or errands. Independence Kentucky, 641-0333. A 9-12 Employer. BabySaiting for our 4-mon. old in our home, Mon. thru Fr. 8:45 a.m. 14:25 p.m. 10/10 month. Must have own transport to home. Must devote this time to 9-12 841-7433. Applications being taken for kitchen workers, bus people, diwashers. Apply in per-merchant restaurant. 1850 A D Lawrence, Kansas. (i) Block N. 4 of turtle ramp entrance.) 9-12 COUNSELOR. The University of Kansas, seeks an individual to provide academic, professional and clinical experience required by staged student. Bachelor degree and relevant experience required. Application deadline September 19, 1980. Interested applicants must have a Bachelor's degree in Educational Services, Military Science And Engineering or Kansas University. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. **9-19** GRADUATE ASSISTANT ASSISTANT EX- KRAUSE of Kansas, Lawrence. Assist with special ordinate activities of several committees. Perform ordinate activities of several committees. Month. Position available immediately to the position. Application deadline bility of renewal. Application deadline description contact Office of the Executive Chairman by telephone: 60643, 913-844-6848, morning action, equal opportunity employe Research Asst. Wanted. Three-Quarter time experience in active research environment; research and typing ability; and typing ability. Elementary bookkeeping and chemistry or a related science are desirable pending on qualifications. Apply by 5 p.m., Monday, May 19, 2010, Malot Hall. Phone 864-4673. Affirmative Action-Equal Opportunity B-17 Balesperson (male or female) needed at parental service. Bachelor's degree at parental service. Diploma in Mortar & laboratory services. WANTED: Intramural Football officers Apply in 208 Robinson. 864-354-19. f-15 PROJECT COORDINATOR: The University Services is seeking an individual to coordi- nate staff, manage recruitment, evaluation and staff com- municating, recruitment, evaluation and staff work, experience requirements and state req uirements. Please contact Jennifer Johnson, September 16, 1880. Involved applicants must be tenured or in the position of a pro fessional educational Services, Military Service, Kauai Building, Kauai University of Kauai, Kaulani College of Education in equal opportunity z/zimrbrb. Wanted—Automotive with artistic ability and automotive knowledge to do cut-and-draw training of 29 Ford Roadster Street Rod. Wage $150-$240 per hour or 379-80337, Te康春, K. 9-12 Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Indicate blue backpack taken from trowr at 1330 Offered with black notebook 867-321 or 84-94 No questions asked LOST 1 pair of rim-less style glasses in brown striped. Strong. Call 843-2644. Thanks. 9-18 I lost a brown billfold Friday (10/5) Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Pond Please contact Jack at 841-535-9567 Blue nylon bag with economies book on 23rd Street REWARD Phone 842-4719 9. 10% Leather 1-pocket case, known with MISCELLANEOUS Yee-hah! September 19-21 is Blue Grass Time again. Camp out with SUA at the Annual Windfield Blue Grass Pump Tickets are limited so sign up with SUA today. XENOPHOBIA Lawrence's first anime magazine on sale on now at White Lights 100% Ask any complainant about the new food for 19th and 20th century block North of 46th Avenue in MOSSINGH. Attention all interested caretakers enthusiasts. Attend a weekend getaway this fall. Attend a career weekend in a national meeting on Wed Sept. 17th at 7:00 in the International Room at the Student Building. NOTICE NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MORRINGER. Morrison night your membership card gets. You can all night long. Only at your place. THE LOISE WHERE "Parking is" the LOISE. 9-30 p.m. DRINKING AND DRUNKING every Monday night DRINKING AND DRUNKING every Monday night McDonalds on 6/12 give $-girls- McDonalds on 6/12 give $-girls- McDonalds on 6/12 give $-girls- THE CLUB HOUSE TGIF TONIGHT 3 for 1 Highballs 508 Locust 842-8429 SOLAR ENERGY International Club will host the first meeting Saturday, 30 am, in the Public Meeting Room of The University to participate with the Kansas Solar Energy Institute at 645 New Hampshire. There will be speakers and informational discussion highlighted. Please join us at either meeting location. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-9821. 9:30 CONGRATULATIONS on your engagement Karen and Stu. Gook Lucki1 Love Steph. Sunday dinner at the Crossing. It's the new fad, by the wave. 9-12 LOUISEN从6-7 WEST HAPPY HOUR. Every day from 6-8. Enjoy 90 schotters. See draws and $15 pitcher. 7th and Mish. "Partying is our business." If PERSONAL FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control Counseling 5 hours a day. BSA 2 hours a day. 623-810-4401 W. 10th St, Overland Park, Kansas. fax LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are provided and there is no cover change. Only at the Club Lounge, 508 Locust, 812-942-9300, 9-30 HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. Every-day 7-10 p.m. enjoy $100 hightails (75 €) and the bigggammon at the atmosphere of The Club LOUSE. Occup. 882-942. "Farting is our business." LOUISE'S Friday Afternoon Special $1.25 pitcherware $64 achooerers 1009 Mass SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOUISE. 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. tf If you undecided about a career, but you're not sure where to begin in sales and sales management with a large eastern based company, our part-time program offers flexible training and informal call Terry. Westband, B4-6141. Equal Opportunity Employer M/F In keeping with her tradition of biting you more good times for less cash, Louise Drowned at the CLUB LOUESE. All the house guest highlights you can drive-guys love are in this club or a club THE CLUB LOUESE. 508 Locust, our house guests available. "Paris is our busiest." I had Start Needs You to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher aides for one day each week. Locat d close to campus. Call 842-715-215. The Moffett Beer Band is now holding quilters only. Call 841-506-906, 843-934-934, 845-726-726. **TOG AT LOUSES BUSE** with $12.5 pitch Friday from 2 ttl 6 Be there - Alahal! *If looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singlagram, 841-650-769 **TENNIS PLAYERS:** There's still a lot of opportunities for players will last it out. Call David at 841-8054 for great prices on good strings and strings for the Tennis Instruction Stingers and K. U. Vertz. Preview sessions: **9-18 Singing messages for all occasions.** Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Singing messages for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. tf FRESHMAN LADIES! Are you alone and missing your friends? Find Sid at the Main Union - 8 p.m. See us! www.freshmanladies.org I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal labotomy. Greens Tavern. 810 W. 23rd. 9-12 The Mofelt Beers Band has an immediate opening for road crew assistant. Call 864-2933 or 845-5068 or 843-9334. 9-17 Skydive. Look before you leap. Learn about an alternative in first jump instructions and practice proper safety record, 7 year history. Contact SKydive records. 144 NW Street Tuxedo Ks. 65617-98-10-96 Experienced skydivers enrolled in 12 hours and interested forming teams in 8 hours. Experience required. I E dive center contact Rick (913) 283-0255, N4 W-nW 81st St. Toppea, Ks. 6617-6154 Will buy baseball cards, 1979 and earlier. For more information call 843-0530. Ask for Randy. 9-12 ATTENTION: Established brass band is more serious. Serious instruments only. Call 841-265-3000. John, Tom, Bill or. . . Susan wants to buy you Sunday dinner! Come to the Hawk's Crossing. 9-12 It's Friday and TOIF is wild at the HARBOR LITES. All pitcheres only $1.50 at Harbor Lites. And we receive a Harbor Lites "T"-Shirt or hat and receive 1.00 pitchers. And remember, THE game days for Memorial Stadium, it's a trip! THE HARBOR LITES, 1031 Massa. trip! THE HARBOR LITES. 1031 Massa- chusetts, a first-class div. 9-12 Sam's Fine Dining is the best. Excellent service. A satisfied customer. 9-12 Free Kittens, Guaranteed cute, cuddly and adorable. Call 842.1588 9-16 ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED CAREER WEEKEND TRANSFER, take this Fall Attend a career job organization meeting on Monday at the Student Union. See you there! SERVICES OFFERED Job resumes prepared by a personal pro- fessor and then submitted to the counsel interviews. 814-564-7664. 9-12 Intendant color passport photos. Immigration. Credit: N.J. Bureau of Immigration. color & B W. Tom 814-729-960 9-16 THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional garage. Located in a quietly pared garden. Garage specials—Tumeloise prized by homeowners. Call 841-294-7300. TAN L. offers facilities for TAN students. The only European tuning salon in Lawrence, guaranteed no ban, but requires an appointment. Monday thru Saturday, 8:30am to 6pm. Kegs and Case Beer. Long neck Buch Botl- =85c deposit. Greens Tavern. 810 W. 23rd. 9-12 For the finest complete service on most imports—STRAICTR AUTOW SERVICE. Oversee 25 years experience specializing in Daxon, Honda, Toyota. 843-242-442. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-10:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2 ½ HOURS EACH HOUSE OF USHER BEN MICHAELS & BRENT SMITH AT 454-732-6800 Banje and guitar lessons with Chris Bigs. 3rd place winner Natl' Flatpicting Championship in 1978 and 1979 Call 841-0817. 9.12 Preparation in Northern Shaolin Kung-Fu. Monkey, Preying Mani. 841-754. 9-12 Patient tutor available for Germ. 104, West Civil, and Eng. 103, 841-908. ak for Judy. LEARN TENNIIS this fall in fun classes at the University of Maryland. The semester closes Monday evening. Sept. 15. Classes may be taken online, on campus or at a location. VOULEZ-VOUS PARLER FRANCEI 'CRAINAS19' he writes in hardcover about French and France (Grammar culture, or why not cooking!) tutor or small group. Call 842-642-6439; dinner RESUMES PREPARED TO help your budget be written and typed. Used: 2978 eveens 9-16 Flut's lessons -Experienced teacher accents Call Diane at 814-402-9875 (evenings) Call Diane at 814-402-9875 (evenings) TYPING Have you had trouble losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you have to ask your doctor. Job You can change this and hypnosis can help. Call 843-195 for more information. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476 ff **ENSTEIN'S TUTORS.** For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call DARL 841-7083. English, grammar, computer research, typing, calling Randy 841-7040. Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 841-6879 after 5 and weeks, iftf Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mice, electric IBM Selectric. Prolificion, spelling corrected 843-9554. Mrs. Wright, if Experienced K. u.t. typ., IBM Correcting Selectie. Quality work, References available Sandy, evening and weekends. 748-9818. tf Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectic Call Ellen or Jeannain. 841-2172. 12-8 Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-7244. ttf Typet Editor, IBM Pizza Elite, Quality Editor, IBM Pizza Elite, editing, editing, welcome Call, John 84. If you need more help, contact: Jason Snyder 84-691-3702 412-2001 ENCORE COPY CORPS 114.796.8523 114.796.8523 Experienced typetrud—thesis, dissertations, books and journals. Select select bibli- Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-2310. Friday IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate typewriter with 842-2250 phone numbers and 100 edits per minute. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. ff Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-3203. Thess, Dissertations, etc. IBM Selectric or enter on computer via your account. 9-12 8-12 WANTED GOLD- SILVER - DIAMOND. Clam rings. Buying gold. Paying $50-$140 for men's watches. Buying $25-$35 for women's 1210 W. 25th, Holdish Place, Plaza 8426-96-38. Women's watch. Professional couple w/4 children seek non- care for infancy. We provide care for infant and 3-yr-old in our home or 3 mornings a week or T & Th after. We teach at Bayside School by 8t at 3114 for interview appt. Female roommate to nice 2 bdm. apt. $171.50 plus 1½ units. Utilized except for 1 bdm. Call Sara at 749-9496. 9-12 RIDERS: Depart wichita M.A. day, des- partment Monday-Wednesday. 316-943-6386 or 316-685-5883. 9-15 Roommate for 2 bdm. apartment Jackwawk West Roommate for 2 bdmr. apt. Jayhawk West. $120 + 1'_2 utilities. Call Bret. 749-3586. 9-12 Nonsmoking roommate for apt. near campus. All other vices or habits acceptable. Jeanie, 841-6838 or 864-3425. 9-12 2 nices, nonnousing, roommatics. 3 bdm: $1500-$1800 for $1750 or call 749-1017 or $1250 for $1250. Site: Gaithersburg, MD. ROOMMATE WANTED. Responsible K.U. BROTHERS. Please contact majors physicians major to share 2 bdm¹; 1½ bath fully furnished apt. located at 1012 Memory road. +/- 3 utilities. Call 841-567-8911 evenings. 9-12 Female roommate for mice apt. close to Pool, AC, utilities 79-125 743-748-299 The University of Kansas, McColum Laboratories, is an open, permanent full-time laboratory. Laboratory equipment Repair consists of eight high grade, must consist of at least one year of experience or a comparison of the same period of experience or a comparison (other than correspondence study), in the case of laboratory equipment; or a combination Roommate: Beautiful home loft home Roommate: Beautiful home loft home Roommate: $110/mo. plus 1/6 of utilities. Call 855-723-4567 Roommate to share 2 bdmr. apt. $10/mo. plus half utilities. Call At al 89-1621. 9-16 Roommate for spacious new 2 bdmr. apt. rent + 5 utilities. Contact Julie. 9-17 A SERIOUS IOB interested in playing in a maximum R&B group (Rock and Roll) in a band with well and able to bend, snash and observe physically abusive call. Call 842-1560. 9-15 Quillet, non-smoking grad, student or upper-grad man with woven headband. In-Room Village Fpt. bath & room, $125 per mon. + ½ util. Call 814-7534-1754. Sun. Or. For Sun. Information 9-12 Roommate at the Jayhawk Towers 8603 Anytime. All utilities paid. Call 919 3051 Anytime. Sports Page 14 University Daily Kansan, September 12, 1980 Ducks are sinners. but still picked as winners By GENE MYERS Sports Editor Sinners are often winners in football, and the sim-ridden Oregon Ducks are a touchdown The Jayhawks open the season at 3:30 p.m. Saturday in Eugene, Ore., against one of the most penalized teams in years and one of the naughty five of the Pac-10. But despite indictments, suspensions, death threats and probation, the Ducks have a decided advantage because they already have blaved a game this season. "We can correct our mistakes," duck Coach Rich Brooks said. "Kansas doesn't know what its fault is." THE DUCKS DROPPED their opener last Saturday 35-25 to No. 14 Stanford. The biggest Oregon mistakes were on defense. On offense, even without suspended quarterback Reggie Oxburn, the Ducks were dynamic. The Jayhawks' biggest concern is an inexperienced, young defense, especially on the line. Since last year's 3-4 season, Head Coach Duncan has decided to chance to express his concern for the defense. But the defense isn’t the only question mark as the 1890 season opens. The Jayhawks also have - Steve Smith, junior quarterback from Emporia, is starting his second game ever. The first was three years ago when KU still used the wishbone. - The two kickers, Bucky Scriner and Bruce Kallmeier, never have kicked in a major college game. Mike Hubach, who's now in the pros, punted and place-kicked the last three years. Scriner, a redshirt sophomore, inherits the place-kicking Kallmeier, a freshman, gets the place-kicking. - KU has an unimpressive record in opening games in the last half of the 1970s. Since 1975, KU is 1-4. The last victory was over Oregon State, 28-16, in 1976. - KU also has an equally unimpressive record for the last three seasons. The Jayhawks are 7-25-1 since 1977 and 9-29-1 since Nolan Cromwell was hurt midway through the 1976 season. EVER WITH THESE major concerns, even if they says that the Kansas state is ready for the season. If *practice means anything*, we should be a lot further along than last year's team," he said. "We're working hard." The Jayhawks have a sense of confidence and purpose this season. The players have decided that it is time to erase the losing seasons of their former teammates. on we defense are going to show them what it is like to play Big Eight offense, "Frank Wattelet, defensive captain, shouted last night to a small crowd at a rally near the Satellite Union. "We're going to kick them Ducks right in their butts." Farnbough, speaking from the balcony of the union, said, "We haven't given you too much to cheer about the last few years, but let me tell you we're going to have some fun starting this Saturday." OTHER PLAYERS have the same optimism, but you show KU sixth, seventh or eighth the conferen- tion or eighth the conference. "This year's team is easily the best since I've been here," David Verman, All-America flanker candidate, said. "What's a stronger and a lot more aggressive than we could play the first game than we've been before." "From what I saw on the films, I'm sure we can beat Oregon." "we'll show them," defensive tackle Jeff Fox is a lot better, and people are giving us credit. "We're not going to talk about it. We're going to soo and prove it." EVEN TROUGH THE season has yet to start, the Jayhawks have received a quasi-vote of confidence. In the Bottom Ten, a weekly syndicated column that picks the pitts of football, Kansas was ranked 14th, tied with cross-state rival Kansas State. Both Kansas teams ducked the second week's poll and Oregon became No. 15. Last year, the Jayhawks started the season as No. 6. Oregon made the charts despite its close game with Stanford. The Ducks lost their top two cornerbacks in that game, but the starting quarterback will be back. The quarterback, Ogburn, returns after spending one game in the NCAA penalty box for using money from a secret fund for airline tickets. Ogburn, a senior, is credited with leading the Ducks to a 6-4 record last year, the first winning season in a decade. Kansan Predictions
ArnoldBertelsLewisMyersSeeley
Kansas at OregonOregon 21-17Oregon 24-17Oregon 27-21Oregon 16-10Kansas 17-16
Kansas State at LSULSU 24-3LSU 20-14LSU 24-7LSU 34-0LSU 23-20
Kentucky at OklahomaOklahoma 37-21Oklahoma 28-7Oklahoma 22-10Oklahoma 41-6Oklahoma 44-12
W. Texas State at Oklahoma StateOklahoma State 21-17Oklahoma State 30-7Oklahoma State 18-6Oklahoma State 24-17W. Texas St. 19-7
N.E. Louisiana at Iowa StateIowa State 14-3Iowa State 24-10Iowa State 20-6Iowa State 20-13Iowa State 9-3
New Mexico at MissouriMissouri 30-14Missouri 28-7Missouri 35-7Missouri 27-10Missouri 28-10
Utah at NebraskaNebraska 34-27Nebraska 30-10Nebraska 45-3Nebraska 52-10Nebraska 56-3
Colorado at UCLAUCLA 37-14UCLA 21-14UCLA 31-10Colorado 20-17UCLA 36-9
USC at TennesseeUSC 42-17USC 21-17USC 21-17USC 16-10USC 18-14
Syracuse at Ohio StateOhio State 37-21Ohio State 35-14Ohio State 35-14Ohio State 30-13Ohio State 27-13
The predictors are Patti Arnold, Kansas associate sports editor; Kevin Bertels, sports writer; David Lewis, editorial editor; Gene Myers, sports editor; and Matt Seeley, sports writer. Scouting Report QUARTERBACK--Starting for KU will be Steve Smith, Smith, Smith. Smith is expected to start in the second seven passes in the last two years. His backup is Frank Pawn. FULLBACK-Harry Sydney, offensive captain, led KU in lukin last season with 541 yards. K库emp, also a senior, is TAILACK™ Waltacker马克,a junior from San Francisco, will get his first season with 286 yards. Highly fouled fresh recruit in the second season with 326 yards. Highly fouled fresh recruit in the second season with 326 yards. RECEIVES BY the fanker position is AM-America candidate RECEIVES OF the team in the season will be joined by split end Lester Mackenzie and Tigm end Rachel Foster. FRONTLINE-LUK will start four seniors in the five slots. At right tackles is Jake Sutcliffe, the game's抢点球员. On left tackles are Fred O'Brien, former first baseman and guard. At center is Bub Fois, a walk on four years ago. Steve Lawrence is the starting left wing and junior David Lawrence will be the start left wing. DEFENSES BACK -Senior comprise the starting defensive defense, with Jason Terry as center and Captain Frank Wheatle start at strong safety or "hawk" position. The cornerbacks are Dave Harken, who sat out last year with an ankle injury, and Delvin Miller, a starter for the past two years. LINEBACKERS—With senior Scarlet Young with an ankle brace, they will join the linebackers last season, and another junior, Chris Rush for the second. DEFENSIVE FRONT - Senior Stan Gardende, the leading tacker among linemen last year, and Jef Fox, a 63, 240 pound tackle, spearhead the front line. At right tackle is Greg Smith, left last season. With Lawrence product George Galman at end season. OREGON QUARTERBACK--After a one-week suspension, Reggie Cottle, 49, of Terrebonne, La., was given a total of 124 yards, including two touchdowns and one interception. FULLBACK-Vince Williams, 6-1 senior, will get the start. In three seasons, he has rushed for more than 1,300 yards. TALKBACK-Réggie Browne, who rushed for more than 100 yards last week in Oregon to loss to Stanford, replaces Deight Robert- OFFENSIVE LINE—The Ducks start three juniors, a senior and an assistant. The team takes on Gartner and Garrett Earl and the guard side filled by Stuart Huntley. RIDEVIEWS~Senior Curt Jackson will start at flanker Jackson Tipher, a sophomore who is known for his strong blocking ability. DEFINEPVS BACKS=At free safety will Jill Willuffa, a 6-4 Winner. At free safety will Bill Brady, a 5-3. The currumbies are Steve Brown and freddie Danny McMahon. LINEBACKER2 - Chris Congress-Baer 4-8 junior, who led the team in wins and saves over two outside linebackers are an Junior Vibora and senior Bryan DEFINIVE FRONT=An experienced front fear. The Dockers were bound for the sea by a man-made bridge and booklet屠关。At the two end manely baited canoes crossed the sea. KANSAS SCHEDULE Sept. 12—at Oregon Sept. 17—at Washington Sept. 24—at Nebraska Sept. 31—at Louisiana Sept. 37—at Oklahoma State KANSAS OFFENSE OBERON DEFENSE JAMES Dawkins TEJU Willett Dickens TEJU Willett Dickens LT 70 Steve Oliver LT 70 Steve Oliver LC 58 Laura Lawrence LC 58 Laura Lawrence C 48 Bob Lowe C 48 Bob Lowe RG 69 Fred Osborn FL 89 David Verser FL 89 David Verser IB 12 Steve Smith TB 34 Walter Mack TB 34 Walter Mack OREGON DEFENSE LB 73 Lewis Luttrell LB 73 Lewis Luttrell RL 51 Lorraine Bard RL 51 Lorraine Bard AJ And verbs MLB 58 Charlie Congrove BL 88 James McCormack CB 27邓宁 McCallister CB 27邓宁 McCallister SC 40 Joe Jouwman SB 40 Joe Jouwman CS 40 Joe Jouwman CB 28 Steve Brown KANSAS DEFENSE OREGON OFFENSE LAFT 48 Jeff Fox RT 70 Rick Garrard LT 58 Joe Folembe RT 70 Garrett Arlee NG 65 Stan Gardner LG 55 Stuart Yatako NC 65 Bill Kramer L RG 58 Jenkins HILTON 81 Hiltown Dawson LG 68 Jaime Matthews LCB 64 Chris Toburen QT 67 Rich Price LBC 34 Kevin Muller QB 17 Ingle Ogubgm LCB 34 Delvin Miller QB 17 Ingle Ogubgm SS 40 Frank Wattlette BR 48 Reggie Brown SC 54 Brady McKean FT 48 Reggie Brown RCB 43 Dave Huntel FL 37 Curt Jackson BIG EIGHT SCHEDULE Saturday's Games Northern Louisiana at Iowa State Kansas State at Louisiana State Oklahoma State Colorado at UCLA Kansas at Oregon New Mexico at Missouri Kentucky at Oklahoma Kentucky at Oklahoma Memberships available 530 Memberships available Wisconsin T.G.I.F. at the Clubhouse Beginning at 3:00 pm all single shot drinks only 50¢. Each hour the price goes up only 10¢, until 10:00PM when all drinks return to their normal prices Happy Hours 4-8 Mon-Thurs 2 for 1 THE BOBBY BELL'S BAR-B-QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING *2.49*. AND FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED MARBLE QUIE BEEF AND GRATUIT PILED WITH SOFT CHILDS IN A SPICY BLEND. Presents SVA FILMS ...makes no difference who you are,you'll love Walt Disney's Pinocchio ...makes no difference who you are, you'll love Walt Disney's Pinocchio TECHNICOLOR® Sept. 17th 1980 2214 YALE ST. CITY COUNTY 842-6121 VALUABLE COUPON Woodruff Auditorium-No Refreshments Allowed TECHNICOL * Re released by BUREA VISTA DISTRIBUTION. INC. **G** H Sunday, Sept 14 — 2:00 p.m. $1.50 Spirit Squad and Mike Person AUDITIONS Informational Meeting Monday, Sept. 15, 5 p.m. Allen Field House Clinics Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Sept. 15,16,17,5 p.m. Tryouts Thursday, Sept. 18 All requirements for the spirit squad, mike person will be explained at the meeting September 15. No previous experience necessary. Minorities encouraged to participate. Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads. Call 864-4358. All You Can Eat Pancakes $1.79! Served With 2 Link Sausages 4:00 p.m. to Close Wednesday & Sunday 821 Iowa Lawrence Village Inn PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT 9th National Guitar Flat-Picking Championship & Arts & Crafts Festival WINFIELD FAIRGROUNDS WINFIELD, KANSAS TOMMY HOWARD September 18,19,20,21,1980 "The national convention for acoustic string musicians" 7 Contests $18,000 Cash Przes, Trophies & Instruments 14 workshops PROFESSIONAL SOUND BY SUPERIOR SOUND Wirthka Kannas Ticket Information: At Gate: Weekend $22 (Fri; 8; Sat; 9; Sun); (admission to Thursday evening free to those) Advance: Weekend 517 (Fri-77; Sat-84; Sun-77) All Cases: Weekend 229 (admission to Thursday evening free to those purchasing a Friday or weekend ticket) Children under age 12 free with adult In Operation Grounds Rough Canyons free with admission No Animals, No Beer or Drinks and No Motorcycles (due to noise) Children under age 12 tree with adult No mail orders after September 10th Uni Law Featuring in Person: Folk Arts & Crafts Fair - Cathy Barton - Front Porch String Band - Doc and Merie Watson (Friday only) - Norman and Nancy Blake - Bryan Bowers - Dan Crazy - Hot Rize - George Gritzbach - Margo - Profit Porch String Bant - The Dulcimer Alliance - Wrystraw * Art Themes * The Boys In The Band * Claudia Schmidt * Bones Love Revival Innis & Lilah Gillett potten - The Mid-Missouri Heltband Polic Kasostory Ji - Kevin Roth - David Amram B For more information and advance ticket write: By P. Staff walnut valley 127 E. 9th St - Bost 260 H Wintfield, Kansas 6716 Phone 318-221-3280 association, inc. THE BEST MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT VALUE IN THE MID WEST --- The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Monday, September 15, 1980 Vol. 91, No.16 USPS 650-640 31 544 CHRISTODD/Kansan staff Pounce and rescue workers administer first aid to Kevin Malott, one of two Lawrence men injured last night in a one-car accident at the 1100 block of Kasold. Malott, Route 4, and the driver, Steve Taylor, 2611 Arkansas St., were listed in stable condition last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. See story page 3. Julian Bond to speak at homecoming By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Rewr Staff Reporter State senator Julian Bond of Georgia has been selected as the 1980 homecoming speaker by the SUa Forums committee. He will speak on "Next" at 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 17 in Auditorium. Bond was chosen because "he is somebody that appeals to a diverse group and a lot of different kinds of people will be interested in it." He said he would speak at SILeaghard, SIA Forma chairman, said Friday. Once a supporter of Sen. Edward Kennedy's presidential campaign, Bond announced his support for the re-election of President Carter in 1980. He also supported the Democratic National Convention in August. IN A 1976 SUA lecture, Bond said he would vote for Carter because Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz. PARKER was not a candidate and because former President Gerald R. Ford had a history of tight control. Bond said in a speech Wednesday at Kansas State University, "Now there is no one more qualified than he running for the President of the United States." Julian Bond He also said that if Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan was elected it would be a major win. He said he had trouble pinpointing independent candidate John Anderson's stand on the issues because of Anderson's "stereotypical conservative" background. Bond also said that if blacks wanted their needs to continue to be met, they should vote for him. Bond estimated that Carter would get 90 percent of the black vote, but the remaining See BOND page 3 Hostage debate to start Iranian Parliament By United Press International After receiving a letter from a group of U.S. congressmen yesterday, the speaker of U.S. parliament said the Parliament would start working on a decision "on the fate of the American hostages. It was the 316th day of captivity for the 52 hostages. "It is now America's turn, if it has good will as regards the hostages, to prove its sincerity through action," Rafsajman sai after meeting Mr. Aifares in Tehran, who delivered the letter. "A decision was made in the Majlis today regarding a reply to the letter by the U.S. Congress, and substantial discussion on the hostages will begin on Tuesday and the Majlis will begin on Wednesday." Ayatullah Hassan Rafsami said in a Tehran radio broadcast monitored in London. "Since the U.S. Congress letter was read out in the Majlis and was also covered by the press, we expect the U.S. government to publish the text of the Majlis letter of reply for the American public. If it fails to do this it will have shown its lack of goodwill, and this will have an adverse effect on our talks." Rafsantani said. ...ormen, or the second time, asked the foreign affairs committee to "take into account suggestions by Majlis deputies" and draft a reply to an earlier letter from the same group of U.S. congressmen that was sent in July as an offer to the release of the hostages, Tehran Radio省。 THE MAJLIS' open debate recommendation comes two days after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khominei said the hostages could be released if the deposed shah's wealth was returned, U.S. claims against Iran were canceled, Washington guaranteed no U.S. intervention in Iran and if frozen Iranian funds in the United States were released. Meanwhile the border war with Iraq spread to See IRAN page 5 ASK. Carlin to discuss issues By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Gov. John Carlin's aides have invited the Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobbying group, to talk to the governor this month about its priority issues and concerns. Other issues that Bingaman asked ASK wanted to discuss with Carlin were its support of student Bob Bingaman, ASK executive director, announced the Sept. 24 meeting at the ASK executive board meeting and retreat in Topeka this weekend. AMONG THE NINE ITEMS ASK has chosen as 1981 priority issues from the Board of Regents budget are an 8.1 percent increase in student salaries, 100 percent fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants, 100 percent funding of student union rentals, 100 percent funding of student use, funding of student financial aid offices and expansion of the state scholarship program. Other issues include funding for Kansas State University's community-based education program "University for Man," funding for building handicapped facilities, a 12 percent faculty salary and benefit increase and a 12 percent Regents staff salaries and benefit in- representation on the Board of Regents, passage of the andorde-terman help oil bill and keeping ACCORDING TO BINGAMAN, the request is significant for two reasons. The ASK board also discussed a request from the Kansas American College Testing Program to provide the results. "One, it proves that we (ASK) are a viable organization and a recognized student voice in the profession." Second, Bingaman said, is a national piece of legislation called Truth-In-Testing that could directly affect both ACT and college students. It is an issue that ASK has been interested in. The Truth-in-Testing bill, if enacted, would open research and statistical studies on the test questions by the testing agencies to the public. The study could be based on a certain information about their tests and scores. THE FINAL MEMBERSHIP decision will be made by the national ACT council in the spring. If membership is granted, an amendment will have to be made to ACT's bylaws. ACT regional coordinator in See ASK page 5 Black awareness symposium stresses student involvement Staff Reporter By KATHY BRUSSELL The tempo was upbeat, the atmosphere positive. The message: black students at the University of Kansas have a job to do; if they believe in themselves and work to improve themselves, no one can keep them from succeeding. The forum was the Black Awareness Seminar/Symposium held Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union. Using the theme "Now's the time... Let's Get Serious," the seminar brought together black students, alumni and faculty who shared ideas about how to increase involvement of blocks in KU programs and in society. you think you've got it made because you can come to KU and live in any dorm you want; you can pick your roommate or apartment house; you can walk into any restaurant, through the lobby, to a coffee shop or go into Strong Hall and sit in the front row of a lecture class," Franklin told the audience. E. BERNARD FRANKLIN, chairman of the Board of Regents, addressed the seminar Friday night. He emphasized the danger that exists when black students assume they "have arrived" in the world, or achieve the goal get good grades. KU. He urged the students to be competitive, to work toward a complete education and to get involved in college activities. But blacks still have a long way to go toward achieving true equality, he said. Basic human rights were acquired by blacks not so long ago, and they can be taken away if not protected, he More than anything, black citizens need good educations to secure jobs and increase their political power, Franklin said. 14. 1 A RECENT study by the U.S. Department of Education showed that 42 percent of black 7-year-olds were unable to read, write or spell. Another study beyond the first or second-grade level, he said. "This is not progress in any sense of the word." Franklin said. Despite the statistics, however, some administrators think American universities already are doing too much for minorities, such as providing special tutors in math and English, he said. Those people would like to cut finding for such programs. To prevent cutbacks, black students must speak up for their rights and justify the existence of cuts. "Wake up! KU's not heaven," he said. "This is a predominantly white campus, and you shouldn't take that lightly. Your first goal should be arm, to better yourself and not to socialize." THE PROBLEMS facing black students on a predominantly white campus were also the focus of the seminar's second speech, given Saturday by Gilbert Parks, a Topeka psychiatrist. Moreover, every black student must decide for himself his true purpose for being in college, he --promoter Chris Fritz knew a good thing when he saw it. This thing could be bigger than a wet T-shirt contest, more intense than pnock fluces, more satisfying than a good "I don't recognize such a creature as a minority," Parks said. "The whole concept of minority is someone else's definition of you. If See SEMUNA8 page 5." sweatshirt Blacks have come to think of themselves as a minority, because they have been denied basic rights by other whites. CLOUDY Weather See SEMINAR page 5 It should be partly cloudy and warmer this afternoon with a high in the mid 80s and a 20 percent chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph. 15 should be partly cloudy tonight with a low near 70. The high tomorrow will be near 90. Mud wrestling is the latest craze from the West Coast. At Benjamin Stables in Kansas City, Mo., spectators were paying $5 last week to see womens wrestle. Fans wallow in mud wrestling craze RV MARK PITTMAN Staff Writer MY GOD! What am I doing here? These people are animals. They clutched at my clothes as I entered the gates. Their tongues lolled, drolled, droolled. Flecks of beer foam at the edges of their mouths and oil-spilled the construction hats perched sideways on their beards. They pleaded. They begged. They mowed. Prostrate at my feet, they asked for admittance. The cop at the gate began to look at me. "Where are you?" The king of Heaven, I had a press pass. The place had a capacity of 5,000, and thousands more milled outside. "What are you doing?" I demanded. SCALPERS AT THE gate were asking twice the $5 admission charge. He coughed and sputtered. "I drove 40 miles to see the mud wrestling." I turned and stalked off, disgusted. This was it. The Midwest's first taste of the rage on the West Coast: mud wrestling. I snatched my jacket from the grasp of a wild-eyed lunatic in a Harley-Davidson T-shirt, threw a haymaker that missed and looked him straight in the eye. The premise is simple: take two scantily clad women and drop them into a 20 by 20 pit of grime. Oh yeah, and count the receipts when it's over. The crowd ostensibly had gathered at Benjamin Stables in Kansas City, Mo., to witness a tractor-pull competition. While the trucks swam in the mud, the crowd waited for "It was disgusting, degrading—a sorry spectacle of what America has come to," said one bystander. "And it was worth 10 times the price of admission." the real drawing card. The rodeo arena burned with anticipation. A man lost his footing on the cooler he was standing on and sent himself and four others caterwailing into a makeshift fence stretched between the crowd and the building where the "wrestlers" were being interred, for their own protection, under tight security. I sidedestead the guys picking themselves out of the fence and stood in the beer line next to a guy who was intent on baptizing all recent converts with Budweiser. My glare brought a host of reinforcements, and I pulled out my notebook and went off in search of Chris Fritz. I FOUND THE HIGH priest also in search of alcohol, which was duly purchased. We headed toward the stockade, parting a sea of security. Inside the temple were the sacrifices, three blondes and a brown-haired woman. They leaned against the plywood walls and didn't look especially fierce despite their beauty. See MUD page 5 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Guidelines set for Polish labor unions WARSAW, Poland—Polish officials outlined guidelines yesterday for the inclusion of labor unions in the national power structure under agreements signed Aug. 31 by the government and striking workers, the official PAP news agency said. After registering with the Warsaw district court "the union is granted legal identity," the agency said. The historic 21-point strike agreement, which ended the August strikes and brought down the government of Edward Gierke, legitimized the unions and pitted them potentially against the historically powerful ruling Polish Communist Party and the Roman Catholic Church. Despite open displays of Catholic devotion by workers during the strikes, the church is no longer the only mass opposition organization, and its leaders are becoming more militant. Catholic intellectuals point to two emerging factions in their church, one advocating active resistance to government policy and the other urging a more moderate stance. Poland's dissident intellectuals and workers have remained firmly united. Poland also remains a permanent might use association with the dissidents as a pretext to clamp down. Workers have not yet settled how they will wield their power. Search for plane crash victims halted WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.—Many of the bodies recovered from the Gulf Stream 20 miles from Freeport, Grand Bahama, where a DC-3 crashed Friday killing all 34 people aboard, were mutilated in shark-infested waters, authorities said yesterday. The Goast Guard found 16 bodies Friday and Saturday but suspended the search for more victims yesterday. A Coast Guard spokesman said there were no arrests. was no chance that the other to people a board could have survived. Autopsies showed that some of the victims had been mangled by sharks. The plane was equipped with life preservers, but none of the passengers were wearing them. The plane crashed while making its final approach to Freeport in a violent thunderstorm. It was carrying passengers to Freeport casinos for a gambling tour. Two Coast Guard cutters and two helicopters conducted a 10-hour search in the Bahraini seas. Eleven bodies were recovered soon after the search began. The captain of one of the cutters, Lt. Susan Moritz, said her crew saw sharks in the dark water, Klan leader arrested in Connecticut SCOTLAND, Conn. — The Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, Wilkinson, was arrested Saturday for allegedly carrying a loaded weapon. A Connecticut state trooper told Wilkinson was stopped in Scotland, where he was on a road trip to the area last night. He said Wilkinson was on his way to a second rally planned last night. Police said the 38-year-old Wilkinson was first held at a local elementary school, then was transferred to Brooklyn Correctional Center. Wilkinson posted a $1,000 non-surety bond and was released in time to attend the rally last night. The charge of possession of a dangerous weapon in a motor vehicle is a felony. The Klan rally in Scotland Saturday night was the first in Connecticut in more than 70 years. A Superior Court judge had issued the no-weapons order after Wilkinson announced that the grounds of the rally would be patrolled by armed men to protest. Wilkinson earlier had praised the 200 state troopers who patrolled the area to enforce the weapons ban. Union strikes hit Minneapolis Tribune MINNEAPOLIS—The Minneapolis Tribune, hit with a strike by two unions, was published yesterday, but the scaled-down edition was available only to readers who ventured across a picket line into the lobby of the newspaper building. Donald Dwight, publisher of the Minneapolis Star and Trubune, said ab- breviated versions of both papers would be published today. Decisions will be made later at the Minnesota Public Library. The strike was the third against the newspaper in recent years. No negotiations were scheduled in the strike that began Saturday after members of the Twin Cities Newspaper Guild rejected a contract offer that would have made them the third-highest paid journalists in the nation. The 24-page edition of the Sunday Tribune included news, sports and partial classified sections. About 10,000 copies were printed compared with about 5,000 daily newspapers. Also striking the newspaper are members of the Minneapolis-St. Paul Mailers' Union No. 4. Members of other unions, including the Tearwaterers 4 suspects in shooting spree arrested LOS ANGELES—Three teen-agers and one adult were arrested Saturday for stealing a griege last month that left four people dead on a quiet neighborhood街. Police said they would seek to try two 17-year-olds as adults. They were booked on suspicion of murder. Dani Sullivan, deputy chief of the Police Department's West Bureau, said he would need to have the two "shooter" suspects tried as adults because of their similarities. Another 17-year-old and the 47-year-old father of one of the suspects also were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the shootings. They were later indicted. The City Council immediately offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers. Police established a special "hot line" for information and received hundreds of calls from frightened citizens. The "Sunday Night Killings"," which occurred within a three-block area of west Los Angeles Aug. 24, *buried the city and terrified the residents of the area.* Police said the arrests were triggered by a "congonation" of evidence compiled from various sources, including some calls from concerned constituents. Teacher strikes persist in 8 states A strike by Philadelphia's 22,000 teachers entered its third week yesterday with contract talks at a stalemate. Elsewhere, efforts were bogged down to resolve the issue. Most of the strikes, affecting more than a half-million students nationwide, involved demands for higher wages and job security. The Philadelphia teachers are demanding that teacher layoffs due to declining enrollment be limited to 100. School officials plan to eliminate as many as 350 students. More than 75,000 students were affected by school strikes in Illinois and 75,400 students were affected by strikes in 18 Michigan districts. In Sierra, Ariz, teachers continued their 8-day-old walkout, which has left more than 5,000 students under the supervision of substitutes. WASHINGTON (UPF)—President Carter's campaign manager, Tim Kraft, saying he wanted to protect the campaign from political exploitation; took a leave of absence yesterday to fight "false" charges that he used cocaine in New Orleans three years ago. Carter aide takes leave to fight charges Kraft, 39, who moved from the White House to the Carter-Mondale campaign declared himself "completely innocent" in a statement sent to reporters. THERE WAS no immediate word on a replacement for Kraft, who apparently took the leaf rather than quit so he could stay on the payroll during what might be a lengthy and expensive process of defending himself. president was not involved in the decision because Tim's aim was to try to keep this from being used against the president." His friends said that "basically, the A WHITE House side testified before a federal grand jury investigating Jordan in New York that he had seen the drug in drug in New Orleans, the sources said. A three-judge federal panel named a special prosecutor to investigate the charges, sources said yesterday. Attorney General Benjamin Civletiell asked the panel to act as a result of evidence uncovered during a long investigation that eventually cleared former White House chief of staff Hamilton Jordan of similar charges, said the sources. Kraft, said his friends, stepped aside on his own because just six weeks remain until the election and his defense could be a protracted affair. Carter asked Jordan to stay on during the investigation into his case. "Although I am completely innocent of the charges, I find myself in a very difficult situation and facing a difficult decision," Kraft said in the statement. "I must make every opportunity to clear myself. At the same time, the campaign and my responsibilities there call for my full time and attention. "Most importantly, I have not worked hard for President Carter for the past six years just to become a subject of political controversy in the final six weeks of his re-election campaign. "Therefore, I have concluded that I can best serve the president and avoid political exploitation of the false narrative by taking a leave of absence from the campaign." Carter-Mondale campaign chairman Robert Strauss said he regretted the loss of a "fine young man." He said he had no doubt that Kraft would be vengeful, and he told the press of a special prosecutor "is in no way an indication of guilt or wrong-doing." Kraft said he learned last month of an FBI investigation into whether he had used cocaine "on two occasions within the last few years." He said he had volunteered for an FBI interview and denied the allegations. Campaign law anchors Anderson to candidacy By United Press International SAN FRANCISCO-John Anderson acknowledged yesterday that even if he wanted to end his candidacy, which he emphatically does not, the federal campaign he would force him to in the face of military dollars (for the rest of his life). Anderson made clear that he is in the race to stay, and said he would not feel any remorse if his candidacy, by siphoning votes from President Carter, helped to elect Ronald Reagan president. The independent presidential candidate, in an interview with United Press International, also said he might make public before the election some information about the type of person he would consider for Cabinet posts. The Federal Election Commission has said that Anderson is eligible for millions of dollars in government campaign aid after the election if he wins at least 5 percent of the national popular vote. The amount will vary based on his vote total, but 5 percent would be worth $3.1 million. Fifteen percent of the vote, about what he is getting in the polls, would be worth $2.9 million. If he withdraws a candidate, his vote would almost certainly be less than 5 percent. million from the government as the nominees of the two major parties. Anderson expressed confidence he would be able to borrow millions of dollars to help his financially allying campaign afford badly needed television advertising, now that he can use the promised government payment as collateral. His aides are negotiating loans with several undisclosed banks. Reagan and Carter each get $29.4 But Anderson acknowledged that even if he wanted to withdraw he could not, because he would lose his eligibility for a loan and they needed to repay the expected loans. Some Democrats have hoped that Anderson, faced with politics that showed he had no chance to win with only a few votes until the election, would withdraw. "Given the peculiarities in the federal campaign act and the fact that a new party or independent candidate like myself can only get retroactive analysis I think your analysis is correct," he told a reporter who raised the issue. "It does lock a candidate in. But I want to re-emphasize that I will be locked in, not because I have borrowed money, but because I deeply believe in what I am doing and that I can win the election." "I will not withdraw from this race because I believe I have put together what I know." That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. KINKO'S No brag, just fact. And for dissertation copying, blinding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. 904 Vermont 843-8019 904 Vermont 843-8015 8-8 Mon-Thur 10-5 Sat 8-6 Fri 12-5 Sun CONVERSE Team Water Polo Organizational Meeting "I will feel very, very good indeed, because the American people will have freely exercised their right, their franchise, their choice in a free election and have brought out many millions of people who would have stayed home. "What good would it do Jimmy Carter to be elected in a two-man race if maybe 40 percent of the American people showed up at the polls? There are no reasons for me to feel badly at what the American people had freely decided to do." Wednesday, September 17 7:00 p.m.Meet at the Robinson Center Pool. All interested in playing please attend. Recreation Services 864-3546 Anderson, asked if he would make public the names of prospective members of his Cabinet before the election, said: "I don't know that I will, other than to perhaps indicate the type of person I might like in my administration. I might mention some names as being typical of the skill, the judgment, the background and expertise I might like to have." Asked how he would the day after the election if he finds Reagan has won because traditionally Democratic votes are lower in Indiana candidacy, the Illinois congressman said: campaign. I am not going to deprive the American people of the opportunity to come out and vote for me on the fourth of November." Valuable Coupon TACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd with this coupon Buy Two Tacos Get One Taco Free with this coupon Good Until Sept. 26, 1980 "The Proof is in the Taco" offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. K. U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. --ques popi Where Cards & Gifts Abound Let Us Help Decorate Your Room Within walking distance ZERCHER PHOTO A cartoon showing a man holding an explosive device and preparing to launch it. He is surrounded by three other characters, one of whom is carrying a bag of fireworks. The scene suggests a military training exercise. K. U. Union or Baskets Bed Spreads 15% off - Campsites - Alarm Clock - Jumpers Holiday Flights Are Filling Fast! - Glassware - Lampshades - Alarm Clocks - Tote Bags - Bamboo Curtains Maupintour travel service Officer Osprey HILLCREST ZERCHER DOWNTOWN 919 IOWA PHOTO 1107 MASS Mon Oct 10 10:30 PM Mon Oct 10 10:30 PM Make Your Reservations TODAY! "There is no extra charge when you buy your airline tickets at Maupintour." --- K By RC Staff Eve And custom recon nonpa "EET KPL staten that c to rai KU Karate Club KP Steph mana KU K B Classes Every Tuesday and Thursday night 102 New Robinson Beginning Classes 7:00 Advanced Classes 8:15 For More Information Call Scott Taubin 749-0086 Mary Marshall 841-5590 864-4715 Re m hi co Le Co Ru "T University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 t it o i b o l d o f a n h e a n h e i n - i n a n a n a n a d h a n a d h a n a d h Page 3 KPL stalks electricity thieves By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Every little bit counts And that is the Kansas Power and Light Co. takes a dim view of customers who steal energy by energy meters cut off because of nonpayment. KPI1 is a large company, said Stephen Kline of Sunion division management, but she still fails. "Every kilowatt-hour produced by KPL has a cost," he said in a recent statement. "When we can't recover the money, we force us to raise the price to others." WAITE SAID FRIDAY that diversion or use of electric service without paying for it contributes minutely to rate increases. The increased cost of producing electric energy led KPL to seek an increase in rates, said Fred Bryan, Lawrence division manager. An interim increase of 15.75 percent went into effect June 1, 1980. This means that a Lawrence residence that uses 1,000 kcalwathtours this month will be billed $77.56 plus tax, an increase of $7.26. The residence using the same kilowatt hours next month will be billed at the lower winter rate, which is a half cent less per kilowatt-hour. The summer rate from July to September is higher so that customers will be encouraged to conserve energy, Bryan said. Stealing electric service may be a way to get around the rate increase and a past due bill, but is also can be dangerous. Tampering with meter boxes without proper property can expose a person to electrical hazards. 240 VAC 16 AMP. *KPL employees wear protective work with high voltages*. Waite said. THE PROBLEM OF electric energy theft is growing, according to Waite. KPL has started measures to stop theft or diversion of electric power, he said, to protect customers who do pay for their energy use. Measures include training meter readers and workers who connect and disconnect service to look for meters in a building and provide an indication of a diversion in progress. This training has led to the investigation of 19 people suspected of using electric energy without paying for it in Hutchinson this year. A Hutchinson man was recently sentenced to 30 days in county jail for reconnecting his meter after it was shitty. He was also ordered to order KPJ $181.93. In Lawrence, a man recently pleaded guilty at a preliminary hearing involving diversion of electric energy from KPL totaling less than $25, according to Bryan. The man faces a possible jail term and fine. Two other cases of diversion in the Lawrence area are pending investment. Bond 2 Lawrence men injured From page 1 question was how much of the black population would vote. BOND, 40, was a reporter, feature writer and managing editor for the Atlanta inquirer in the early 1880s. He graduate of Morehouse College in Atlanta. He was elected in 1965 to the Georgia House of Representatives but was barred from taking his sent by the military, who objected to his statements against the Vietnam war. Two Lawrence men were injured yesterday when their car went out of control at the 1100 block of Kasold Drive and struck an utility pole. The victims, Steve Taylor, 2811 Arkansas St., driver of the car, and Kevin Malott, Route 4, were both in stable condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital where undergoing surgery last night according to a hospital spokesman. Allen Winter, 1111 Kasold Drive, who witnessed the accident, said the car, which was traveling south on Kasold Drive, spun around before it jumped the curb and skidded across Winter's back. Winter, who had been playing football with his son in his backyard, said he heard tires squealing, looked toward the car and saw the car slide backwards into the pole. "It's the third accident on that curve since we moved here a year and a half ago," he said. Lawrence police had not yet compelled the report last night and would be able to review it. SUA FILMS Monday, Sept. 15 Blithe Spirit Rex Harrison sets out to debunk a medium—and ends up with the ghost of Jim Morrison, who composes in the hands of director David Lean, become a wittery, hilarious force. Constance Cummings and Margaret Rutherford co-star. Plain St. is set against the backdrop of *Cold Water* (Col 79). Tuesday, Sept. 16 The Miracle of Morgan's Creek Preston Sturges' outrageous satirical face about a young girl (Bettut Hayton) who gets drunk with some soldier and tries to trick her. But whose name she thinks is Ratskystaw. A non-stop circle of hilarity, with a great performance by William Demarest as Officer Kockenlocker. Plus: Bugs Bunny in "Dr. Devil and Mare. Hare" (98 min). Color Wednesday, Sept. 17 Breathless (A Bout de Saufie) Soume (1959) Jean Luc Godard's breakthrough New Wave film, an amoral tale of a petrocy clown and his gift team (Jean-Paul Belmouch and John Sullivan), rules of editing in its fast-paced, exciting story (written by Truttaff. Plus: Godard's short "All the Birds are Called Patrick." Thursday, Sept. 18 Orchestra Rehearsal (1978) in the middle of rehearsal an orchestra breaks down. Some want different instruments, some don't want to play at all. Federico Fellini's film *Inappropriate* in part by the director Toshi Inagawa in dappering with clever, thanks to Fellini's light touch and cleverness, thanks to Fellini's delicate啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪啪哺 Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown on the campus. Weekday films are $1.00, Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50. Midnight films are $2.00. Theater screenings are $3.00. Union 4th, level: information 864-349. No smoking or refresments at the theater. Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS ■ ARLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CARRENTAL ■ CAREERS ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED ICCRS ■ CALL TODAY! travel service 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843-1211 CALL TODAY! BOBBY BELL'S BAR-B-QUE COUPON SPECIAL! FREE BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING *2.49...AND GET FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPERED BABY BEETLE AND GRADE ELL PIED TREATMENT FOR HUMAN CONVENIENCE Veterans 9 24:80 2214 YALE ST. 842-5121 VALUABLE COUPON For Men & Women PERM-$30 Reg $35 (Includes Cut and Set) SPECIAL SALE HAIRCUT-$9 (Includes Shampoo and Blow Dry) PROFESSIONAL CURLING IRON $8.95 Reg $12.95 Located in Mall's Shopping Center — 711 W. 23rd 842-1144 REDKEN SALON ON THE MALL BAHA'I FIRESIDE The Life and Teachings of Baha'u'llah —Tonight's Topic— Dr. Norman Park PhD., is the director of Education of a vocational cooperative in Ottawa, and is also a consultant of Kansas Dept. of Education will speak on the Baha'i Faith. BLANE'S On Campus "The real treasury of man in his knowledge." TODAY Baha'u'llah EVERYONE IS WELCOME Monday, Sept. 15 7:30 p.m. MOUNT OREAD BICYCLE CLUB is meeting at 7:30 p.m. today at the South Park Recreation Center. Discussion will center on planning for the Octoginta in October and an introduction to the club and its activities. CANCELLATION International Room in the Union A recital by Phyllis Brill, soprano, scheduled for today has been postponed until next semester. THE STUDENT SENATE COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE meeting at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Dept of Student Room, Leavens 3 on the Satellite Union HOMECOMING COMMITTEE meeting is at 10:30 p.m. in room the 9th TOMORROW The PRE-NURSING CLUB is meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room in the Union. BLACK STUDENT UNION is holding choir practice from 5:30 p.m. to 7:20 p.m. tomorrow in 328 Murp. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST is meeting from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow in rooms 209, 212 and 233 Haworth. TAU SIGA DANCE ENSEMBLE is at 7 p.m. tomorrow in 220 moblton THE ACADEMIC COMPUTER CENTER is holding an Introduction to Text Processing seminar at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday at Computer Services Facility auditorium. HANS GEHBARD, professor of music at the Muskhochschule of Lubec, Germany, will perform in concert at 8 o'clock tomorrow in Swarthout Rectal Hall. AFTERNOON SPECIAL TERMON SPECIAL Buy one donut or roll, and get one free with your KUID Good from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday CAROL LEE DONUT SHOP 90 WEST STREET LAKE BUENA AZURA, FL 34087 goto PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES - Rush Services Available on Black and White Displays - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) - Rush B + W Enlargements - Black and White Prints from slides in 2 days Withdrawal policy to change - 16x20° B + W Prints from color or Black and White film ★ 4x6" Color Prints from 35mm Merges Available Te KU. Departments 1741 MASJACKHURTEETTS OVERLAND PHOTO Phone 841-0760 By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Students will have an extra week next semester to decide if the pressures of classes are too much and withdraw it is recorded on their transcripts. Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said yesterday that the withdrawal policy recommended by the University Council in April would be approved and put into effect during the spring 1881 semester. The new policy, which was accidentally published in the addendum to this semester's Timetable, divides the additional period into 5-week sections The policy is now divided into 4-week phases, the first phase ending Friday. The schedule now allows four weeks to withdraw without any record, three ACCORDING TO THE new schedule, a student will have five weeks to withdraw from a class and delete it from his record. During the following five weeks, the student will receive a "f" for withdrawing from a class and then send an emailation to withdraw and receive an "F" or "W" for a final grade. weeks to receive a “W” and after the week a student must petition to drop a class. Confusion resulted last week about the withdrawal policy when University governance realized that the proposal was delayed and the amendment last April had not been approved. Printing of the new schedule in the addendum was approved by Robert G. Berry, director of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, who did not realize it was incorrect. WHEN THE discrepancy between the Timetable and the addendum schedules was discovered, Hoffmann said, the University Council asked Shankel to confirm the University's use of the new schedule. However, Shankel said that because the schedule had not been approved, the old withdrawal schedule would be effective this semester. Although it would be possible to start the new policy, this semester, Shankei will continue. "We don't want it to get any more confused than it already is," he said. George Worth, University Senate executive committee chairman, said the policy officer was changed so the university would have a uniform withdrawal policy. Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eyes. & Sun. Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More BAG SHOP BOKONON .841-3600. 12 EAST 8TH ST. SALE - 20% OFF PARAPHERNALIA HEWLETT-PACKARD CALCULATOR DAY SFT QWB GTD 1 XCJ R+ STO NCL X+ ENTER CHC EXK GLX + 7 8 9 + 4 5 6 × 1 2 3 ÷ D - R/2 MEET A FACTORY EXPERT DATE: Wednesday September 17 TIME: 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. PLACE: KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE Level 2, Main Union Special Sale Now In Progress! hp HEWLETT PACKARD We are the Only bookstore that shares its profits with K.U. students. YOUNG KANSAS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 Opinion KU officials blow it Often the University of Kansas and common sense just don't mix. One thing is for sure: the University's handling of a KU football ticket promotion program has been an exercise in stupidity. The University certainly has blundered in scheduling the annual Parents' Day football game on Sept. 20, which happens to fall on Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement. The Jewish holiday represents a day of obligation for those who practice the Jewish faith. Therefore, many of KU's 1,000 Jewish students and their parents will be unable to attend KU's home opener against Pittsburgh. Worse yet, KU officials simply have no excuses for their mindlessness. The conflict was discovered last April—five months before the game—but KU officials refused to budge. In effect, KU's Jewish population was given an apology and was told to read the next morning's paper if it wanted to find out the score of the football game. The Parents' Day committee recommended earlier that Parents' Day should be changed, but the date was not moved. Former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes made the final decision. KU has three promotional dates—Parents' Day, Band Day and homecoming. One of the primary reasons the promotions are held is to help sagging ticket sales for KU football. Although season ticket sales have increased slightly this year, there is no doubt that KU sports revenue is hurting. An increase in football revenue depends on sound promotions at this University. Unfortunately, KU has alienated perhaps a few thousand potential ticketholders. KU needs all the football revenue it can get or more non-revenue sports will have to be eliminated. It appears that the schedule conflict will affect the Parents' Day promotion at least to some degree. Any degree can be critical when revenue is needed so badly. But this time, if the coffers come up short, KU officials will have no to blame but themselves. Letters to the Editor Smock's beliefs defy attacks To the editor: After reading the letters to the Editor of Sept. 3 and 5, I realized I must speak up. The letters in question concerned the recent visit to KU of George Smock, the traveling preacher. Though the writers attacked Smock personally, he was a secondary target. Their main point of contention was what Smock was preaching, God's Word from the Bible. The writers tried to brittle and prove God's scriptures false using their own words. He didn't work. The letter writers were operating under a delusion, and I must point out their error. That any person possibly could believe himself wise enough to be an equal of God and to debate the truth of His Holy Word is unthinkable. Jesus站 for all eternity that "The Word is word" is truth, and anyone who believes otherwise is merely falling into Satan's trap—he is believant "the lie." "The lie" is found in Genesis 3:5. When Satan tempted Eve, he told her that if she did this (eat of the fruit, which she already was forbidden to do by God), "your eyes will be opened and you will be like God, knowing good and evil." God already had told her it was evil, but Eve believed it was not. God gave her a fork and ate the fruit, believing it would make her like God. The result was disobedience to God, a fall from grace and banishment from paradise. So much for human wisdom. When a man claims he has a better way than God, he commits the same grievous error as Eve: he places himself on an equal level with God and rejects His universal truth. I am so regrettful for men like that, for the following reason. II Thess. 2:11 states it briefly: "And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie." Once that happens, the only way to come back to the truth is through the blood and grace of the Lord Jesus Christ. He was sent into the world to save it from the lie, but unfortunately, too many people refuse to accept and believe it. That what is Smokow was trying to say, but the letter writers were only looking at the surface of his words, and not at the meaning of it, and indeed by Satan, as the scriptures state, and did not. And the scriptures also state, "And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not convenient (fit)" (Romans 1:28). so much for human understanding. When someone calls God's Word "practise" and instead welcomes the chevroff in a six-pack of beer, (letter to the Editor of Sept 3), it only proves how true God's Word really is. Such behavior is equal to idolatry. When Smock condemned those with views and practices opposite God's, he wasn't doing it on his own authority, but God's. What do the letter writers think God will say to them in the final judgment? The delusion is sent so that (II Thess. 2:12) "they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness." Those are not views or judgments concocted out of my mind or Smock's, but God's as they were written down centuries ago for our use and study. They came out of compassion, tenderness and the deepest love the world has ever known. Out of that same love, Smock, and countless others, we have received a gift to deliver the message of Jesus Christ to those who might never hear the truth otherwise. For that, they are met with derision and scorn (and nasty letters in newspapers). Smock's sniff and bristle approach to the Gospel may seem a bit antiquated, but with the advanced state of moral decay in which we live (sexual promiscuity, alcohol and drug abuse, materialism, etc.), perhaps a stronger approach is necessary. Human values are constantly degenerating. Christians have remained silent long enough—it is time to speak up. I thank God for the voice of Smock, and pray that his work will continue and that those who have been misled will find the truth through Our Lord Jesus Christ." And Jesus said, "I am the light of the world; he that followw me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the life of light." (John 8:12). Ed Johlman North Haven, Conn., graduate student Honors Program Brett Conley's Sept. 9, column dealing with the KU Honors Program does raise some frequently heard criticisms. It is unfortunate, however, that he not looked beyond his own bad experience. To the editor: Like Conley, I have seen both the best and the worst that the program has to offer. For my own part, I think the experience was worthwhile, if I houseuse of the many interesting people I hives met. That, however, is of little consequence. What is it that I can now reasonably say that I have seen the other side as well, having just finished a year-long stint as a student representative to the College Honors Advisory Committee. In doing so, I think I have gained some understanding of the constraints within which the program operates. The Honors Program, like many campus activities, long has suffered from a lack of financial resources. Staff help is short. Teachers of honors classes receive no additional compensation, and in many cases, they teach these classes in addition to their regular loads. Their service to the University is often ignored in tenure decisions. What courses are offered are the product ofdeference among faculty belonging from the Honors Office. When the rewards are purely personal, it is hardly surprising that the quality of honors teachers varies so widely. Because of its reliance on self-selected volunteers, the program has had difficulty developing the kinds of things Conley suggests. Upper-class seminars integrating the several disciplines (an enormous task) have been attempted, but they again are subject to changes in faculty and student enthusiasm. After all, it is difficult enough to recruit honors instructors within a department, let alone instructors for courses under the LA&S rubric. Besides sounding oddly elitist, any attempt to more rigorously define the Honors Program is rather redundant considering the College's distribution requirements. But, in addition, how could anyone really construct a schedule of classes that all honors students, regardless of interests and aptitudes, should take? The Honors program is not a discipline, in itself but a professor who works closely both with a professor and with students of similar incinations and abilities in exploring a subject in greater depth than is possible in the usual introductory course. Granted, the Honors Program is not the best of all worlds, but that is not for lack of trying. The efforts of many people over the years belie such a simple notion. Because of the program's limited resources, there is little incentive for faculty members to teach these classes or for departments to offer them. To condemn the program on the basis of its constraints under which it operates and, further, the opportunities it has provided for countless other students. For these courses, honors or not, that do not live up to one's expectations, there is a solution: drop. Mark Hansen Colby senior The University Daily KANSAN (USP5 690-440) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or at the U.S. Post Office. Send subscriptions to $2 a student, or $8 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a student, paid through the student activity for Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint, Hall of the University Editor Credit Bldc Elaine Strahler Managing Editor Editorial Editor National Sales Manager National Sales Manager General Manager and News Advisor Kannan Advisor Cydi Hughes David Langer Kevin Koster Nancy Masoner Rick Muster Wilfred W. Congress suffers prestige disease this summer, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas dealt his so-called constituents a body check in a power play contriver to thrust his name into the spotlight. Ronald Reagan's presidential campaign. Last spring, after coming under attack from angry farmers upset with President Carter's grain embargo, Dole forsook his membership in the Senate Agriculture Committee. Dole switched to the Finance Committee, which will put him in an influential position when the committee drafts tax legislation. To be sure, his position as tax writer will endear him to Reagan. Moreover, if Reagan Sue Banton 80 TED LICKTEIG A wins the presidency, Dole's position might high spot in the Reagan administration. Dole's abandonment of farmers will be especially important as election day draws nearer. Dole, who is running for re-election against Democrat John Simpson of Salina, cannot say that he has any real influence on Carter concerning the grain embargo because he no longer is a member of the agriculture committee. Not surprisingly, this disease, which developed after Watergate, has destroyed the purpose and effectiveness of meaningful therapy. Maybe the disease has simply defended it. Another symptom of the disease is the congressional subcommittee, which breathes Joe Bantor 80 KANSAN This disease has resulted in the loss of effective leadership in Congress because each congressman is interested only in being reelected, not in serving the public interest. It is widely assumed in Washington that a tax cut will be enacted early next year. Only its size remains in doubt. Dole can collect windfall political points with Reagan if he is in the spotlight of the debate over the size of the tax cut. Dole's action is not unusual among congressmen. It is merely a symptom of a political disease that seems to afflict congressmen. Congressmen often choose to their own interests above the interests of the people who place them in the position of power. If Reagan wins the election, Dole would become his chief tax surrogate in Congress because of his position as leading Republican on the committee. Dole could even become chairman of the committee if enough Democrats lose in November. Meanwhile, Kansans are left in the cold. Somehow our leaders seem larger than life. life if the interest group involved is powerful enough. Unfortunately, the farmers' group doesn't have enough political clout, as the grain embargo proved. The subcommittee serves to give television time to congressmen who feel threatened by their opposition in an election or to boost aspiring presidential candidates. This was evident last year when Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, had tear-jerking Love Canal residents appear before one of his committees. the 1980s, when important and effective civil rights legislation was passed, and of the early 1970s, when consumer and environmental legislation was passed. Dole was able to dodge the grain embargo issue and help his re-election chances by joining the finance committee. By doing this, he avoided criticism from farmers because he didn't try to influence Carter on the embargo. This fraud is in contrast to the leadership of These laws and their effectiveness inspired special interest group leaders in gun control, medicine, anti-gun control, energy and law, among others, to point their salvos at Congress, which reacted with committees and subcommittees. Now, in 1800, when effective energy legislation is desperately needed, a stalemate is developing between Northeastern and Southern governments and Southern and Western congressmen. Dane has sinned. But nothing can assure Kansons that is Simpson were to be elected, but he had not. CIA accusers spray-paint silly pictures If it's not South Africa, then it is Iran. If it's not the FBI, then it is the CIA. This time, it is the CIA. As anyone who listens to Saturday Night Live's Roseanne Roseannadanna knows, it's always something. Last week, students may have observed the handwork of a paranoid person on several campus buildings. Somebody learned how to operate a spray paint can, and with what took incredible skill and forethought, wrote the legend "CIA out of KU" on several campus walls. The meaning and intention behind the graffiti, however, were a little confusing. Is the CIA engaging in operations, covert or otherwise, on the KU campus? The only dictator BILL MENEZES 1978 to overthrow around here already has left to work for a Topeka insurance company. While overthrowing dictators makes for good headlines, is isn't the type of thing the CIA is doing in the Mount Oread area at this time. Well, it might be a mistake. I've worried about? Maybe recruiting, for starters. A spokesman for the agency's Denver field office said the agency now was looking for electrical engineers, computer scientists and physicists, just as Texas Instruments does. Despite a hiring freeze in certain areas, a CIA representative will be on campus Oct. 23 and to give out information and to conduct interviews through the University placement office. If it was the intention of the graffiti writer to bring this to public attention, he was washing his paint. Not only are the CIA interviews as open as any other corporate recruiting interviews, but, like Texas Instruments, the agency has every right to come and recruit. So what if it is the same organization that propped up the Shah and tried to explode Castro's cigar? Believe it or not, the agency is involved in a number of other activities, and for some people, these activities could mean a rewarding career choice. But, of course, it also is quite probable that the person who wrote the graffiti was not referring to CIA recruiting, but to CIA intelligence operations. Remember, intelligence is its middle name. When talking about intelligence, certain when talking about intelligence, certain and probably right now for that matter, the and probably right now for that matter, the CIA actively solicited information from many students and faculty members who had traveled abroad or had done research concerning foreign affairs. In the past, this area of local CIA activity has brought crises of "spy" down upon those who have participated. The controversy arose most recently in 1976, when members of the University of Pennsylvania were questioned by the CIA upon returning from trips abroad were accused of being CIA tools. What the accusers did not seem to realize was that if the travelers did not want to give out information, they were not tortured or thrown into prison. They simply were left alone, a concession they did not seem willing to extend to those who had backed the CIA or other intelligence agencies. Graffiti from a Wesco Hall wall named two KU professors and an "etec." after the standard "CIA out of KU." Roy Laird, a professor of Soviet and East European studies and one of those named, did indeed work for the CIA. From 1956-57, Laird sat at a desk in Washington, D.C., and wrote papers on the status of Soviet agriculture for the agency. Laired said he also was approached by another professor who asked to赴 Saskatchewan and was asked to find the answers to a list of questions they gave him. He refused, but agreed to answer any questions they might have about his trip after he returned. "I said, 'Don't put me in the position to go looking for things,' " Laird said. Now the agency contacts him two or three times a year, Laird said, and asks him questions about research he does as a KU professor, which he gladly answers. Interestingly enough, despite being branded as a CIA tool by some, several years ago he was called "one of the eight leading communists in the Lawrence area" by a radical fringe group. "The Soviets described me as a 'bourgeois falsifier,'" he said. "I guess that makes me a double agent." For people like Laird and the others named in the graffiti, whose academic specialties often require work abroad, any link with the CIA, no matter how false or innocent, would be enough for an anti-CIA fanatic in a foreign land to gain access to the streets of Europe and Asia, which crawl with Francais and other expatriates who have no great love for the CIA, this is a real possibility. What it does make him is the victim of smear tactics by an artist who doesn't even have the power to make a statement. But why just write graffiti about those who work for the CLA? Other government agencies receive just as much, if not more, from KU academicians. Perhaps the graffiti would have been more appropriate if it had read, "Department of Education out of KU." Ir a PerMiG | IraMiGnorthregioPrimchiefspect IN bord Th MiG VANDALS OEE CAMPUS 1 --- University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 Page 5 Iran From page 1 a Persian Gulf port, and Iran shot down two Iraqi MIG fighter planes, Tehran radio said. Iranian armed forces "shot down two Iraqi MIG fighters, killing the pilots and co-pilots north of Qaar-Shirin in the western Gerde region" while President Abbasbahan Bani-Sadr, acting chief of the joint staff Gen. Fallah, were inspections battle zones, the radio said. The radio claimed Iran has downed nine Iraqi MIGa "in recent days." IN THE FIRST naval battle of the recent border conflicts, four Iraqis were killed when two Iranian vessels returned fire on two Iraqi frigates in fighting near the port of Abadan in southern Iran, 30 miles from the Persian Gulf. "Iraqi forces are massed along the border. They are ready and have deployed their entire capability." Gen. Fallahi, acting chair of the Iraqi's joint chiefs of staff, said on the radio. Fallahi said that Iraq, "the agent of the world-devourer, the United States," was playing out a "sinister and coherent plan" to tighten the political and economic blockade of Iran and that Iraq had moved its full force from its western and northern borders to Iran's borders. nicknames—Catwoman, Tiger Lady and the Sisters of Satan. From nage 1 Mud The natural question is "Why?" "This is our life's work," said one combatant. The others nodded. "We've been in training for this." Their responses were wary, a mixture of street-smart bar brawl and cinnamon. They weren't in it for the money, they said, but there were to be 'other considerations.' The Sisters of Satan kept looking for a way out of the coffin-like plywood box that held them. Intoxicants were introduced into the chamber to help with stage fright. I thought the pellets were going to be dropped in at any minute. I was released and spent the next few minutes relishing a fight in the stands. "In this co-nu, weighing in at 115 pounds—the Coronado team, who had cheerless, obsessed and appalled of approach," he said. IT WAS SHOWTIME. to stochastic to stochastic when one contestant shipment the other helped us read her lips: "Are you all right?" she said. I thought back on the great contests in history: Louis-Schmeling II-A.Fraterz, Nixon-McGovern. "Fix!" I screamed. "Fix!' By then it was over. Cattawater was pinning Tiger Lady and Chris Fritz and New West productions counted her out. The only way to recount my losses was in the next match. The guy behind me told me to shut up and sit down. I took a beating on the next set too. The smaller of the Sisters of Satan拥着 his sibling. A guy with a cooler stuck under his arm and beaten on stains on his shirt shouted to her, "You're crazy." I paid off my bail and followed the victor to the water truck where the worst of the soil could be reached. She looked at him, slowly smiled and asked, "I am?" ASK From page 1 Kansas, said the invitation was made because "ACTs programs and services are planned to assist students in their decision making and participation should be a part of the program." Davis said the Truth-in-Testing bill was not a primary factor in asking ASK to join. In other business, the ASK board took a temporary stand in favor of placing a student representative on the Board of Regents. Although the opinion will not become official until April, the assembly meets Oct. 4 and takes a vote, the stand was taken to speed legislation in the House. A forum with Republican Sen. Bob Dole and his Democratic challenger for the U.S. Senate seat, John Simpson, or representatives from their campaigns, is being arranged. ALSO DURING the three-hour meeting, ASK's personnel policy was approved, a committee was established to review the association's bylaws and plans for the ASK Legislative Assembly at Kansas State University on Oct. 3 and 4 were tentatively made. Seminar At the retreat yesterday, which was designed as an orientation meeting, ASK delegates were coached in such areas as how to organize a presentation, how to manage campus director responsibilities. From page 1 you adopt the concept of *minority*, that what minority allows you to view minority quality always rules, and minority always lea- ws. To be winners in today's working world, black students need to get involved in activities at the school. WORKING IN college organizations helps students to develop self-confidence and the skills needed for success. Franklin credits his success in business after graduation to his student involvement at K- BLACK STUDENTS at KU cannot afford to take college once they have made it to college. Franklin, who works for the Commerce Bank in Kansas City, Mo., graduated in 1978 from Kansas State University, where he was the first black to be elected student body president. He is a member of the Board of Regents to be selected chairman and is one of only two blacks to hold the position. They must take an active role on campus and work to develop influence at the university, he said. "Do you not have any control on this ship," Parks said. "You are in someone else's back yard, playing with someone else's toys. If you assume that playing in someone's back yard gives you a part of that yard, you're in for a rude lesson." Parks continued, the action unless you go out and take control. Parks said that blacks have vet to achieve In higher positions, the average black worker makes only 33 percent of his white counterpart's equality in the job market. Much of the inequality still found between Americans and immigrants tends to a tendency to restrict blacks. Far more PARKS ALSO criticized television for using black stereotypes in much of its programming and for providing black children with poor role models. About 80 people attended the opening speech, which drew a larger crowd than the second. D ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday Butterfly 731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm INTRODUCING DRY HAIRCAUTION FOR GUYS $5.50 Shear Dimensions 1802 Massachusetts Dillon Plaza phone 842-3114 (No appointment needed) Furniture (No appointment needed Open Evenings) KODACOLOR Film DEVELOPED AND PRINTED $150 12 EXP. 110-126 20 & 24 EXP. 126-110-135 $2.50 36 EXP.-135MM $4.50 Expires May1, 1981 Enclose 25* more per roll for special handling and 1st class return Enclose this ad with order Hwy H North Lake Geneva, Wis., 53147 SKRUDLAND PHOTO 明模力 CO-REC Volleyball Manager's Meeting Thursday, Sept. 18, 7:00 p.m. in 156 Robinson Center. Rosters and additional info available in 208 Robinson Center. Recreation Services 864-3546 --presented by: 3F MIND Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas A. Peirce have believed that new tools exist to allow any normal person to draw on the 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate - LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHORIAS * POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. O.P. Box 424, INDEPENDENCE, M04 84051 SAVE UP TO 75% MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. LAWRENCE RAMADA INN 2222 WEST 6th (816) 252-8318 (913) 383-1432 Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices FROM 2 to 9 P.M CARPETS bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa Use Your "People Book". AZUKI MOTOBECANE M FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts TACO JOHN'S TACO JOHN'S It's TacoRific! MONDAY SPECIAL 3 Tacos $1.30 Reg. $1.92 1101 W. 6th 1626 W. 23rd Sun-Thur. 10:30 a.m.-midnight Fri-Sat. 10:30 a.m.-2:00 a.m. Women's Bodybuilding Seminar Barbara 'Buzzie' Gentry editor of: "The Fitness Factor-The Complete Book of Bodybuilding for Men & Women" founder of: MAWPA (Mid-America Women's Physique Assn.) -Figure Shaping -Muscle Building topics to be discussed "How to Reshape Your Body" -Motivation -Personalized Fitness Program -Diet -Weight Training 7-9 pm Tues, Sept 16 & Thurs, Sept 18 at the FITNESS CENTER (6th & Maine) 4 hours of instruction for only $5.00 Reserve your space now, call 841-8540 K.U. Volleyball Club Fall Tryouts Tryouts will be held Wednesday, Sept. 17 and Friday, Sept. 19 at 7:00 p.m in the south gym of old Robinson Gymnasium. Come prepared to play. Any questions? Call Stan 842-1114 or Steve 842-4387. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1980 WILL BE ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWING ACCOUNTING MAJORS FOR AN INTERVIEW STANDARD OIL COMPANY (INDIANA) TULSA, OKLAHOMA EXPLORE THE POSSIBILITIES OF A CAREER WITH ONE OF THE NATION'S LARGEST AND MOST PROGRESSIVE PETROLEUM COMPANIES. PLEASE SIGN UP AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN INTERVIEW AMOCO Spirit Squad and Mike Person AUDITIONS Monday, Sept. 15, 5 p.m. Allen Field House Informational Meeting Clinics Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Sept.15, 16, 17, 5 p.m. Tryouts Thursday, Sept. 18 All requirements for the spirit squad, mike person will be explained at the meeting September 15. No previous experience necessary. Minorities encouraged to participate. Page 6 University Dally Kansan, September 15, 1980 Mistreated books on display By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Fires, floods, mice and men are a few of the culprits in a book exhibit opening today at the Spencer Research Library. The enemies of books" is a display of books that have been damaged by the forces of nature, inherent defects and human abuse. Books displayed are taken from Spencer Library, a rare books library. Bill Mitchell, associate special collections librarian at Spencer library, surprised the students to show people how they should treat their books. "one of our chief functions in this library is to make sure that the things we have will last for other people to use," Mitchell said. SOMETIMES people don't realize they are harming their books, Mitchell said. "There are people who hurt books out of a sort of ignorant benevolence," he said. "They think they are doing something that will help the book, but they are really ruining it." Mitchell said that the collection showed written in books, pages repaired with adhesive tape and damaged with unintentional damage to books. The collection also has books that were harmed when they were used to press flowers and store newspaper clippings. Mitchell said the acids in the flowers and the newspaper ate the book pages. "The problem with newsprint is that basically they just grind up a tree to make it look said." "Well, as well," he added. "always said, you got guts, feathers and all." An example of deliberate harm to books, Mitchell said, is the work of book censors. THE EXHIBIT includes a 16th century book on alchemy that had 36 pages cut out by a Spanish inquisitor. Mitchell said the Inquisition was responsible for the destruction of a number of books. "They burned both books and people," Mitchell said. "Today, you can book says probably wouldn't trouble anybody, including the pope." The collection even contains a book whose owner glued all the pages together so no one could read it. "I don't suppose there's any way of getting across to that guy. I'd like to," Mitchell said. "The average person, though, who unthinkingly does bad things to his books, maybe he'll recognize himself here." Humans are not the only cause of the damage to the books in the exhibit. Mitchell said the collection also had books that show damage from mice, silverfish, cockroaches and bookworms. He said insects were attracted to the starches used in book paper to prepare it for printing. BOOK DAMAGE is sometimes due to a book's structure instead of outside forces, Mitchell said. "A book, just like an automobile, can be well or ill made," Mitchell said. A smaller exhibit on the friends of books will be shown with the exhibit of book enemies, Mitchell said. He said that books were often printed on paper containing chemicals that would later destroy it and a lighter paper was more expensive. "The main exhibit is roasting one guy or another for the things that have happened to these books," he added. "They need to also have a positive exhibit." Included in the exhibit of book friends are examples of books such as *The Alphabet* and books and book oil that is used as a lubricant for leather book covers. Dexter Shoemakers to America Sure-footed style. It's what Dexter's Norwegian walking shoes are all about. The natural rubber sole and Norwegian welt construction assures you of miles and miles of comfort in the great outdoors. comfort outdoors 120 1 McCall's Not Yourself in our Shoes McCall's Not Do yourself in our Shoes Mon-Sat. 9:00-5:30 Thurs. till 8:30 Meisner Milstead Liquor 829 Massachusetts Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! VIN 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holday Plaza Aspecial breed. D. M. G. What does it take to be a Marine officer? It takes strength, agility, coordination, intelligence, moral and physical courage. It takes desire, determination and gift Above all, it takes the ability to lead other Marines during the war. In this environment, short it takes a special breed of man if you have what it takes, well bring out the best in you. Contact us Now! See LT Winers on campus in the Kernsurance Union on 15, 16, 17, and 16 Sep 80 from 4 AM to 4 PM or call (913) 248-2996. The Few.The Proud.The Marines. Plan for industrial park gets Chamber attention By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce is considering the development of an industrial park north of Lawrence, the Chamber announced that the Chamber has ordered a study of the purchase of two tracets of land involved. The Chamber's affiliate development company, the Lawrence Industriol Co. Inc., has signed orders to buy the two tracts, 259 acres just north of the municipal airport and 186 acres across Highway 24 west of the airport. The option gives the Chamber ex- tension and release the land before the end of next year. LANDPLAN ENGINEERING of Lawrence will conduct a study before the Chamber decides whether to buy the land. The study should be completed by the end of the year, the firm said. The engineering firm will study the park's feasibility and prepare a cost estimate. No firms have expressed interest in the area yet, and there is no definite plan for developing the area, Chamber officials said. Brian Kubota, an engineer with the firm, said the study would examine the area's transportation facilities and determine the cost of developing the area. Glenn E. West, the Chamber's executive vice president, said the Chamber itself would not be able to finance the area's development. Neither tract of land is within city limits, but Lynn Anderson, Chamber president, said the city might want to annex the land. "One of our objectives is to add to the tax base of the city as well as the county." ANNEXATION WOULD provide property taxes for the city, but the city could issue the bonds without annexation. New industry to the park could develop a high level of industrial prosperity a year, West said. Anderson said the park probably would be zoned for light to medium industry. The Chamber intends to be heavily involved in the area's development to insure a controlled, attractive area, he said. West said the community needed to add to the number of industrial sites in the area. The 186-acre Santa Fe in northwest Colorado and the West Turnpike exit is full, he said. The Chamber has not set a starting or completion date for the industrial park. On the Record It will depend on how aggressive the community is in needing jobs," West said. Instead, the city could offer low-interest industrial revenue bonds to induce industries to build in the area, he said. According to KU Police Capt. John Mullens, the woman was raped and beaten by the man. She was treated for bruises at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Mullens said the victim described the man as a medium-size black male, possibly with a beard or a mustache. He said there were no suspects. KU police are looking for a man in connection with the rape of a KU student in her apartment at the church. Towers early yesterday morning. Bucky's Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb. Hamburger at regular price Get One Free One coupon per customer Good thru 9/21. --starts at Dusk 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 Bucky's hp HEWLETT About 4:30 yesterday morning, the man entered the woman's apartment through an unlocked front door and sat on a bed. He stopped sleeping on a living room sofa. Moms Hewlett Packard HEWLETT PACKARD HP 34C 1,2,3,4,5,6,7-34 CLASS MACHINE DIALOG LUIS A. PARKER BROADWAY NEW YORK 100 W. 3RD ST. 800-877-6888 COMPUTER BREAKOUT TIME TO REFRESH COSTS & TAXES DETAILS ELECTRONIC COMPUTER MODEL: IBM 7000 INPUT: 8-bit RAM OUTPUT: 8-bit ASCII DISPLAY: 2-line LCD KEYS: Z-Z-Z-Z A-Z-A-Z-A-Z CTRL-S-D-F-G-H-J-K-L-M-N-O-P-Q-R-T-U-V-W-X-Y-Z Calculator Sale According to the police report, the man hold the woman's mouth shut.刺伤了她。 - 21 Storage Registers With Continuous Memory Yesterday's attack was the third reported rape in Lawrence in 13 days. - 210 Program Lines Reg. $150.00 - Unconditional Branching & Subroutines Sale $133.00 - Flags & Scientific Features MULLENS SAID three other people were in the apartment during the rape, but they were sleeping and were unaware of the attack. - Many Built In Statistical Built Into Calculator Save on These Other Hewlett Packard Calculators And Accessories Reg. Sale Reg. Sale $295.00 $265.00 HP41C 32E 70.00 63.00 41C Card Reader 215.00 190.00 33C 110.00 97.00 37E 75.00 68.00 38C 150.00 133.00 41C Printer 350.00 320.00 41C Memory Module (Blank) 45.00 39.00 29C 175.00 140.00 Hurry Sale Ends Wednesday, September 17 Sale Prices Good For Existing Stock Only BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICES * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Kansas Union Bookstores Level 2, Main Union Two locations to serve you Satellite Shop, Satellite Union We are the only Bookstore to share its profits with KU students. ASTA S W Kl "Say it with a Song! 841-6169 Singing Telegrams Flowers by Alexanders Footlights Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenberg's Dell) Imaginative Cards & Gifts THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 P1 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Boogie Man R 7.40 & 8.20 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-B400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:15 & 9:15 2. Caddyshack 7. 20 & 9. 20 3. Urban Cowboy Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 2. Oh Heavenly Dog 7:30 & 9:30 Sunset Hotel West 67th St. 843-8172 The Shining & The Exorcist University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 Page 7 Scorecard KU Stats TEAM STATISTICS First dives KU 41 OL 61 Raveney-yards 45-13-13 31-21-9 Passing yards 119 107 Total defense 252 138 Offense 10 10 Passing Passes 15-28-11 19-6-9 Passing Ticks -46-0 19-6-9 Foulmate-loops 1-0 3-1 Penalties-yards 4-50 0 3-8 Oregon 0 0 0 7-7 Oregon 0 0 0 7-7 Weekend Results Women's Cross-country WiiBits Gold Classic 1st place - Kansas State 35 pts. 2nd place - Kansas 48 pts. 3rd place - Kansas State 48 pts. KU placings-Tanya Heard, 4th; Vickie Simon, 7th; Marvel Barry, 9th; Nancy Rowdy, 10th; Tina Barr, 10th. Rugby Oregon—Ogburn 1 run (English kick) 14:57 Massachusetts—Ogburn 1 run (English kick) 14:57 KC Blues 30, KU A 6 KC Blues 22, KUB 13 Kanaea~Verser 14 pass from Seurer (Kalmeyer kck) 0:15 Rushing - Kushna, Bell 29-69, Bayle 13-18, Seurer 3-10, Mack 2-4, Brown 19-24, Owen 17-15, Feasuring - Kushna, Seurer 12-19-10, Smith 14.5;1.16; Dufour, Dehra 8.1;107 Ogben 10-11, Williams 10-14, Jackson 10- Passing-Kansas, Seurer 12-14-103, Smith 3-5-11-16. Oregon 9-19-107. 3-1-18. Oregon, Ogden 9-14-10. IU- 10-2-18. Washington, Oquam 9-14-10. Kansas, Varsay 5-4-8. Mickens 4-3-1. Bell 2-1-8. Sydeny 2-9. Capers 2-12. Oregon, Moser Jones 2-3-27. Punting--Kansas, Scribner 7-332-46.0, Oregon, Rabb 7-417-10. Baseball Oklaahoma 29, Kentucky 7 Missouri 47, New Mexico 16 West Virginia 7, East Texas 20 West Texas State 20, Oklaahoma State 19 UCLA 64, Colorado State 8 Kansas State 8 Pittsburgh 2 0 1,000 51 34 Cleveland 2 1 000 17 34 Houston 1 0 00 17 34 Cincinnati 1 0 00 17 34 W L Pts. PF PA Buffalo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 8 504 37 Baltimore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 8 504 39 Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 500 26 34 New England . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 500 26 33 N.Y. Jets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 0 2 30 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE AMERICAN CONFERENCE FAST Pro Football San Diego 2 0 1.000 64 37 Denver 1 1 1.500 64 37 Oakland 1 1 500 64 37 Seattle 1 1 500 50 30 Kansas City 1 0 2.000 50 44 NATIONAL CONFERENCE San Francisco 2 0 1 000 50 40 Atlanta 1 1 1 000 64 Los Angeles 0 2 000 29 51 New Orleans 0 2 000 26 48 Detroit 2 0 0 1000 70 27 Tampa Bay 2 0 0 1000 70 27 Chicago 1 1 500 28 19 Green Bay 1 1 500 28 19 Minnesota 1 1 500 31 16 W L W Pct PF PA Philadelphia 0 1 045 39 27 Dallas 1 0 100 37 44 N.Y. Giants 1 1 500 62 58 Washington 1 1 200 65 68 St. Louis 1 1 200 65 68 Seattle 17, Kansas City 16 Atlanta 74, New England 21 Baltimore 85, Chicago 21 Chicago 20, New Orleans 3 Buffalo 20, New York Jets 10 Minnesota 20, Pittsburgh 18 Baltimore 17, Washington 23, New York Giants 21 Denver 23, Los Angeles 21 Dallas 41, Dallas 20 San Diego 30, Oakland 44, OT Los Angeles 21, LOS Major-league Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE CENTRAL EAST | | W | L | Pct. | Gb. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 91 | 52 | 576 | - | - | | Baltimore | 86 | 57 | 601 | - | - | | Detroit | 73 | 67 | 538 | 14% | - | | Boston | 68 | 67 | 535 | 14% | - | | Cleveland | 73 | 69 | 514 | 17% | - | | Detroit | 63 | 70 | 510 | 18 | - | | Philadelphia | 63 | 67 | 477 | 17 | - | W L Pet. GB Kansas City 89 75 518 Oakland 89 72 610 Texas 69 73 480 Minnesota 69 70 441 Chicago 60 81 628 California 61 84 628 Michigan 61 91 659 Today's Game Houston at Cleveland Kansas City 4, Oakland 3 New York 8, Boston 3 Tampa Bay 13, innings Cleveland 5, Detroit 40, 1st game 13 innings Milwaukee 5, Seattle 3 Washington 6, Portland 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE W W L G Pts GB Montreal 78 64 341 Philadelphia 78 65 341 Indianapolis 78 65 341 St. Louis 64 79 448 New York 64 79 448 New York 61 79 427 New York 61 79 427 | | W | L | PCT | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Houston | 82 | 71 | .577 | - | | Los Angeles | 82 | 60 | .477 | - | | Cincinnati | 74 | 60 | .321 | 1 | | San Francisco | 74 | 68 | .321 | 1 | | San Diego | 67 | 71 | .413 | 8 | Montreal 1, Pittsburgh 8 New York 10, Chicago 7 Los Angeles 9, Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati 1 Houston 6, San Francisco 4 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer . . . Each additional word. one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one $2.50 three $7.50 four $15.00 six $15.00 seven $8.00 nine $10.00 ten AD DEADLINES ERRORS The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS 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 Kansan business office 841-4538. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible Study, every Tues. 7:30 p.m. Parsons A & B Union. The Salt Block. 10-2 Yee-hah. Sept. 19, 2013 is in Blue Grass Time. The team has released a new game, which limited sign up on UPS with USA today. SUA TRAVEL WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS: When: October 5,1980 Cost:$14.00 These all new and contemporary townhomes are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ bathrooms, an openier, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-445-8 a.m. 5-p.m. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing Due to the poor standing of the California Angels, the previously scheduled trip ended October 17th has been cancelled. Over the hump, Boogie with Tofu Teddy this Wednesday at Off-Wall Hall $2. Take a bus, complete with all the beer you can drink, to see the hottest team in baseball take on the Minnesota Twins. Sign up now! For more info., drop by the SUA office or call 864-3477. Interested in attending a pre-fast dinner event before Koli Nidra services at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center? Call Hikilat at 212-735-9400 for reservation Wednesday, Sept. 17th 9-16 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE R. 1009 Mass. ff ENTERTAINMENT Looking for something on Sundays? 9429 Come out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 5 p.m. "till 10 a.m." membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. tf Support your local underground cartoonists! Get your debut copy of XENOPHOBIA Available now at your favorite headshop. 9-16 Blue Grass Jam every Wednesday night on the Tuesday or come play, Greens Tavern What's the Deal? Lawrence's firebreathing 8 piece horn band. Watch out! You'll be amazed. 9-19 2. bdrm, house, clean, quiet, close. 745-5207. Collect. 9-17 Over the hump! Boogie with Tofu Teddy this Wed, at Off-the-Wall Hall. $2. 9-17 FOR RENT 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now - 1½ Bedrooms. Call (604) 258-7995. You'll like our books on Southern Parkway. You'll also love our bookstore in the library. For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. May work out part of rent if Call 648-1435. 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace 1924. Will take 3 students. 2500 ff 843-743-3236 Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route, duplex, central air conditioning, all appli- cations. $250 off. C Villa Capit Apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. avails. Central air, wall to kitchen. Avail. 3% blocks south of Fraser Hall. Call 943-970-1530 at 5:30 anytime on weekends. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdms, study, kitchen dining rm. 3 bedrooms. Kitchen room. No pets. For more informa- tion call 842-4545 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Office space at Area 103 822 Mass. 650 gt. fb remodeling A, Also in the basement. remodeling B, Also in the basement. 4700 809 8777 For fall or spring, Nailshim Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private room. It is weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, funeral service to meet your needs. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you want, visit HALL, 1800 Nailshim Drive, 843-8559. If you're looking for a house in HALL, 1800 Nailshim Drive, 843-8559. Beautiful older home in law of Lawrence, neighbor's house. Family's family 'a' bakes. kitchen, dining rm. living rm. library, utility rm. and 2 full formation call 84-84554 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 formation call 84-84554 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 BRAND NEW FOUR-PLEX! For only $295 per month. You can live close to shopping, rent a studio, or distance to KU. And you'll be the first to see your new home in air, refrigerator, disposal. 2 bdrm. Call Dick Edmondson Real Estate at 814-7844 or Rob Edmondson 983-9983 to see the real estate. 9-15 KUMC duplexes+2 refurbished. 2 KUMC duplexes+2 refurbished. 2 Beautiful bouquet! Call 913-818-103-1 Large 1 bdm; unfurnished apt. water paid. Large 1 bdm; unfurnished apt. water paid. West sun exposure, on bus route. 841-7473. 3 bdm: townhouse, on KU bus route, across sports court and tennis courts $400 monthly. 81-453-553 Roommate wanted for a 3 bdm. house. 9223 15 utilities. Call Kim at 91-77-1937 Room close to Union Utilities paid $20. Room close to Union Call evening 79-189 keep trying. Like new large plus blue carp dorm carpet. old condition. Must see. Call 9-15. 9760 Non-smoking roommate to share a bdm. of a large, fully furnished $3 bdm. at Male Aldea Maltei Village Resort $416.1. Contact Mary Forest 842-1261. $461. 1 bdmr for non-moking and non-drinking 2 bdmr for smoking. Information Margarita 841-876-9 9-19 Ping Pong table. Like brand new. complete with net and垫盘. 841-1168 9-15 38 mg Honda Hawk HI 400 cc, street motorcycle. It has a rear tire with crash brake fatings, and comes with helmet, protective gear, and a spare tire. PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For use with PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS stained envelope to: D. A. 2 Productions. Dept. KI, Box 252, Tempe, Arizona 82581. New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic bedding and pillows. New Furniture. 1200 New York Bldg. 844 N 6th St. FOR SALE 1977 Datum glickup, 4 speed, excellent companion speed, maintenance free, self maintenance, bait 843-797-12 after 5 p.m. (8:30 a.m.) for delivery. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-506-9026, 843-506-9036. WATERBED MATTERSES, $26.98, 3 year guarantee; WHITE LIGHT, 70.0 Mass. of quartz, $44.50 MATTRESSER, Orthopedic sets from $29. Sports shoes, one block west of 8th and one block east of 10th. 75 Honda ST 90. Good Condition, Great Gas Mileage. 600 Call Sarah, 841-2581. 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Still in warranty. Good condition, Info: 814-9674. 9-15 Brand new Smith-Corona electric type- phone and a stenographer 9-17 454-382-382 Black Vinyl recliner, oversized arm chair, gatered (no heater), cash only. Call B-147- 806-239-1885. Unti-cycley $550. Frie l森会. cal 1844-65-79 and kak for Fremont to cal 1843-65-79. Cal 1844-65-79 cal 1843-65-79 CARPET for dorm room. $79. CURTAINS must sell. 74-116. PARACHUTE. 8-16 must sell. 74-116. Musical Instruments 1929 Gibson L-4 Gibson Bass Guitar with case $25.99 with case $25.99 1912 Niles Upright Piano good tone钥匙 $325. Nice solid top student cello also good tone钥匙 $325. Nice solid top student cello only please Greg Bass 743-675-894-9 2-94 1978 28208 Datain S speed all Lux. pkg. 1978 28208 Datain S speed condition. Must. 1978 8101 Call 842-8250. Must. 9-17 Water Beds, hybrid foam water type, Water Beds, hybrid foam water type. Shopping Center. 842-260-9000. 9-17 1975 TRT, perfect condition, low mileage, cheap, must sell. 843-9334. 9-17 Head Comp. 1 Tennis racket—4 5/8 L grip. 2 yrs, old, excellent condition. $25. Call 841-8222. 9-15 71 Camaro in excellent shape, new paint, in-dash stereo, like new, very clean—call Tom after 5, 841-1838. 9-15 Must sell "73 Mazda Wagon-AT, A/C, AM/ FM. $1200. 843-5935. 9-16 1975 Toyota Land Cruiser $2000 or best price. Toyota Pros Fn Pros 24, 28, (local) eve's. **9-10** **9-18** Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them—1. A study Makes sense to use them—1. A study exam preparation. New Analysis of West- ern Civilization Notes. Malls Bookstore and Oread Book Cater. Malls Bookstore and Oread Book Westendown Condo, 2 bdm. Home on top of the condo floor, central air, microwave, truss comp, dishwasher, custom made curtain, custom gauges, custom bath mat, guest courses, $46,000. Call Reza or 9-19 Roller SL-81 Movie Camera, $100. Php 843- 0983 9-16 75 Flat K19 Convertible for sale, Mags, dued. 82-9710. 30 mph sharp, Pricem 9-16 uice 84-9710. FOUND Red pocketbook in front of Bailey Hall Wed. Night. Please call 864-4926 and identify. 9-17 HELP WANTED Needed Immediately-School and personal graduate student with a disability. Live in or on call. Set hours. Call Dana Wray 842- 9315, 841-2972, 843-1011. 9-17 GRADUATE ASSISTANT, ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE MANAGER of Kansas. Lawrence, Assist with special ordinate activities of several committees. Monthly position. Position available immediately to the Board of Directors for a month. Position available immediately to the bility of renewal. Application deadline for position. Contact Office of the Executive description contact Office of the Executive designed by Executive Director of Kansas, Lawrence 66451 934-864-494 improve affirmative action, equal opportunities 9-17 Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must have general office skills and type at least 10 years. Must be able to meet Must be eligible for work study. Contact Hindsman 864-6647 or Rodgers 864-6647. CUNSELOR: The University of Kanaa, career and personal counseling to disadvantaged students, seeking an individual to provide academic, career and personal counseling to disadvantaged students, and providing application deadlines (September 15-$14,000). Application deadline (September 15-$14,000). Application directly to Supportive Educational Services. Military Science Anthropology. Apply Research Asst. Wanted. Three-Quarter time experience; ability to work independently with library, research techniques and drafting skills, and a background in chemistry or a related science are desirable pending on qualifications. Apply by 5 p.m., Monday, December 10, 2015, 2015 Malot, Phone 864-4673. Action-Equal Opportunity 9-17 ployer. SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART MEMBER-grams, coordinate membership drives and grants, ability to work on a degree, ability to work with people, organizational ability, typing skills, familiarity with computer resources and names of 3 references to Ann Wilkund Kesar, 66045. An equal opportunity /affirmative care. Knowledge of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veterans status, national origin, age. Bureau of Child Research has opening for positions in the Child Care Maternity 10-15 hours per week to conduct assessments for adolescent use. Must have own business for afternoons or evenings. Excellent interpersonal skills. Joly at 111 Haworth 864-3446. Application Email to babysitting.wk@babycare.com. We are an opportunity employer. I lost a brown billfold Friday (10/5) of my 63rd birthday. Please contact Jack at 841-5345 or mail to: Jack@hacking.com PROJECT COORDINATOR: The University Services is seeking an individual to coordinate staff, recruitment, evaluation and staff counseling, recruitment, evaluation and staff work experience required. Salary $18,000-25,000 per year, December 19, 1800. Applied to January 19, 1800. Interested applicants must have a bachelor's degree in educational Services, Military Science or Lawrence, Kansas 60045. The University of Pennsylvania offers opportunity as employee action employer. 9-19 Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Inside blue backpack, taken from my apet. at 1359 Abbey Road, Birmingham, 845-7231 or 845-916 No questions asked. 9.8 Leather 1-pocket case (brown with black zipper) Hewlett-Packard, but pass initials DIF. Newport, but pass initials DIF. WANTED: Intramural Football officials Apply in to Robinson. 864-3546. 9-15 LOST Female grey kitten 6-7 months old. White female horse Ridge Court Area 9-17. 841-4818. 1 pair of rim-less style glasses in brown case. Lost in the vicinity of Watson and Strong. Please call 843-254. Thanks. 9-18 MISCELLANEOUS Yee-hah! September 19-21 is Blue Grass Time again. Camp out with SUA at the 9th annual Winfleet Blue Grass Fetish and are limited so sign up with SUA 9-14. XENOPHOBIA *Lawrence's finest armure* margalite. On sale now at the Parisian Hotel 9-16 Attention all interested canse enthusiasts. Plan your visits to THE VALEL, weekend get-together or annual meeting on Wed. Sept. 17th at 7:00 PM at the State Theater in St. Paul, Union. See you there! There are pitchers of Budweiser and Natural Light for one dollar under the rainbow on 23rd, Monday, Tuesday, and 3-9 p.m. Greens Tavern. 9-19 NOTICE We want to work for you, Give us the chance. NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CLUB membership card gets you $1.00/highchip all night long. Only at your place, the CLUB LOUSE where "Partying is our busi- ness." Vote Enterprise For Freshman Class Officers DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night. Get a McDonald's drink. $3-$4. If billed at McDonald's, you can drink Free rainbows. 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. B.10 PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR Everyday sunday at 12 noon, $10 pitchers, Tid and Mihch Partying with $15 pitchers. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control Clinic. Dedicated vaginal ligation lab (9 am-9 n.m.) (31-35) 440. W108 St. Overland, Park, Kansas w/ HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. EVERY 7-10 p.m. enjoy $10 highfive on Thursday. Backgammon Damian Gomez 80 Locust 842-9429. "Partying is our business." LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights): Drinks are only on weekdays; eats every Wednesday for once. The ladies are not invited to the Club, 508 Locust, 842-9429. 9-30 SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LUOUSE 3 for moments from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday thursday. PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern based company, our part-time information team Westland, westland information STEP WESTLAND, STEP WESTLAND In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for your guests, WEIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUISE. We offer a 2-hour daytime only $2 only. $2 only. Drink and drown at a club! THE CLUB LOUISE. 508 Locust. The club membership available. "9-30 is our business." TGIF AT LOUISIEN'S BAR with $1.25 pitchers, 65c shoes and 50c draws. Every Friday from 2 till 6. Be there—Aloha! tof Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-691-769 FORT KNOX MINI WAREHOUSE Singing messages for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. tf Take a break after classes at LOUISE's BAR 1000 Mass. Afternoon classes every week! (behind K-Mart) 1717 W. 31st St. 841-4244 TENNIS PLAYERS: There’s still a lot of good tennis winters, especially in Call. Cat David at 814-8544 for great prices on string and courts, and K. UAT var. Skydive. Look before you leap. Learn how to do it. Lower student-instructor ratio, superi- or safety record, 7 year history. Contact Jay Koch, 144 N.W. 9th St., Topeka, Ka. 66117. 8:16 U-STORE IT The Mofet Beers Band has an immediate opening at 843-5068 or 843-9334. 9-17 ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED CANOE TRAVEL WEEKEND getaway this fall. Attend a canoe trip organization meeting on Wednesday at Room at the Student Union. See you there! Experienced skydivers in enrolled in 12 + hours and interested in working with SCR. SCR, SCSR, NSCR, NW contact Rick (913) 283- 0235, 14 N. W. 58th St., Topeka, Ks. 66117. ATTENTION: Established brace band is MATTEUR. Serious infection may Bentos injections only Call 844-326-7960 Fair Kittens, Guaranteed cute, cuddly and adorable. Call 842-1558 9-16 LOUISISE WEST DRINK & BROWN Tangue after 6 $4.00 girls $3.50 girls All the coolest wines ever drink 2nd & Michigan Come to THE HARBOUR LITES for the first-class dining at the hotel, giving in setting in front of the tube. Tongtown, from 7-10 p.m. all LIER beers 695 cans bottles; and from 8-10 p.m. all WINE beers 245 cans bottles. First-Class Dive, 1013 Massachusetts, 9-15 Over the hump! Boogie with Tofu Teddy this Wed. at Off-the-Wall Hall. 9-17 8-17 SAM SAM SIG=GIF You. So You're closed cause KU hasn't been the same since. We've had a lot of great times every time we'v been everything! Have a HAPPY BIRTHDAY and beware of fountains and lakes, especially with Alpha Phi P.S. Get payments for TRADI Free rainbows. 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. 9-19 Green's Liquor has ice cold强kegs and excellent tapping equipment. 9-26 PSCHICY SELF- AWARNESS CLASS: Learn about the aura, chakras, spirit guides, self-healing. Starts very soon. Cost $10 per session, for 10 weeks. Earn 9-24 841-9681 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Pleisporters and 1974 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. SERVICES OFFERED Instant color passport photos Immigration. Color & B/W Tom. 841-7294 9-16 THE BIKE GARAGE=Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage speciality="Tune-ups" and "Total Overhaul." Call 841-728-6117. TAN.Ltd. offering $10 discount to K.U. TAN.Ltd. offering $10 discount to K.U. in Lawrence, Guaranteed no burning, and no dangerous ultraviolet rays. Call for appointment. Monday thru Saturday. (9-19) For the finest complete service on most imports—STRAIGHT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Datsan, Flat Honda, Toyota. 843-242-4421 Patient tutor for Germ 104, West Cliv. and Eng. 101, 843-9806, for Judge 102, 843-9806. RESUMES PREPARED to suit your budget resumes written and typed 9-14 2787 evening calls 9-16 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 PM 2½ eACM HOUSE OF USHE: 238 MAJESTICETTES & LARRENCE & CANNAS 6044 & 1913 B42 3619 ENSTIN'S TUTORS. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call 841-7638. English, grammar, compilers, typing, calling, typing 841-7640. 7960. 9-17 Flats lesson-Expertized teacher accent- ing new students, beginning through ad- vanced. Call Diane at 841-0429 (evenings). TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. tf Experienced typism -term papers, ibis, ibis Experienced typing -term papers, ibis, spelling corrected. 843-954, Mrs. Wright, tl. tl. Experienced K. U. ttyp, IBM Correcting Team of Experts for K. U. ttyp, Sandy, evening and weekend, 7/4 Reports, dissertations, recues, legal forms Rockford University, 1986-90 Ellen or Jeannam, 841-2172. 12-8 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast tp- e nights to 845-220-1855, evenings to 10 and weekends. Typetab Editor, IBM Pigs/Elec, Quality welcome; editing/layout, Call John, 881 welcome; editing/layout, Call John, 881 Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with the company. Betty, 842-669-1 and after 5 weeks, with tf Experienced typed-thesis, dissertations, conducting library selection, selecting Barb after 5 p.m. 842-2310 2001-2002 ENCORE COPY CORPS 314 E. 56th St., Bedford Park, IL 60907 Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, c. Call Gayla at 842-3035, www.faculty.gaylahouse.edu For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tf RIDERS desert Wichita Monday A.M.DEC 9-13 6:34-6:36 or 6:18-6:58 Descend 9-15 WANTED 2 nice, nonmoking, roommates 3 berm, 4 bedrooms 5 baths 6 utilities $125 or $150 (2) utilities 'Call 749-107-198 'Call 749-107-198 Buying gold. Paying $50-$110 for men's watches. Buying watches at 60th St. 2120 W 22th, Holiday Plaza, 942-928-5900. The University of Kansas, McColum Laboratory, full-time Laboratory Equipment Repair and maintenance completed the eighth school grade; and completed the eighth period of experience or a comparable period (other than correspondence study), in the laboratory equipment; or a combination of laboratory equipment and a combination of laboratory equipment. Starting salary is $799 per month with registration; candidates should contact Personnel and apply for employment. Application deadline September 17, 1800. Action Equal Opportunity Employer. 9-16 GOLD-SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings, Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling ear- we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-7414 542-2688 10-6 Roommate. Beautiful spacious home to live in. Roommates $110 per month plus 1/6 of utilities. Call 877-235-4955. The University Daily Roommate to share 2 bdm. *ap$ 105/m* plus half help费. Call Al at 842-1683-19-16 A SERIOUS IOIUS interested in playing in a maximum R&B group (Rock and Roll) Must be able to play well and able to bend. Call. 842-1560. Call. 842-1560. 9-15 Roommate at the Jayhawk Towerers towers All utilities paid. Call 6-915. 30th. Anytime. Roommate for spacious 2 bdrm. apm+ + 15 utilities Contact Jill. 0170. 9-17 Male wanted to share mobile home, non- related to responsible student. $8. 746-210-3980 9-17 ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM ) SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! If you've got it, Kansas classifies 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: Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 15 words or less 1 2 3 4 5 time times times times times $ 8.25 $ 8.25 $ 8.25 $ 8.30 $ 8.35 additional words 02 03 04 05 06 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 AD DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 15, 1980 Deadlocked game fails to sour Seurer's opener ByGENEMYERS Sports Editor The Kansas football team pleads not guilty to charges of cowardice, whimpering and complicacy. The team's defense is morale, hard work and guts. Kansas could have gone for a two-point conversion and victory Saturday against the Oregon Ducks in Eugene, Ore. Instead the Jayhawks kicked an extra point and opened the season with A similar decision would have caused a Big Eight crowd to start a rousing rendition of "Chicken hawks, Chickenhawks, Chickenhawks, But the non-conference Doppa fans simply booed. "THAT'S TOO BAD for them. Isn't it?" said Frank Seurer, who directed KU to the tying touchdown with 15 seconds left in the game. He was victorious in the victory for him; it was a patch-up victory for us." KU is 1-4 in morale and 0-1 for the season. But that 0-1 record is the best KU has had this late in the season in four years. Since a 5-4 record in 1976, KU has finished 3-7-1, 1-10 and 3-8. The ghosts of seasons past led KU head coach Don Fambrough to turn conservative and play for the tie. "I want everyone to know that I'm not satisfied nor is the team satisfied with a tie," Fambrough said. "But we were 10,000 miles from home and we didn't give up." There was no hard that I couldn't take a chance on losing. "If we don't come out a loser it is a little easier to show that the hard work has paid off. I felt that it was so important to win the first game. I got to thinking that if winning is so important than not losing is important. And a tie is the second best thing." RICH BOOKS, Oregon's head coach, called the tie disgusting. "I feel it's a loss," he said. "We were capable of winning, but we didn't." The tie turns our arm back. The game had been all but lost when KU failed to make a first down on fourth and inches at the Duck 20-yard line. There was 3:42 left to be played. But Oregon failed to run out the clock and gave KU 93 seconds and the ball 62 yards from the goal. Then freshman quarterback Seurer (pronounced SIGH-eR) slowly began KU's rally. He missed David Verser with a pass on first down. He was sacked on second down but Oregon defensive end Gordon Bledsoe was penalized for tackling Seuer by his chin strap. "I TRIED TO take charge", Seurer said. "I was telling everyone that it was no or never. I was telling everyone that it was no or never." The 15-yard face mask penalty brought the ball to midfield. A 15-yard pass to Lester Mickens brought the ball to the Duck 35-yard line. A 9-yard run by Kerwin Bell and two passes to Wayne Capers put the ball on the 14 with 22 seconds remaining. Mickens slanted over the middle and dropped a pass. But on the next play Verser ran the same pattern and grabbed a pass at the 4. He rolled into the end zone. The decision to go for the extra point and the tie came quickly from the sideline. Bruce Kallmeyer, a freshman from Shawne Mission South who had missed a field goal attempt in the first half, split the uprights and the game was tied at 7. "KALLMEYER COULD have made me look bad and could have made the football team look bad," Fambrough said. "Here I was worried about having a freshman quarterback in there going for two points and what do I do but send a freshman in to beck." The players did not object to the decision. "I knew we'd go for one," Harry Sydney, fullback and offensive captain, said. "You must remember that a tie is better than a loss. Next week it's no wins and no losses, and it's starting all over again." "I was comfortable with the choice," said Bell, who won the starting halfback job with 69 yards in 20 carries. "It is early in the season and it's only the first game." Bell and Sydney both had problems late in the game. Twice KU had the ball deep in Oregon territory on third down and inches to go. The first time, with eight minutes to play, Sydney was stopped on both third and fourth downs. The second time, with four minutes to play and after Dave Horn had blocked a Duck punt, Bell was stoned on third and fourth downs. "We were let down after the second time," Bell said. "I figured that Oregon would keep the ball and run out of the clock." "MOST PEOPLE thought it was old KU all over again," Sydney said. "it had stopped ourselves and had made mistakes. But we proved that we could come back." Oregon, which had lost to Stanford 35-25 by a touchdown. But the Duke's also overpowered 60-54. "I'm sure we surprised them," Fambrouch said. "It was obvious that they thought it would be a runaway. They were ready to run up a lot of points." The only Dick points came on the first play of the final quarter. Quarterback Reggie Ogburn scored from the 1-yard line and scored 97 yards, 81-yard line and 54-yard line for a fullback Reggie Brown's 44-yard run. The KU defense kept Oregon under control the rest of the game. The defensive front three, Stan Gardner, Jeff Fox and Greg Smith, played every play and led the defensive charge. JIAHYAW NOTES—Freshman Frank Seurer entered Saturday's game early in the second quarter when starter Steve Smith was hit in the head. Smith could have gone back in, but Seurer's performance, 12-for-21 and 103 yards, kept him out. Seurer is listed as the startler for the next game, which is Saturday in Memorial Stadium against third-ranked Pittsburgh. The Pitt Panthers committed nine turnovers but still beat Boston College 14-6 Saturday. The Pitt defense, led by All-America Hugh Green, carried the generous offense. The KUOregon game will be televised on the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network twice this week, ESPN, which is available through Sunflower Cablevision, will broadcast the game at 2 a.m. Tuesday and 11 p.m. Wednesday. LaCock paces KC 4-3; Royals' title two away Bv United Press International OAKLAND, Calif. -- Pete LaCock hit his first home run of the season yesterday to give the Kansas City Royals a 4-3 victory and reduce their lead for winning the American League West to two. Paul Spitlottorf gave a run in each of the first two innings, but had not allowed another runner past second base when he was relieved after the seventh inning. Dan Quisenberry recorded his third pitch out the most in the American League, while Spitlottorf gained his 12th victory against 10 losses. LaCock's homer off Brian Kingman, 7-18, gave the Rovals a 4-2 lead in the sixth inning. Second-place Oakland took an 8-2 lead, 10-3 in the first hit a bates-loaded single in the turtle to the six. George Brett spent his eighth consecutive game on the bench yesterday. The major-league's leading hitter, with a 396 average, still has a sore right hand. Brett needs 55 at-bats in the league for a win against the American League batting championship. Brett must have 3.1 times at bat in each of those 18 games to have a chance to qualify. But Royal officials still do not know when Brett will be able to come off the bench. Kansas City plays again tomorrow night in Royal Stadium against California. The Royals, if Texas beats Oakland tonight, could clinch the division with a victory tomorrow. In the American League East pennant race, New York beat Boston 5-3 and Baltimore lost to Toronto 4-3. The Yankees hold a five-game lead over Baltimore with 20 to play. The Yankee victory was their seventh straight in Boston's Fenway Park and marked the first time since 1971 that the Red Sox had been swept at home for a season series. Kansas City Royals' Magic Number $\textcircled{2}$ Seahawks hold off rally; Seattle nips Chiefs 17-16 LAURA NEWMANN/Kansan staff By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Nick Lowery booted a club-record 57-yard field goal yesterday, but it wasn't enough to push the Kansas City Chiefs past Seattle. The Seahawks used Jimm Zorn touchdown passes to slip by the Chiefs 17-16. Seattle took a 17-10 lead in the first half, but ended up having stave off a late-game rally by the Chiefs. Kansas City quarterback Steve Fuller hit Henry Marshall with six seconds left in the first half with a 1-yard TD pass. Fuller ended the day 20 of for 38 to 148. Zorn was 17 of 27 for 184. Lowery, who beat out Kansas City's all-time leading scorer Jian Stenner this year, tied for the third-longest field goal in NFL history. Carlyle had 16 points and Tony Franklin's 59-yard have been longer. Seattle scored on three straight drives midway through the first half to build its 17-point lead. Zorn marched the Seahawks 67 yards for the first score, a 12-yard pass to Sam McCullum. Seattle then went 50 yards in seven plays with a 7-yard pass to Sherman Smith. Fuller began Kansas City's city rally by moving the Chiefs 83 yards in eight plays in the last two minutes of the first half. J.T. Smith sustained the drive by catching three passes for 44 yards. Lowrey's first field goal was set up by Gary Barbaro's interception with nine minutes left in the third quarter. The rookie free agent booted a 50-yard field goal that time, and then followed with a 23-yarder after Gari Spain recovered at the Seattle 7 with 6:25 left in the game. Kansas City's record dropped to 0-2 after a 31- exhibition season. Seattle evened its record to 1- 0. Now, You Can Be A Swinging Single! Enter the Intramural Tennis Tournament (singles). ΣX ΣX The deadline for entering is Wednesday, Sept. 17, 5:00 p.m. 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services 5 1950 DERBY GAMES September 17th 6:00 - 12:00 p.m. Potter's Pavilion Music by Sunburst Greg's Country Western Band And Special Attraction Moffet-Beers Band Tickets are $4.00 in advance purchase from any KU sorority, $5.00 at the gate. 9F Valuable Coupon TACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd Get One Sancho Free Buy Two Sanchos offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. Get One Sancho Free with this coupon Good Until Sept. 26, 1980 "The Proof is in the Taco" --- CORN DOGS BUY ONE — GET ONE FREE! 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I understand there is no obigation (ΩM) Army Navy □ Air Force ZCN090 State Zip Name Address City Enrolled at! to graduate int (Please Print) Sex M F Apt___ Phone___ (School) Decree $\Delta$ (Month Year) 1 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN Tuesday, September 16, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 17 USPS 650-640 School to add requirements By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter The School of Education next fall will expand its undergraduate program from four to five years Dale Scannell, dean of the school, said yesterday. staff Reporter The new program, which will require 160 rather than about 130 hours for graduation, will be mandatory for students who will be freshmen in 1981 and optional for sophomores in the school. "It was clear to us that teachers need to be professionally educated before being certified to teach," Scannell said. "And you can't do that with only 20 hours of experience." THE SCHOOL DECIDED to expand its undergraduate program last year in response to a rash of new federal and state regulations, Scannell said. As a result of the regulations, all teachers must now be qualified to instruct handicapped students and every school should be prepared to teach bilingual students, he said. There was concern about how reading, 'riting and 'rilticism were being taught', he said. In the same way, the director was To comply with the laws, Scannell said, the school had to decide either to extend its program, or cut back on its liberal arts requirements. THE NEW FIVE-YEAR program is the result of that decision. "There'll be a lot more practical experience," Scannell said. "Students will do some observing, some aiding and some tutoring. But overall, much more time will be spent in the schools." The early exposure to schools will help become teachers, they really want to become teachers, be trained. The program also will require that students specialize in one subject. At the end of the program, students will have accumulated 4 1/2 years of undergraduate credit and one-half year of graduate credit, Scannell said, and they will have a strong foundation in educational levels—grade, middle and high school. Students in the present program are only certified to teach at one level, he said. ALTHOUGH THE school's faculty and administration have been working on the new program since December, Scannell said, education students will not be told of changes in the program until it reaches its final form this winter. However, several students said yesterday that they were not going to the program from advisors or from other sites. "I'm kind of leery of it," said Deb Lewis, Winfield junior. "I don't know all the details, but I don't think it would be fair to make students take classes they're not interested in." The School of Education Assembly has not filled in the basic outline of the program yet, but one member said students probably would spend some of the extra year in paid teaching positions. OTHER STUDENTS like what they had heard about the five-year program. "Personally, I think the program is a good idea," said Tina Hanna. Topkappa sophomore. "When you see the program you'll look at your resume and say, Wow, she's got a lot of experience. It makes the students look good." Although the extended program will be optional for her, Cora Stagner, Towanda junior, said she probably would stay for five years. Several of the faculty members said they also were sold on the new program. "I'm very supportive," Nita Sundybe, professor of curriculum and instruction, said. The students will be more marketable because the curriculum is more contextual background and greater field experience." SCANNELL SAID graduates of the KU program probably would be highly recruited and have higher starting salaries than other graduates. "If students consider that, the fifth year won't loom as large as it sounds," he said. Several faculty members said that they had high hopes for the program's future, but that they would not have been part of it. Scannell said the assembly was not sure how junior transfer students could get freshman and sophomore field experience. One graduate student in education, who asked not to be identified, said students could be drawn away to college with less stringent four-year programs. "Some of the older people heard about the five students who they were glad they were graduating, "he said. On the other hand, students also could be attracted to the KU program because it offers more detailed training, said Thomas Erb, professor of curriculum and instruction. Basketball game in conflict with finals "If you've got a quality program, it will attract people," he said. Staff Reporter By CINDI CURRIE The date of the KU-Morehead State Men's basketball game has been bounced around the month of December because of University rules restricting final-week basketball games to The Morehead State game is Tuesday, Dec. 9, which is the stop day, a scheduled study of study for the state's sports teams. The University Senate calendar committee had told the athletic department in December 1978 that the game was in violation of University Law and that 3.7 and could not be approved by the committee. The rule states, "The only intercollegiate athletic contests that may be scheduled during a final examination period shall be conference and national tournament events, the scheduling of which cannot be controlled by the University, and contests that are scheduled at home on a Saturday. Exceptions to this rule may be made only with permission of the calendar committee." THE RULE WAS adopted in 1970 and amended in Aniir 1978. Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, said the rule made it difficult to schedule games around exam schedules because negotiations for game contracts begin four years in advance. "The December schedule is tough to guess on because of the time schedules on the exams until about a month in yearly calendar." "It's just difficult to get the necessary 25 games in with the limitations." Robert L. Hohn, former chairman of the committee, said yesterday that the Morehead State game and two games scheduled for the fall 2015 season not approved by the committee two years ago. BOTH THE ARIZONA game scheduled for Monday, Dec. 7, 1981 and the Bowling Green game scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 9, 1981 may be in violation of rule 1.3.7. In 1978, the calendar committee told the athletic department that the Morehead State game violated the rule and should be rescheduled. The game was rescheduled from Dec. 10 to Dec. 9. Last week, the calendar committee recommended that the date be changed again and sent its recommendation to Marcum and George L. Gorsky of the University Senate executive committee. However, the calendar committee later changed the date of stop day to Dec. 9, and the Morehead game was again in violation of the rule. WORTH SAID THAT if the Morehead game was again in violation of University rules, SenEx would recommend that the chancellor and Marcum cancel the game. Marcum said he would try to get the game rescheduled for Monday Dec. 8, after the Dec. 6 The date change would depend on whether Morehead State can also move. Marcum said. He said he would consider playing the game on a Sunday rather than canceling it. Marcum said that he had thought all the scheduling conflicts in this season's schedule had been resolved. "It was brought to our attention some time ago and it thought it been resolved," he said. IF THE MOREHEAD State game is canceled, it could cost the University $27,000, Susan Wachter, assistant business manager of inter- collegiate athletics, said. "If the game had to be canceled," she said, we would lose the guarantee on Morehead State and at least one of its opponents. She said that the guarantee KU paid moreheal State was $4,000 and that the project revenue was $2,800. James B. C. Carothers, calendar committee chairman, said the reason for the rule was to provide as few distractions as possible for students during finals week. "I think the aim is essentially for the benefit of the student body rather than the basketball team." 100 Former President Gerald R. Ford and former Missouri Gov. Christopher "Kit" Bond answer questions at a press conference in Kansas City, Mo. Former president attacks Carter's economic policies Bv BILL VOGRIN KANSAS CITY, Mo--Former President Gerald R. Ford strongly criticized President Carter's economic policy last night, labeling it "unnecessary" and saying that Carter "has screwed it up." Ford's remarks came at an evening press conference that preceded a $100-a-plate fundraising dinner for former Missouri Republican Governor Christopher "Kiit" Bond. Bond is challenging Democratic Gov. Joe Teasdale for that office. Staff Reporter FORD SAID THAT Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan had the issues on his side in the presidential race, and that he believed the issues, and not "off-the-cuff" remarks would decide the election in November. "President Carter's economic policy has been a disaster, a catastrophy." Ford said. "Carter and his staff are better politically aware and are at managing the country, and that bad." "President Carter has really screwed it up. The rate of inflation is now about 13 percent, the prime interest rate is at 12.13 percent and unemployment is high. The farmers and working people of America are going to remember that on Nov. 4th. "When Carter took office the rate of inflation was 4.8 percent, the prime interest rate was at 6.14 percent, jobs were going up," said Mr. Ford. "And now everything is just the reverse." Ford said that he thought independent presidential candidate John Anderson should "They've blown it." be allowed to debate Reagan and Carter and speculated that Carter's refusal to debate was because "he doesn't want to try to defend a record that would be hard to defend." "I think it was a mistake for many reasons for President Carter not to participate in the debate," he said. "Anderson has a right to be president and the American people need to know his ideas." THE FORMER PRESIDENT also said it was a mistake by the Carter administration to release information last month about the experimental 'Stealth' aircraft. "The Carter administration has made the defense department a political instrument. The decision by the Carter administration to allow the Obama administration to reason was a serious mistake." Ford said. Ford refused to comment directly on the hostage crisis in Iran, now in its 318th day, but implied that he thought action should have been taken. The failed helicopter rescue mission last April. Although he agreed that the coming election was important, Ford said he did not see the benefit of his decision. "I did support the action taken by President Caitlin. It had both fun and tragedy, it was really too bad." Ford mentioned that military experts later said that there had not been enough preparation or equipment for a successful mission. I have a lot of faith in the election process, our form of government and the judgement of the American people. I am not a pessimist. We have had crises before, and, despite all the problems Carter has created, the next four years can turn it around." candy Lasserter, 22, from Hebron, Ky, urges KU students to repent their sins. She says she is a displeaser of Jed Smock, an evangelist who was at KU two weeks ago. See story page 5. STEVE DICK/Jansan Afghans evade Soviet grip,prof says By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter Since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Soviets have found it hard to control the Afghanis, said an African native who was guest lecturer in James Pearson's political science class last night. Afghan rebels are making life so miserable for the Soviets that they may not try an invasion, said Darwool Farahi, assistant professor of politics at the University of Minnesota administration at Axelh College in Kawasan City, Mo. Farahi recently visited Afghanistan and was able to talk with rebels in the provinces and Kabul, the capital, where much of the fighting is taking place. "The Soviet Union is having a job to do," he said. "This is not like Czechoslovakia where the came rollin in and nobody objected." Farina "Some of the tricks the Afghan are using are driving the Soviets bananas," he said. He cited one example in which magnet-topped pumpkins filled with dynamite are floated down the streams where the Soviets have built steel bridges. Although the Soviets rule many of the major cities and paved roads during the day, the M3A was not used. "At night, the Soviets control nothing but their garrisons." he said. Many of the rebels he talked to had an unrealistic view of the United States, he said. Farahi estimated that it would take 400,000 Soviet troops, considerably more than the estimated 100,000 troops there now, to stop Russia from coming across the Pakistan border. Many were disappointed that the United States had no military aid because they were fighting the Soviets. Afghanistan, considered a non-aligned buffer state since achieving its independence in 1917 from the British, was invaded earlier this year by the Soviets after President Hafzallah Amin, ruler of the Soviet supported government, was attacked by a Soviet choice, President Babak Karmal. Farahi is a KU graduate with a doctorate in political science and is a graduate of Kabul University. Hay fever victims seek relief By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter Record high pollen counts in Lawrence last week have caused an increase in the number of students seeking treatment for hay fever. Martin Monger, a researcher at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said yesterday. "Hay fever has been particularly noticeable and persistent this year," Wollmann said. "The pollen count is among the highest in recent decades, probably because of the extreme heat this summer." The pollen count is a relative measure of the quantity of pollen grains in the air. Menorah Medical Center in Kansas City, Mo, is the pollen count center for this area, Wollmann said. Hay fever season is in full swing, as many sufferers will testify. Usually, from mid-August until the first frost, hay fever victims will suffer runny noses, watery eyes and scratchy throats, said Jean DeForest, a Lawrence allergy technician. 'We thought we had a dry enough summer to dry up the ragged, but we had just enough rain that it came out in all its glory." `DeForest` said. "The worst times of the day for hafy fever victims are the mornings, when the pollen rises into the air, and the evenings, when it settles back down." "This week has been pretty miserable, but there's nothing I can do about it," Huber said. Ann Huber, Boca Raton, Fla., sophomore, is a life-long hay fever sufferer who must take precautions to avoid the symptoms. Antihistamines and decongestants also are prescribed, or in more persistent cases, allergy medication. For relief of hay fever symptoms, allergy specialists suggest staying indoors in airconditioning and sleeping in a room with the windows closed. Chewing on a honey comb is a cure suggested by Shelly Maizalish, Prairie Village senior. But hay fever symptoms vary and different cures must be used for different patients, DD. "Maybe it an old wives' tale, but it works for some people in the jar come with cob and salt, and just chutney." Weather A LITTLE WARMER It should be partly cloudy and warm today, with a high in the mid 90s, and a slight chance of rain, according to the National Weather Service in Topeka. Winds will be out of the north at 10-20 mph. Toulight's low should be in the upper 50s under partly cloudy skies. University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Turkish military arrests extremists ANKARA, Turkey—Turkish security forces marching three abreast swept through cities and slums across the country yesterday, arresting hundreds of suspected terrorists in an effort to stifle resistance to the four-day-old coup. The crackdown on Turkey's left and right-wing extremists came amid reports that the country's six-man ruling military jota had selected a new leader. Government sources said Turgut Ozal, undersecretary for the office of prime minister and the coordinator of Turkey's economic recovery measures, will visit Turkey this week. Oval has been placed in charge of all economic affairs by the junta but has not been appointed a minister. An official spokesman for the junta emerged last month after the court sentenced him to six years in prison. The six-man army junta began its first full week in power by ordering Turkey's 60,000 striking workers back to their jobs and conducting a nationwide search for persons suspected of involvement in the political violence which caused 20 deaths a day before Friday's military takeover. Sources close to the junta also said they expected a major purge within 48 hours of civilian provincial governors, all of whom were appointed by the ousted Demirel regime. Some of the locally elected mayors also were expected to lose their jobs. Carter says Reagan "under wraps" President Carter attacked Ronald Reagan yesterday for making a campaign issue of the U.S. hostages in Iran and suggested that Reagan's staff had the GOP presidential nominee "under wraps" to keep him out of trouble. The president was seeking Hispanic votes in campaign stops in Corpus Christi and Houston, Texas. At a town meeting, he drew an enthusiastic response from the predominantly Mexican audience when he criticized Reagan for Meanwhile, in Washington, Reagan described Carter as being isolated from his own party and "unable to fulfill the primary responsibilities of his Joining hands with Republican incumbents, about 150 GOP candidates and his running mate, George Bush, Reagan assailed the Democratic leadership in Congress and said the party was now "a mere shadow of its former greatness." Reagan was to leave yesterday to follow Carter's trail in Texas, campaigning today in Corpus Christi and Houston. Nixon may testify in ex-agents' trial WASHINGTON—Jury selection began yesterday in the long-delayed trial of two ex-FBI chiefs accused of approving illegal break-ins in the early 1970s. A defense lawyer said he "very likely" would call Richard Nixon to testify. W. Mark Felt, 67, the FBI's former associate director, and Edward S. Miller, 51, its former intelligence chief, went on trial after $2\frac{1}{2}$ years of legal haggles over procedures for preventing release of classified information during testimony. they are accused of conspiring to approve illegal break-ins, known as *black bag jails*, wiretaps and mail-openings in a hunt for migrants mentioned in the New York Times. Felt and Müller contend they are innocent because former acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray, who faces a separate trial on the same charges, is sued by the agency for alleged misconduct. Felt's lawyer, Brian GetTINGS Jr., said Nixon had agreed to testify if he was given one week's notice. Nixon apparently could be useful to the defense in describing a 1970 convention he had with FBI Director J. Edgar Hover about the fugitive trial. Lawvers say Garwood mentally ill CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C.-Marine Ptc. Robert R. Garwood, who faces court-martial on charges of desertion and collaborating with the enemy, will be sentenced to a prison term in October. Civilian attorney Vaughan Taylor said Garwood was dropped on his head as an infant in an accident that led to mental illness. He said the defense would prove that Garwood's actions resulted from a mental disease that was rooted in his childhood and triggered by the pressures of cantivity. Garwood also was abandoned by his mother and raised by his grand-mother, Taylor said. Garwood is accused by former prisoners of war of joining forces with the let Cetang after being taken captive while driving a Jeep outside Dae Nang in 2017. He was later arrested and convicted. He is the only Vietnam-era serviceman to face a court-martial on such charges But Taylor stressed that, by raising the issue of insanity, Garwood was not admitting to the fact that he is accused, such as informing on and over American POWs. Taylor said Garwood had gone into "fits and tirades" on an airplane returning from Vietnam last year when he was told that both his mother and grandmother had died while he was in communist hands. He said a Marine guard who was present at the time should be called as a witness. TOMAH, Wis.—A Cuban immigrant was being held yesterday in the beating death of a woman who became his sonner three weeks ago. Tomah Police Chief Don Fisher urged calm among the residents of Tomah a town near the Fort McCoy refuge camp. Police found Lone Cespedes Torres, 20, sitting on a chair Sunday in the bed of Bernice Taylor, 57. Taylor apparently had been beaten to death a few times. Authorities said Torres faced charges of first-degree murder. Torres, who was unemployed, had been selected for sponsorship by Taylor from among the thousands of refugees who have been housed at nearby Fort McKinley. She and her family were relocated to Alaska. The investigation has proceeded slowly because of tension in the area and because Torres does not speak English, he said. Fisher said authorities had information there was a slight quarrel involving Torres and some members of Taylor's family Saturday night. Fisher said that when Taylor's daughter, Theda Evans, called her mother Sunday morning, Torres answered the telephone, sounding extremely upset. Evans called police and went to the home with a neighbor. They found the refuge, Taylor's fully clothed body and Taylor's 5-year-old grandson, who had stayed with her overnight. The grandson was not injured. Anti-cancer drug gets mixed reviews Speaking at an international cancer symposium, Michael B. Sporn said experiments during the past few weeks at the National Cancer Institute showed that tiny amounts of the vitamin A derivative in combination with amounts of interferon retarded the proliferation of malignant mouse cells. NEW YORK—A government scientist exploring the cancer-fighting potential of the protein interferon reported yesterday, with a synthetic form of the protein, as a new antiviral. Sport said the findings were very preliminary. Experiments would have to move to laboratory animals before they could even be considered for use. Susan E. Krown, of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, made an estimate of the drug's benefit, including too few patients to make any realistic estimate of the drug's benefit. The first animal results could be available in six months, he said. The animals treated on advanced cancer patients treated with interferon have shown mixed results. Interferon is an extremely rare protein produced in tiny amounts by white blood cells when they are threatened by a virus. Families of hostages send appeal to Iran By United Press International "We are writing to you privately as parents, wives and children," the families' letter said, appeasing to "the child" of the author with a profound sense of family ties. Families of the $2 American hostages appealed for the release of their loved ones in a letter delivered yesterday to the United Nations' military speaker, Hashemi Rafsaniian. But Rafsanjani, in a Tehran radio broadcast monitored in London, warned that, "The Majlis parliament cannot disregard condemnation of previous policy by the present U.S. government." Rafsanjiani, who said the Parliament would debate on the hostage issue today, expressed hope that the U.S. would convene a reply to the message of the U.S. In Washington, Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, wearing a "Free the Hostages" badge, took a cautious view of new overtures from Tehran, saying no negotiations are under way with the Iranian government. The hostages entered their 318th day in captivity today. congressmen without any censorship," Iran radio said. Muskie's caution at a news conference contrasted with a more hopeful statement by President Carter. Carter said in Texas yesterday that Iranian authorities were making statements in favor of right lead to a resolution of the problem. Muskie said, "I think it would be a mistake to raise expectations" on the basis of specific statements out of Iran regarding the hostages. Muskie was referring to recent statements suggesting that the --- DO YOU LOVE YOUR DOG? JOIN THE K.U. DOG LOVER'S CLUB Next meeting—Sept, 17 at 7:30 p.m. For information, call 864-3440 or 841-0280 Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomeini had dropped the Iranian condition that Americans repent for their past actions against the Iranian people. Iran radio said only that "current national issues and the government's policy were discussed." Muskie later told reporters that such statements could raise hopes, but that the real test for any optimism would be asking about policies, as expressed in negotiations. Neither the congressmen's letter, the second of two sent to the Parliament, nor the Majili response have been released in Washington or Tehran. No congressmen have acknowledged writing the second letter. In Tehran, President Abdolhausan Bani-Sadr and Prime Minister Mohammad All Rajai met for the first Friday with their Council of Ministers. The families said they "are willing to meet on any appropriate occasion where an open dialogue might be useful." For information, call 864-3440 or 841-5227. --- 图 1 "We understand that the people of Iran have suffered untold indignities and wrongs in the past," the letter said. The letter from families of all $2 hostages, which was written and signed in Washington, was delivered to Rafsanjani, a Macedonian government, Tehran radio said. 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Lady Campbell's (inside lower level of Campbell's Mens Store) CAROLINE PETIT C Hours Mon. thru Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thursdays till 8:30 --- University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 Page 3 Chinese want more transfers By GENE GEORGE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The University of Kansas and the People's Republic of China have established a student and faculty exchange between KU and two universities, but the Chinese appear thirsty for more, KU Acting Chancellor Del Shanker yesterday told a meeting of the International Programs Council of the Mid-America State Universities Association. Shankel told the group that during his trip to China last April "We made important personal contacts . . . for possible research exchanges." Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs; Francis viczema, vice chancellor of research, graduate students and public officers, and Chae Jin Lee, professor of East Asian studies, accompanied Shankel on the 13-day trin. KU HAS MADE plans to exchange students and faculty with Nankai University in Tianjin and Nanjing University in Nanjing. The Nankai exchange will start this spring and the Nanjing exchange will begin next year. Christoffersen said that the Communist Party's "Cultural Revolution" closed China's universities and sent the teachers "out into the fields." He said of the group's trip: "We saw a society that had missed out on higher education." He said the new leadership in China wanted to revive the university system, but needed help from the United States and other industrialized nations to supply training in science and technology. Shankel told the group that the Chinese seemed willing to open talks with other schools, specifically the Central Minorities Institute, an organization that studies minorities within China, to start exchange programs. THE TWO SCHOOLS with which KU has exchange agreements are considered to be among the top seven universities in China, Shankel said. Christoffersen said KU would not just give to China without receiving. He said China's universities had a wealth of knowledge in culture, humanities and law. Under direct exchange, the Chinese schools would send two faculty members to KU and KK university or faculty members or faculty members to the Chinese universities. The host schools would pay for all expenses of the visitors while they were there. Groups discuss neighborhood program Representatives of the six Lawrence neighborhood eligibility for community development funds are getting a chance to attend an event held last week and continuing this week. Residents of six neighborhoods are assessing programs with Lynn GD (CPP) and Jeffrey C. The development office this year has given out $39,000 in HUD funds as grants and loans to help residents of the city. The department also clean up debris and build sidewalks. Areas eligible for the funds provided through the Department of Housing and Urban Development are the North Lawrence, East Lawrence, Pinckney, Far East Lawrence, Oread and Old West Lawrence neighborhood. OPINIONS PROVIDED BY the residents will help the department in future programs and in modifying existing programs, said Goodell. HUD funds also have been used to support building, building, Flight and Education. Vermont streets, to add trees and shrubs along North Second Street and to help finance the Douglas County Rape Victim Sunport Services. The department also allots funds to the neighborhood associations for office expenses. THE DEPARTMENT has a rehabilitation program in which older houses are purchased by the city, repaired and sold. The office also helps some families buy dilapidated houses and remodel them. Goodell said that turnout was low at the first two meetings held last Tuesday and Friday for the East Lawrence neighborhoods. However, he said he was not disappointed by the small number of people attending because some neighborhood groups sent representatives... Also, the low attendance could mean that the residents are satisfied with the department. hearing next year. Federal law requires only one annual meeting. NEIGHBORHOODS ALSO might benefit from hearing about problems other neighborhoods are having. Goodell said. Goodell will listen to complaints and summar- ment for his annual report to HCM. Gooden said he might not just one Also included in the plans for the department's sixth year of allocating CD funds will be a passive solar energy project for low-income home owners and renters, and a housing rehabilitation loan program. He said that next year the department would give out house-painting materials. The next hearing, for the Pinckney and North Lawrence neighborhoods, will be 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Pinckney Grade School. The hearing for the Oread and Old West Lawrence neighborhoods will be 7:30 p.m. Monday at the South Park Recreation Center. VISTING ORGANIST TO PERFORM HANS GEBHARD, PROFESSOR OF MUSIC at the Musikkochschule of Lubeck, Germany and Music director of the St. Nikolaikirche of Kiel, Germany will perform in concert at p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Gebhard's performance is part of the Visiting Artists' Series sponsored by the KU School of Fine Arts. On Campus TODAY STUDENT SENATE COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE meeting will be at 4:00 p.m. in the Kansas National coom, level three of the Kansas University. BLACK STUDENT UNION chair printer will be at 5:30 p.m. at pach. 440 West 21st St. A BIBLICAL SEMINAR will be at the Ecumenical Ministries Center at 7 p.m. THE FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 2021 Rebrish PRENURSING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. Doris Geiss will speak. HOMCOMING COMMITTEE HOMCOMING 3 p.m. in the Apollo Room at Murphy. KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Parchor of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW STUDENTS CONCERED WITH DISABILITIES will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 305 of the Satellite Union. Jean Pyfer, HPER professor, will speak on "Physical Education Facilities at KU for Persons with Disabilities." Ten coalitions and one independent have filed for freshman class offices, Octavio Viveros and John Knightly, committee chairmen, announced yesterday. 37 freshman candidates file for class elections Viveros said the 37 freshman filings were a "really good turnout." Filing deadline was 5 p.m. Friday. Elections are Sept. 24 and 25. Last year six coalitions filed for class offices. There were six presidential candidates, and five candidates each as president, treasurer and secretary. The nine candidates who filed for freshman class president are Mike Wagner, Kirkwood, Mo., Momentum; Alice Everett, Manhattan, Excallur; David Welch, Topeka, The Force; Dawn Wilde, Lea, Mo., Enterprise; P.J. McGovern, Hutchinson, Fresh Action; Bill Odle, Hutchinson, Party Independent; Dave Morrison, Shawne Mission, Imagine Action; Michael Dankwert, Overland Tradition, traditional Tradition, and Mark McKeeen, Overland Park, New Party. The 11 vice-presidential candidates are Roger Day, Rhinelander, Wis. Momentum; Kim Bui, Wamego, Excalibur; Lisa Boyd, Wichita, The Force; David Copeland, Wichta, Freshness; Frank Forsyth, Enterprise; Frank Searer, Huntingen Beach, Calif, Imagine Action; Mike Stinner, Salina, Party Independent; C. Michelle Alloway, Parsons, The Freshman; Randy Sands, Grand View, Mo., The Untraditional Tradition; Cynthia Patton, Parsons, Independent, and Larry Cook, Silver Lake. The New Party. Footlights The eight students filing for treasurer are Susan Hansen, Omaha, Neb., Momentum; Kristy Grey, Manhattan, Excalibur; Karen Matthews, Overland Park; Nicole Dahl, Debbie Hettler, Lawrence, Fresh Action; Ay Jo Chandler, Derby, Party Independent; Keith Cutler, Omaha, Neb., Imagine Action; Jennifer Rede, Andover, Grand New Mission; Robert E. Taylor, Shaween Mission, The Force. Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. The nine candidates for secretary are Suzy Steves, Gardner, Momentum; Klim Niblett, Manhattan, Excalibur; Kim Ann Parker, Grand View, Mo. The Untraditional Tradition; Carole Bitman, Overland Park, Enterprise; Libby Simpson, Lawrence, Fresh Impact; Emily Salina Party Independent; Lyne Brooks, Shawney Mission; The Force: Missy Taylor, Shawnee Mission, Imagine Action; and Ann Benson, Overland Park, Grand New Party. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbrier's Dell) VIN Meisner- Milstead Liquor 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza Featureing one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! K.U. Volleyball Club Fall Tryouts Tryouts will be held Wednesday, Sept. 17 and Friday, Sept. 19 at 7:00 p.m in the south gym of old Robinson Gymnasium. Come prepared to play. Any questions? Call Stan 842-1114 or Steve 842-4387. MIND ZERCHER PHOTO 5 --with this coupon Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. WORKSHOPS Let Us Help Decorate Your Room LAWRENCE RAMADA INN 2222 WEST 6th POTENTIAL Within walking distance - LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * CALMING HABITS * SANCTITY * A boat and a car pull carts carrying boxes. HILLCREST REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas A. Jefferson do not need a model to draw on how to use it, nor any normal person to draw on 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to complement with your subconscious mind for immediate results. MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. PHOTO 919 IOWA M n u t i 10 8 S u t 10 6 (816) 252-8318 (913) 383-1432 MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. O. Box 424, INDEPENDENCE, M6 04501 ZERCHER 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd ZERCHER DOWNTOWN SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 FROM 2 to 9 P.M --with this coupon Valuable Coupon TACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana 1107 MASS. Mon Sat 9 30 5 30 Buy Two Tacos Good Until Sept. 26, 1980 offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. Get One Taco Free --bud JENNINGS AND SONS "The Proof is in the Taco" --bud JENNINGS AND SONS WANTED: CIRCA 1974 You said you'd never give up jeans! CIRCA 1974 But you might have to. You might not be able to afford them. Right now new ones can run $15 to $50 a pair. Who knows how much they'll be next month. A part-time job as a Provident Mutual campus insurance agent can make sure you always have the money you need and work the hours you want. It can help you get the most out of life. Call our campus office and let's discuss fitting our program into your schedule. Terry Westside Camus Superior Campus Superior Suite 111 Commerce Bank 860 84123-7695 or 84123-6441 84123-6441 Get the most out of life with --- PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Home Office: 4601 Market St., Phila., Pa. 19101 Bucky's Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb. Hamburger at regular price Get One Free One coupon per customer Bucky's WANTED: CAMPUS Milton BREED SCHOOL Buckys 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 Part time, flexible schedule Sales Marketing position for enterprising student Includes opportunity to attend a 3-1-2 day seminar in Milwaukee Wisconsin Interviews may be arranged by contacting CAMPUS MILAN BREESCHULZU ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CAR RENTAL ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! Gary at 841-1033 Maupintour travel service travel service 900 MASS KANSAS N 84¢ Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices CARPETS SAVE UP TO 75% 29th & Iowa Use Your "People Book". STATEMENT OF OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION 1. TITLE OF PUBLICATION A PUBLICATION NO. 12 DATE OF FILING The University of Calypso Kananen A 1 B 2 C 3 D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Healy Memorial Library, Mayfield, Kentucky Tourist Attractions: Calypso National Railroad Museum, 104 Loyola Avenue, Jackson, Kentucky 47601 Burlington, Iowa 52608 Burlington, Iowa 52608 111 Flint Mall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS. Douglas County 68649 LOCATION OF THE INFORMATION DISTRICT ON NUMBER OF OFFICES IN PUCKMAN COUNTY 111 Fint Heli, University of Kannawa, Lawrence RI - Douglas County 60427 111 Fint Heli, University of Kannawa, Lawrence RI - Douglas County 60427 8. **PUBLISHER TITLE AND AGE** NAME AND COMPLETE ADDRESS OF PUBLISHER EDITOR AND MANAGING EDITOR THE EDITOR'S NAME AND AGE THE EDITOR'S TITLE AND AGE The University of Kansas, State of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60042 eBay Store (Name and Address) Cyndi Hughes, 1301 Kentucky Carol Beler, 1201 Louisiana, Lawrence, Kansas 66064 Apt. #8 MANAGING EDITOR (John and Adrian) 1. Command if (a) a corporation, its name and address must be recorded and immediately thereafter the name and address of stockholders must be recorded. 2. Command if (b) a corporation or other other subsidiary of a corporation is given by a partnership or other other subsidiary of a corporation, its name must be recorded and if that name of each individual is given by a corporation, its name must be recorded. THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, State of KANSAS - Douglas County 40045 B. **KNOWN BONDHOUSES MORTGAGES AND OTHER SECURITY HOLDERS OWNING OR HOLDING TENTH OF MORE TOTAL AMOUNT OF BONDS MORTGAGES OR OTHER SECURITIES (INCLUDING NEW MORTGAGE)** FOR COMPLEXITY BY NONHOMOLOGY ORGANIZATIONS AUTHORIZED TO ATTACH MAIL RATES (Section 123.122.178) the purpose, function and national status of this organization and the status for payment (Checks or Money Cards). HAVE NOT CHANGED DURING PREVICING I MONTHS HAVE CHANGED DURING PREVICING I WEEKS PRESENCING I MONTHS PRECEDING II MONTHS PRECEDING III MONTHS R. EXTENT AND NATURE OF CIRCULATION VERBOSE OR IMPLIED PRECEDING EVENTS VERBOSE OR IMPLIED PRECEDING EVENTS A. TOTAL NO COVER PRINTED (Inv from Bank) 13,500 13,500 B. FIELD CIRCULATION 1. TABLE COVER OWNER AND CARRIER STREET VENDORS AND COUNTER SALES 12,250 12,250 C. JAM SUBSCRIPTIONS 96 966 C. TOTAL PAID CIRculation (Sum of 108 and 1088) 13,216 13,216 D. FREE DISTRIBUTION BY MAIL CARRIER OR OTHER MEANS SIMILAR TO FREE DISTRIBUTION FROM PAPER CASES 183 183 E. TOTAL DISTRIBUTION (Sum of C and D) 13,399 13,399 F. COPIES NOT DISTributed 1. OFFICE ARE LEFT OVER, UNCOUNTED, SPLOLED AFTER ACTION 101 101 G. RETURN FROM NEW AGENTS 0 0 H. TOTAL (Sum of F, G and B-Second级贴纸 not shown in A) 13,500 13,500 SIGNATURE AND NAME OF EDITOR BUSINESS 1. I certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete. 1.5. A.D.O. [Signature] [Date] [Name of Agent] [Address] [Phone Number] [Email Address] [Job Title] [Company Name] [City, State, ZIP Code] 36. U.S. C. § 2085.341. The person whose work should be deemed necessary for the number under this statute shall such person as provided under this statute must withhold the tax which may be imposed on a certain person for the purposes of this statute. In accordance with the provisions of this statute, I hereby request permission to mail the publication number in item 14 at the posted postage Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 16; 1980 Opinion Babes grow up quickly The University of Kansas' football fortunes are on the upswing, and some new faces this fall are one of the biggest reasons why. The Jayhawks tied the University of Oregon, a solid seven-point favorite, on the road in their opener Saturday. KU scored the tying touchdown with only 15 seconds left in the game, thanks to a drive engineered by freshman quarterback Frank Seurer. Although much of the credit belongs to the defense, there is hardly a doubt in the Jayhawk camp that freshmen played a big role in the opening game and that they will continue to play big roles in future games. Along with Seurer, other newcomers became heroes. Freshman Kerwin Bell, a high school teammate of Seurer's, led the KU rushing attack with 69 yards. Freshman kicker Bruce Kallmeyer kicked the extra point that tied the game. The freshmen recruits were highly publicized last spring and were expected to be great—someday. But few figured that the freshmen would play vital roles so early in the season. The Jayhawks will get a much stiffer contest this Saturday when they take on Pittsburgh, an undisputed threat to this year's national title. Unlike the past, this year's crop of freshmen seems to have added some fresh blood to a program that has been incredibly anemic during the past several years. KU needs players like this to become more competitive. A few more fruitful recruiting years could help Kansas escape the losers' circle. If the team's efforts against Oregon are any indication, Kansas may do it sooner than we think. At least the quick emergence of KU's freshmen will give KU some much-needed depth. And this season, Kansas will need it. Student Senate's approach creates campus-wide apathy In truth, the problem with the Senate goes deeper than indifference. Although KU's Student Senate has regularly kept the student body posted on its state of student apathy, I am regrettedly not indifferent about being labeled indifferent. But for KU's Student Senate, Nestle is only chocolate bar. Issues themselves demand management. My first impression of the Senate, as a transfer student from the University of Minnesota, was a nigging feeling that something was missing on campus. It was a loss of something that in Minnesota had been lost to students and student-led protests. It had mostly meant losing, but there was something in a shared student loss that made it seem a win. Because the Senate gets no cues from a silent student body, it is at the mercy of its red rebukeable rules, which often run up tempers and run sessions overtime. There are the unspoken rules, such as unswerping impartiality, which prompted one senator in a fit of fairness to insist on the establishment and funding of a male chauvinist group. After all, no matter how thin its voice in student affairs, student government was dependably eager to act. Its galloping optimism was infectious. I joined an organization that worked with the student government in an effort to boycott Nestle's food products in dormitory cafeterias because of unethical advertising. Consider the fact that a resolution calling for KU to divest its holdings in South Africa was introduced in the Senate more than 19 months ago. Wrapped in rhetoric and roll-call votes, South Africa has become a state issue. So far, the Senate has taken justice into its own hands; it's too busy playing jury to bother about justice. How, he asked reasonably, could the Senate pledge support of the Emily Taylor Resource Center for Women when there was not an alternative for superiority-minded males? Fortunately for the feminists, fairness only went so far in that Senate session. KU's representation in the Associated Students of Kansas, a statewide student lobbying organization, is a prime example. At the KU Student Association, members delegation, along with six other member Fairness was fastened to nearly every stand the Senate refused to take. Because the Senate is funded by a student body with diverse opinions, the argument ran, it can't repay it with controversial politics. The result was a muddy line drawn between responsibility to students and representation of them. schools, voted down a resolution opposing the draft. The reasoning was that ASK as a representative of all students, shouldn't involve them because they don't directly involve students. Yet those same delegates apparently had no conscienteic twiggs about crossing the seas. But even so, they were not really doing anything. SUSAN SCHOENMAKER the issue of raising the drinking age a priority lobbying item. Either ASK has arrived at a unique definition of drinking as an academic issue, or its members are pedaling a soft politics that ease them from responding to pressing international and national issues. When it comes to issues, the Senate's concern with power and impact has overplaced it. Robin McClellan, former ASK chairman at Hewlett-Packard, told us when she addressed the draft issue last week. "It it not something we can lobby for or against because it is a national issue," McClellan said. "I just don't want ASK to split on something with no insult." That may explain all the empty seats at Senate meetings. Ironically, the very apathy that has dogged Senate decisions may not be because of its lack of interest. Senate has nothing important to say. The Senate, moderating and blurring all its stands for the students who don't speak up, is damaging its own attendance and credibility. And that is why the Senate is positioning itself to benefit no one. It is only the determined actions of a purposeful Senate that can break student apathy. If students are opposed to Senate actions, they have the right to run for office or to inform their representatives of their opinions. If they would like to could stir up the interests and opinions that would lead to a more balanced representation. The world may be a different color from the black-and-white days when KU'S Senate was characterized not by glossy rhetoric but by a feeling of commitment to goals, however unattainable. Maybe the Student Senate is being more realistic these days. But then again, maybe the student body is more realistic. Hence the empty seats. These days, America's campuses grow up fast. The University Daily KANSAN (USF 6594) F Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday June, July and June except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid in Lawrence, Kansas. Kansas Postmaster: Send addresses to the Kansas Post Office at the 13 S R state year outside the county. Student subscriptions are 12 a.m. payment through the student activity. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Dally Lawn Flank, Flint University, the Kansas University. EMAZE Card Beer Business Manager Elaine Straher Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editor Sports Editors Associate Sports Editors Entertainment Editor Manager Charges Wire Editors Wire Editors Chief Photographers Staff Photographers Columnists: Ben Bigles, Ken Combs, ScottHooker, Ben Bigles, Ken Combs, ScottHooker, Amy Holwell, Ted Lichtig, Bill Mileson, Britt Cony, Scott Faust, Fred Marharn, Sasan Soehraeker, Bake Gammape Staff Artists John Jinka, Michael Wunch, Brett Bolton Staff Professionals Kevin Koster National Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campus Manager Campus Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Teacher sheets Manager David Highes David Lewis Judy Woodburn Judy Greenven Mark Spencer, Don Monday, Cindy Whitley Cone Myers Patti Arwald Revin Mills Bob Schaudt, Ellen Iwamori, Jennifer Rolkes Tom Tedesco, Leo Wideman Ellen Trawocki, Gall Eggs Gret Feld Ben Bigles, Ken Combs, ScottHooker, Wendra Kruez, Drew Torre Scott Faust, Fred Marharn, Sasan Soehraeker, Bake Gammape John Jinka, Michael Wunch, Brett Bolton Dentorchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager: Nancy Clouston Jerry Liht Tracy Coon Jerry Woodrow Judy Seller Relax Watkins Bart Spurge Training to enrich our educations. General Manager and News Adviser ... Rick Massey Kansas Advisor ... Chuck Chewins Football team may quiet boo birds While KU's 7-7 tie with Oregon in the first football game of the season last Saturday didn't send thousands of KU students and fans into heartbreak, they least inspired a little hope among many people. For the past several years, KU football fans have occasionally stood and yelled for the Blue, as the football advertisements say they should. But more often they have stood up and yelled at the Blue for making mistakes and not scoring points. With a little more success may more fans and alumni will be able to yell for the team rather than at them, and may fewer fail to perform as alumni will be ruined with dismal KU performances. But, more important, perhaps more fans will show up at Memorial Stadium for KU football games. Drawing more fans to KU football games is crucial because Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, has staked much of the athletic department's future on it. Intercollegiate athletics is big business today, and at KU, the only athletic product that provides a profit is football. It is the only sport that draws enough spectators to provide the hundreds of thousands of dollars in revenue it supports a major portion of the athletic budget. The fortunes of both men's and women's non-revenue producing sports are directly tied to the future of the football team. Unless football is successful and draws more fans to games and increases revenues, the non-revenue producing sports are in trouble. Football must provide more revenue to the athletic department because it is the only remaining source of revenue that is not being fully utilized. The athletic department now raises more than $1 million annually in donations to the Williams BRETT CONLEY Fund, which provides scholarships for student athletes. The state of Kansas provides some money for KU athletics, but it does not appear likely that it will be increased. In fact, it is more likely that the funding of athletics will decrease in future years, according to many official athletic officials. The only other revenue-producing sport at KU is basketball, but most home games are usually sold out and the amount of revenue produced is much higher. A program with just a few thousand dollars left over. So far, the most obvious sign of money problems in the athletic department has been the dropping of men's and women's gymnastics last spring. However, there have been other budget saving moves, including the elimination of an assistant athletic director's position, reductions in the budget of most non-revenue producing schools and the reduction of a few athletic administrative positions. Many people in KU athletics now are closely watching the progress of the KU football team because they know that there could be tougher teams with more personnel cuts and budget reductions. The coaches and athletes who participate in sports such as swimming, volleyball, baseball, softball and even track have good reason to be worried. Marcum has admitted that his department will be hard-pressed to maintain funding for non-revenue producing sports at the current level and that more sports may have to be sacrificed in the future. Marcum's main solution is a commitment to turning around the KU football program and making it competitive in the Big Eight Conference. With a better team on the field, Marcum hopes to see Memorial Stadium filled closer to capacity in the future. For that reason, KU's tie with Oregon last Saturday may have been significant if it shows KU fans that the Jayhawks can at least be more competitive this season. However, if KU fades this season and cannot even play its opponents in games, they will eventually turnaround in the football program. And then the future of non-revenue producing sports will be very dim. Letters to the Editor To the editor: Problems may pull plug on SUA concerts I was rather surprised and pessimistic to see the article on the front page of the Sept. 10 Kansan, "SUA seeks monthly concerts," I say surprised because the lack of even bimonthly concerts at KU has been the most noticeable aspect of the SUA concerts for the past few years, and pessimistic because I know how it once was. There are probably a few students still at KU (although there are many of us still kicking around Lawrence) who remember concerts in the years I went to school. That was a time when we nearly had monthly concerts, with musicians such as Elton John, James Taylor, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Steve Martin, Todd Rundgreen, Yes, Ike and Tina Turner, Sly and the Family Stone, Jose Feliciano, Count Basie, Norman Blake, Michael Murphy... and EmmyLou Harris, Little Feat, Bonnie Raitt, Martin Mull, Mose Allison, Weather Report . I could probably go on, but my memory has dulled over the years. I realize that during period of time the SUA had a different method of contracting bands, which they said caused the SUA Special Events committee to consistently run in the red. That also was SUA's excuse for failing to schedule many concerts over the next few years. My question now is, what has changed that will make it possible for SUA to present "one concert a month this semester?" I hope they achieve it. But I'm pessimistic. Space video games To the editor. Sara Henderson Oskaloosa It's hard for many KU students to accept the fact that they finance a university paper that raises serious ethical issues. But when it comes to editorsir on "space video games" and damning, very naively, computer technology in general, most will agree that editorial space is much more valuable. Apparently Blake Gumprecht in his Sept. 9 column was too ignorant to realize the advantages of computerized supermarket checkouts, a feature that most view as a solution to the problem of clumsy clunk with push-button phones only illustrates Gumprecht's inability to operate simple devices. Gumprecht's editorial, if you could call it that, sounds one of the contrasts of modernist thought that treats majority of viewers like illiterates. The same goes for Gumprech's editorial. And the headline, "Video space games screen victim," is totally irrelevant to the adjoining words because Gumpreth talks about the screen on the machine. The only apparent victim seems to be the author himself because he first condemns pinball machines as being simple luck, only to return for a "good game." That's an indication that he constantly practices. Gumprecht should be writing about technological advances of such mentioned items as computer grocery checkouts, push-button phones, self-opening bank services, etc. Their contribution to progress in the modern world is massive and aspects of our world to operate more efficiently. If this article is a reflection of future Gumprecht columns, I suppose a majority of the readers will only be reading them for the entertainment of seeing what most would assume was a great opportunity opening for a professional career. In truth, he is turning into a writer for Mother Goose books. Dreux DeMack Olathe senior Student Senate For the past few years the Student Senate has been having a problem with attendance at its meetings. Despite numerous revisions of the absentee policy and threats of being relieved of employment, the Senate has often results in the lack of a quorum for voting. One ironic example was the recent meeting when S To the editor: the Senate was unable to take action on the latest proposal to solve the problem of attendance. Perhaps it is just as well! The latest proposal of a new law would require absenteeism any more than previous proposals. The about pleim fall, Studu Let us assume for a moment that this idea of reducing the number of senators had been implemented before elections last spring. The result, of course, would have been that half of the current senators would not be senators. Only the top vote getters would still be in office. This is not bad in itself, but let us examine who is not attending the meetings right now. Are they the senators who were the top vote winners? If so, having only these particular people would not solve the absenteeism problem because they do not come now. By 56 or reque anno S This, however, may not be the actual case and probably is not. It is much more likely that the senators who consistently do not attend meetings only distributed between high and low vote getters If so, we may assume that the percentage of those who do not attend meetings is the same for both the top vote getters (the elected under the proposed reduction) and the whole Senate as it stands now. Since a quorum is a percentage of total membership, and the percentage absent would be the same under the reduction, the Senate would still have the same problems. In short, changing the size of the Senate will not solve the quorum problem, but only hamper the representation of the students of KU. Then again, it would be easier to manipulate fewer people. Perhaps this is the real goal of reducing the number of senators. Edwin Cooley Wichita junior Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the editor, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. ! --- University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 Page 5 Senate can afford 18.5% of requests The Student Senate can fund only about 20 percent of the total supplementary budget requests filed this year, and is appointed by Abbott, the Student Senate treasurer. By 5 p.m. Friday, the filing deadline, 56 organizations had submitted budget requests totaling $89,903.33, Abbott announced yesterday. The Senate has only $17,337 available to allocate, which means only 18.5 percent of the requests can be satisfied. In determining allocations, Mike Gordon, the Senate finance and auditing committee co-chairman, said, "the committee would have to rank groups and their requests in order of benefit to the maximum number of students." Last fall, 21 organizations were allocated $19,610.34 in supplementary funding, and about $45,000 was donated. Another organization were denied funding completely. "First, it was well publicized how much money we had for funding," he said. "And two, a lot of groups didn't pay the money in the spring as they had requested." Gordon listed two reasons for the increase in requests this semester. Gordon said that last spring only the money from the student organizations' fundraising efforts were used. Before, he said, the Senate has voted to use unallocated money to help fund education programs in spring, Gordon, said, some groups did not receive as much as they wanted. There is $34,674 in the unallocated space. The $29,500 to be spent on supplementary funding, The unallocated fund is composed of 37 cents for each full-time student plus any funds not used during the past year. The amount in the payment, which was higher than expected, Speaker blasts monolingual America By CINDY CAMPBELL Staff Reporter Rose Lee Hayden, staff director of the International Communication Agency, told a group of students and administrators yesterday evening that America was known abroad as the land of the spider and the home of the monolingual. Hayden said that of the 23,000 secondary schools in the United States, nearly 20 percent did not offer instruction in any foreign language. Only 16 percent of all high school students are enrolled in such courses. Fewer than one college student in ten studies a foreign language, she said. Hayden spoke in conjunction with the two-day business meeting of the International Programs Council of the Mid-America State Universities Association. The conference ends today. program activities and encourages exchanges among the seven MASUA member schools: KU, University of Missouri; University of Nebraska, University of Oklahoma State University, Oklahoma State University, Oklahoma State University and the University of Oklahoma. The council coordinates international Hayden said that the United States was "losing it" in terms of world leadership and that the "overall response of the American educational citizens for effective coping in an inter-connected world is woefully inadequate." America needs to know more about trest of the world because the United States will be "increasingly at its mercy," she said. U.S. citizens need a chance to be made able about other cultures and governments so they can oversize their own. "Unless some major adjustments are made," she said, "The United States may well lack the basic human resources to steer its ship of state through the uncharted interdependent currents of its next one hundred years." One way to avert a national "nervous breakdown," she said, is to educate children in the diverse forms of cultural expression. Speaking out for what she called "international education," Hayden called Americans "over-fed, physically overweight and esthetically starved." These programs must be made to work at the campus level, she said. U.S. colleges and universities are in need of more language incentive grants. She defined international education as an umbrella term for international studies, foreign language, area studies and study abroad programs. Hayden recently joined the International Communication Agency as director of its United States Government Coordination Division. She has served deputy director of the Peace Corps for Latin America and the Caribbean. Protege of Smock warns students of 'Lake of Fire' Two weeks ago, it was Jed Smock. Yesterday, it was one of his converts. Cindy Lasseter, 22, a former Florida University journalism student, held court yesterday afternoon outside Flint Hall, bringing the same religious message that Smock brought two weeks ago—that most college students are simmers he headed for the "Lake of Fire." Lasseter, in fact, said she was saved by Smock's ministry. Her conversion came during her sophomore year at Florida. Smock pointed to her while in the middle of a song. "I love you," she said of your sins, you wicked woman." When Smock revisited the Florida campus the next year, Lasseter said, he took her "out to eat and to talk," she recalled. Later she became a Christian in the parking lot of a local hamburger establishment. Before her conversion, Lasseter said, "I was just an ordinary college student at Florida." Yesterday, the reminders of Smock were obvious, right down to the red-letter King James Bible she held in her right hand. Her clothing, although quite different from Smock's trademark suspenders, was nevertheless vaguely reminiscent of the Old West. She wore an ankle-length skirt and broad-brimmed hat. Lasseter, who worked for a time for the Alligator, the Florida University student paper, later "sort of dropped out" of school after her junior year to full-time work. She has held 36 campuses in 19 states and had appeared before numerous local congregations to give her testimony. KU police had no suspects yesterday in connection with the rape of a KU officer in her apartment, her Jaiyawk Towers apartment, KU Police Capt. John Mullens said yesterday. On the Record The woman was able to give only a limited description of the rapist to police, Mullens said. He said she described the rapist as a black male with a medium build, possibly with a beard or a mustache. Lawrence within 13 days, occurred at about 4:30 Sunday morning when therapist entered the woman's apartmentthrough an unlocked front door and attacked her on the living room sofawhere she was asleep, Mullens said. Mulens said the man was unarmed, but overpowered the woman, hitting her. The woman was treated for cuts and bruises and released yesterday from Lawrence Memorial Hospital. The rape, the third reported in Old cars await sale on West Campus Old KU police cars never die. They are around West Campus waiting to be sold. This summer, the KU Police Department put its four old, light-blue police cars out to pasture and replaced them with four white 1980 Chevrolet Malibu. The old police cars, 1977 LTD IIIs, will be sold to the public when the KU business office files a notice with the state contracting office in Topeka, according to Jerry Payne, state contracting officer. Payne said each car would be stripped of its emergency equipment and markings and would be sold to the highest bidders. The cars are far from new, KU Police which has been driven 80,000 to 80,000 km. However, Mullens said they could be used as a second family car or for hauling things. He said some people might want them for spare parts. The problem with the old cars, said Mullens, was that they became too costly to maintain as the miles added up. Mullens said the maintenance costs on the four cars during two months last winter were equivalent to the price of a new car. The new police cars were bought by the state for about $6,000 each, he said. Patronize Kansan Advertisers Alibaba Group ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 THE NEXT FAME HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PG Varsity Downtown 843-1085 Boogie Man 7:40 & 9:20 R Hillcrest Sin & Iso 843-5400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:15 & 9:15 R 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 R 3. Urban Cowboy 7:10 & 9:21 R Cinema Twin 31st & Iso 843-5400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 PG 2. Oh Heavenly Dog 7:30 & 9:30 PG Sunset Place West 4th St. 843-6177 1 PRE-NURSING CLUB Are You Interested In A Nursing Career? Funded By Student Activity Fees Then Come Join Us TONIGHT, As The Pre-Nursing Club Holds Its First Meeting At 7:00 p.m. In The Walnut Room of The Kansas Union. Speaker Will Be Dr. Doris Geiss. Tell Your Friends! We stalk to fit We style your hair ... to fit your fashion At Gentleman's Quarters we offer personalized service to assure each of our customers a hair style that will complement their own "fashion." Call for your appointment soon. GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS 611 W. 9th 843-2100 GO 9th National Guitar Flat-Picking Championship & Arts & Crafts Festival WINFIELD FAIRGROUNDS WINFIELD, KANSAS UNDERGROUND PROFESSIONAL SOUND BY SUPERIOR SOUND Wichita, Kansas September 18,19,20,21,1980 14 workshops 7 Contests $18,000 Cash Prises, Trophies & Instruments Ticket Information: "The national convention for acoustic string musicians" Advance Weekend 017 Fr. 017, Sat. 08-17, Sun. 07-17 At Gate 016 admission to Thursday evening free to host purchasing a Friday or weekend festival ticket) Children under age 12 free with adult No mail orders after September 10th No Refunds 3 Stages in Operation Well policed Grounds Rough Camping Free with admission No Artmails, No Beer or Alcohol, No Motorcycles and No Motorcyles (due to notes) Folk Arts & Crafts Fair Featuring in Person: *Doc and Merle Watson (Friday only* *Norman and Nancy Clake* *Dan Craary* *Bryan Bowers* *Cathy Barton* *Front Porch String Band* *The Dulcimer Alliance* *Gerri Gritzbach* *Maggie* *Joel Mabus* *The Mid Missouri Hellband* *Hyphray* *Art Theme* *The Boys In The Band* *Claudia Schmidt* *Oscar Lee Revival* *Just Bill* *Harvey Prinz & Lilah Gillett* *Beverly Cotton* *Frank Hill* *Kevin Roth* *David Amra For more information and advance tickets write: walnut valley association, inc. 117 E. 9th - Box 265 N Winfield, Kansas 67356 Phone 316-221-3250 THE BEST MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT VALUE IN THE MID WEST X Σ ΣX 1980 DEREY GAMES September 17th 6:00-12:00 p.m. Potter's Pavillion Music by Sunburst Greg's Country Western Band And Special Attraction Moffet-Beers Band Tickets are $4.00 in advance purchase from any KU sorority. $5.00 at the gate. COSMiC COALESCENCE Where does science fiction end and reality begin? It's all in the mind's eye. Be it the creative imagination used to produce Star Wars, The Black Hole, and The Empire Strikes Back, or the more scientific approach of hypothesis testing and experimentation with science fiction coalesce into reality with the advanced technology now being developed at a company called TRW. It was the Defense and Space Systems Group of TRW who made possible the Viking Lander biological experiment which looked for life on Mars and the High Energy Astronomical Observatory Black holes in deep space. Professionals at TRW-DSSG are now involved in such impressive technologies as high energy lasers, communications systems, plus other future projects still considered science fiction. A company called TRW will be on campus... OCTOBER 9-10 to interview graduates in scientific and technical disciplines. Contact the placement office to schedule your appointment. If unable to meet with us, send your resume to: College Relations Bldg. R5/B196 UK9/80 One Space Park Redondo Beach, CA 90278 A Company Called TRW Equal Opportunity Employer M.P.H DEFENSE AND SPACE SYSTEMS GROUP ENERGY SYSTEMS GROUP Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 Muscle-stretching exercises are just part of the exhausting routine during the Jayhawks' daily football practice. Countdown to kickoff Behind-the-scenes activities a part of KU's game plan VOLLEYBALL THE GREAT SAXOPHONETS Melissa Miller and Brad Hall, KU Spirit Squad members, work to perfect an acrobatic stunt for the first home football game. Halftime wouldn't be the same without the Jayhawk Marching Band. It takes the band two hours a day, four days a week to prepare the halftime shows for every home game. The stands at Memorial Stadium are empty now, but the work goes on. On the field the football team runs its plays. Around the stadium the maintenance crew and concession workers add the final touches. On the practice fields around Allen Field House the marching band and cheerleaders perfect their routines. "We start right after the KU relays in the spring," said Floyd Temple, supervisor of maintenance and stadium preparation. "We move the baseball bleachers over to the south end zone, then check the seats to see if any repairs are needed." Although the University of Kansas does not open its home football season until Saturday, preparations have been under way for some time. DURING THE SUMMER, general maintenance work continues under the direction of Norm Stuart, maintenance foreman, and his seven-man crew. In the spring, Stuart and his group make sure numbers are clearly painted on all the seats. As game day approaches, the maintenance crew is faced with some less conventional problems. First, a jayhawk must be painted at midfield and letters, stripes and numbers must be painted on the field. Next, crews have to go into the stands to take care of the pigeon problem. Pigeons like to roost near the press box on the west side of the stadium. Under the stands in the north end of the stadium, people also are setting up. Since March, Kevin Remick, who is in charge of concessions at the stadium, has been busy ordering food supplies for the stadium's 60 strategically-placed concession stands. For the first game, he must have 20 tons of ice on hand. IN JULY, REMICK moved his office to the stadium to supervise the proceedings. By game day, he has to have things ready to go for the 350 to 400 people hired to work in the concession stands and sell drinks throughout the stadium. "I am much like the football coach," Remick said. "I have to have a game plan." As Remick works on his game plan and Don Fambricht tries to convey his to the football team on the field, the cheerleading squad is getting its act together at Allen Field House. Under the direction of Tom Johnson, the 10 men and 10 women have been working together since they were chosen in April. After practicing two hours a day in the spring, they worked together for three weeks during the summer. "There may be much more glory in athletics, but a lot of people still think it's neat to be a cheerleader or yell-leader at the University of Kansas," he said. "We do have a certain reputation to unhold." THE SQUAD is now back to working three to five hours a day, Johnson said. Another group with a good reputation practices outdoors next to Allen. The marching band, about 270 strong, has been practicing together since orientation week. Now the group practices four afternoons a week for an hour and a half, said Tom Stidham, assistant director of bands. The band, which is directed by Robert Foster, already has gained some game experience. Sunday the group traveled to Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., to play at the Chiefs game. The show Saturday at KU should be similar, said Stidham. WHILE THE PRINCIPAL groups near completion of their work, many details are being worked out clear up until game day. The University of Kansas Athletic Association must set up a shuttle bus service to take fans to and from the stadium; Nancy Welsh, athletic ticket manager, has to oversee the eleven ticket sellers hired to work the game; Stuart must hire six to eight extras to help with game-day maintenance and another 15 to help with the clean-up. The list goes on and on At 10 a.m. the day of the game, Temple and Stuart make a final check to make sure everything is ready. Two hours later the stands will begin to fill up. The field will be brightly painted; concession stands will be doing big business, and the band and the football team will be ready to take the field amid the cheers of the fans and the cheerleaders. Only then can the game begin. FEDERAL POLICE 1975 Story by ARNE GREEN Norm Stewart, KUAC maintenance supervisor, and KUAC employees Keith Noland and Terry Lynch wet down the artificial turf in Memorial Stadium before an afternoon practice. The team can get accustomed to playing on a rain-sacked toilet. Photos by DAVE KRAUS Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 Page 7 Sports Calendar 7:38 p.m. — Kansas City Toyota vs. California Angels at Royals Stadium (KMBU) — Women's golf at Oklahoma City Mets vs. Lake Genesei, WI 16 17 7:35 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. California Angels 8:10 p.m. - Kansas City (RMB-2) AM, KKK-FM 8:30 p.m. - Kansas City In Allen Field in Women's golf at Cedar Creek Sports Quiz 18 Q Today's question- Who are the two all-time top scorers in KU basketball history? KU quarterback Bobby Douglass was drafted in 1969 by the Chicago Bears. Thursday's answer— 1. Alabama 1-0 2. Oklahoma 1-0 3. Oklahoma 1-0 4. Southern Cal. 1-0 5. Kentucky 1-0 6. Nebraska 1-0 7. North Dakota 1-0 8. Georgia 1-0 9. Minnesota 1-0 10. Pennsylvania 1-0 11. Pennsylvania 1-0 12. Pennsylvania 1-0 13. Pennsylvania 1-0 14. Texas 1-0 15. Texas 1-0 16. Texas 1-0 17. Texas 1-0 18. South Carolina 1-0 19. Houston 1-0 20. Houston 1-0 UPI Top Twenty A United Press International's Couches Top 20 Poll Major-league Baseball Kansas Results Sarah Burgess, 79 Pattie Joe, 60 Sally Bonnini 83 Lisa Howard, 83 Jennifer Rogers, 89 Women's golf first round results AMERICAN LEAGUE W 91 L 5 GB New York 91 52 Boston 86 57 5 Boston 75 65 14½ Milwaukee 73 67 14½ Cleveland 73 69 17½ Dallas 73 70 14½ Toronto 61 82 30 Kansas 19th place----325 Kansas City 80 55 17 Texas 79 73 17% Texas 79 73 17% Minnesota 63 80 25% Oklahoma 63 80 25% California 58 82 40% California 58 82 40 NATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal W 84 G 62 Philadelphia W 84 E 1 Pittsburgh 78 63 Philadelphia 78 63 New York S 89 G 14% New York S 89 G 14% Clarkston S 12 G 11% WEST Houston 82 61 61 - Los Angeles 82 61 - - San Diego 75 68 7 - Atlanta 75 68 7 - San Francisco 67 68 7 - Cleveland 67 68 19% The University Daily Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirty four fifty six seventy eighteen ninety one hundred twenty-three twenty-four twenty-five twenty-six twenty-seven twenty-eight twenty-nine三十九四十五十五十六十七十八十十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七十八十九二十一二十二二十三二十四五十六七十八十一十二十二十三十四十五十六十七八十十一十二十二十三十四十五十六七十八 AD DEADLINES Monday ... Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday ... Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m. Thursday ... Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m. ERRORS The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship groups? Learn about them at p.m. 3/14th, partnership B Union, The Salt Breeze. Yee-bah: Sept. 19-21. is Blue Grass Time lunature! You'll be invited to a mulit-festival sign up at UW's Udawalda today. SUA TRAVEL (includes transportation and admittance) Weekend Getaways Presents: The 9th annual Winfield Blue Grass Festival September 19 $38 includes transportation Camp out with SUA on the festival grounds. Enjoy arts and crafts, music workshops, and concerts all day, every day. For more info, drop by the SUA office, or call 841-7932. Reservation deadline Sept. 17. Sign up now, tickets are limited! Over the hump; Boogie with Tofu Teddy *this Wednesday at Off-The-Wall Hall, 750 West 42nd Street.* 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 15% up for sale. You'll like our looks. Sunny Parkway Walk. For rent, nite sit, for men, next to campus. Call 443-845-7287. May work out of part of room. Interested in attending a pre-fast dinner meeting before Koli N尔德 services at the Lawrence Jewish Community Center? Call Hilah at 914-285-3700 for reservation by Wednesday, Sept. 17th. ENTERTAINMENT 2 bedroom apt and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid.quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 634-8579 or 843-4185. 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplaces and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tf Looking for something new on Sundays @cbsnews.com 6.49 Come out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 4 p.m. till 3 a.m. Memberships “Partying is our business.” 9-30 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE B. BARK, 1009 Mass. ff Support your local underground cartons! Get your debut copy of XENOPHOBIA Available now at your favorite headache. 9.16 FOR RENT Black Grass Jam every Wednesday night on the patio. Come listen to some of the best in the area or come play. Greena Tavern 9-19 $10 W. 23rd. Outdoor Rollerskating 1011 Maa. Tues.-Thurs. 6:30 p.m. 12:00 a.m. 13:00 and 13:00, Friday. 5:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 10:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m. Deposit-pledier. I.D. What's the Deal? Lawrence's firebreathing 8 piece horn band. Watch out! You'll be amazed. 9-19 Over the hump! Boogie with Tofu Teddy this Wed. at Off-the-Wall Hall. $2. 9-17 Perfect for 4 students. Cloop to bus route 10, or for 2 students. Cloop to bus route 12, centrally, on a conditioning all-up- side, centric to bus route 10. (8) Via Capri Apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. available. Central air, wall to wall carpet. quiet location. 2½ blocks south of Capri. 9703 - 9708 anytime on weekends. 5:30 KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished. 2 bdrm carpet, drapes, parking appliances. Beautiful housing! Call 913-381-2878. 10-3 2 bdmr. house, clean, quiet, close. 764-5207. Collect. 9-17 Office space at Area A is 392 Mass. 630 sq ft. Office space at Area B is 452 Mass. 718 sq ft. remodeling alt. Also, conference rooms. remodeling alt. For fall or spring, Naimish Hall offers you a large room of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it, weky maid service to your room, and much more. If you are looking for a room, if an apartment hall is wanted, go to Naimish Hall, 1800 Naimish Drive, 843-859-791. Beautiful older home in-law of Lawrence, wife of the late William and family / family 4. kitchen, dining room rm. living room lr. library, utility rm. and 2 full bathrooms lr. laundry room formation call 84-45455 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, a kitchen, an opener, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or B42-4855.8 a.-5 p.m. New and contemporary 2-level duvet. Available immediately. 2 bdms, study, kitchen, dinner room, lingerie, pet bed, sunroom. Call 814-8455 or www.micromedia.com information call 814-8455 a.m.-p. 3-9月 Roommate wanted for a 3 bdmr. house. $117 mo. + ½ utilities. Call Kim at 841- 9222. 9-17 3 bdrm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across from swimming pool and tennis courts. $400/month. 841-0553. tf For rent to students 1 bdm. apt., fur- rent $125 + electricity at 1419 Ohio. $195 + iums at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdm. basement with lots of windows at 1423 or 1715 + electricity. 84-753 or 1700. Room close to Union. Utilities paid $90. Available Oct. 1. Call evenings 749-3048. Keep trying 9-17 Villa Carla Apts. for sublease, 18 mgr. apt. Boston Ave. for lease, 21 mgr. apt. Walnut to Wall-mair. Have to leave. $180/m + utilities Originally $230/mth. Call 30 p.m. or any time on Wednesday. 841-553-7278 9-18 Brand new Smith-Corona electric type- board with a electromagnet 544-3828 9-17 Unicycle. $50. Free lessons. Call 864-4859 and ask for Hammer or call 843-1845. 9-17 1 bdmr. for non-smoking and non-drinking person. Share utilities. For information Call Margarita 841-8576. 9-19 New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic mattress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Ledon's Furniture. 1200 New York St. 843-3228. FOR SALE Near campus 2 Bdrm. apt. Comfortable for 2/3 people. Water paid, C/A, dishwasher. 841-5215, 841-5070 after 6 p.m. 9-22 Alternator, starter and generator specialist. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 943-9689, 3800 W. 6th. tf 1975 TR7, perfect condition, low mileage, camp, must sell, 843-9334. 9-17 88 mug Honda Hawk HI 400 cc, street motor cars. Muffler is black with white horn. cares bark, faring, and wounds with helmet. Rides on public roads only. Must sell '73 Mazda Wagon—AT, A/C, M-FU. Must $1200. 843-593-59. I will just provide the text as it appears in the image. No further processing or analysis is required. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-136. CARPET for dorm room, $70. CURTAINS Must sell. 748-1777. PARCHMENT. $9. -16 PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For use with flat-faced stained envelope to: D & J Productions, Dept. K1, Box 252, Tempe, Arizona 8281-8281. '75 Honda ST 90, Good Condition, Great Gas Mileage. $999, Call Sarah, 841-2581 MATTRISEEES, Orthopedic sets from $29. FURNITURE, one block west of 3d and Fowler. Furniture, one block west of 3d and Fowler. Black Vinyl recliner, over-sized arm chair, no (no) heater, cash only. 9-17 7861 Musical Instruments. 1939 Gibson L-4 Miniature Strings. 1939 Gibson L-5 with case $425. 1941 Nelson Upright Concert Piano. 1940 Yamaha Supra-Tone good tone $325. Nice solid top, student cello also please.greg B434-765. Ivy seria-9 only please.greg B434-765. Water beds, hybrid foam -n, water type, $299 queen set; Pavilion Furniture, Hillcrest Shopping Center. 842-2696. 9-17 1978 280Z Datamun 5 speed all Lux. pkg. much more. Excellent condition. Must sell. 8,150. Call 842-8220. 9-17 1975 Toyota Land Cruiser, $3000 or best offer. Men's Scuba Pro fins. $25. 749-0288 (local) eveL. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense to use them! As study makes sense, use them! As study exam preparation, use them! Analysis of West- ern Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Malls Bookstore and Gread Book Store! Westmedeaes Condo, 2 bdmr. Horns on top of a kitchen island. Fully equipped, central air, microwave, trunk comp, dish dishwasher, curtain made curtain, pool, wallpaper curtain, cafe table, pool. curtains: $46,000. Call Reza or 81-159-3323. Calra Reza or 81-159-3323. Rollet SL-81 Movie Camera. $100. Ph. 843- 0983. 75 Fiat X1-9 Convertible for m.a. mag. MGs. 260 - 300 mp. hp. sharp. Price: 825.0 - 871.00 9-16 Like new large plush blue dorm carpet Excellent condition. Must see. Call 811- 9760. 9-16 Custom made shirts, sports shoes, and sweats. University Sports Shop. 942 Mass. St. 9-16 AiWA AD 12500 Cassette Desk - almost new AiWA AD 12500 Cassette Desk - almost new Dmagnetitec - 4 Blank Maxell tape, All still in box $39.99 x size $40.99 Bench $69.99 x size $79.99 narrow lapdesk $39.99 x size $49.99 bundle $89.99 x size $149.99 Harley-175 SS Excellent condition, 2200 miles, New battery, 40-50 mpg, $300 fee. Harley-180 Withings, when you can bring a Harley! 814-607-8894, EVENINGS, 8:45 a.m. Ask for Dellor Dan. 9-23 For sale new=1979 Rally Sport, fully new. 844-431 or 842-9231. New equipments: 844-431 or 842-9231. R red pocketkite in front of Bailley Hall Night. Please call 864-3948 and iify. 8:17 FOUND Film book in 205 Flint Wed. afternoon. Call and claim, 843-114 after 6 p.m. Ask for a copy. HELP WANTED Set of keys at University State Bank, Fri. 9-5. 841-3916. 9-18 GRADUATE ASSISTANT. ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE OF KAWANSA. Assist with special ordinate activities of several committees and groups. Position requires ordinate activity of several committees month. Position available immediately to graduate student. Applicant must have bility of renewal. Application deadline is September 15, 2014. Description contact Office of the Executive Commissioner of KAWANSA. 913-864-8644, KawanSA Lawrence 6845; 913-864-8644, KawanSA Lawrence 6845; 913-864-8644, employer Needed Immediately--School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student at a disability in Calla Dana Wray 842-917-845, 841-797-843-1011. Research Ast. Wanted. Three-Quarter time experience; ability to work independently with library resources and environmental technology similarity with library personnel; technical knowledge and drafting skills, and a background in chemistry or a related science degree (800-mil point pending on qualifications Apply by 5 p.m. at Chemistry, 2010 Malott. Phone 864-4737. Affirmative Equal-Affectment Policy 9-17 PROJECT COORDINATOR: The University of Kansas Service is seeking an individual to coordinate and evaluate the recruitment, evaluation and staff training for students in work experience required. Salary $18,000 per semester. 19, 180. Interested applicants must be a graduate degree or post-graduate Educational Services, Military School Lawrence, Kansas 66445. the University of Kansas will equal opportunity action without discrimination. 9-19 COUNSELOR. The University of Kansas, COUNSELOR. The University of Kansas, career and personal counseling to diaclayn and seek an individual to provide academic Bureau of Child Research has opening for a position on Monday, 10-15 hours per week to conduct the necessary early childhood milestones for adolescent use. Must have own vehicle for afternoon or evening. Excellent interpersonal skills. Apply to 114 Hwahna, 884-3444. Application July at 111 Hwahna. We are an equal opportunity employer. We are an equal opportunity employer. SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART MEMBER grade, coordinate driverate drives and coordinates job duties. degree, ability to work with people, organizational ability, typing skills, familiarity with computer resources and names of 1 references to Ann Wilkinson K 60454. An equal opportunity/affirmative gardend of race, religion, color, sex, gender, marital status, national origin. Student help needed. Part-time for fall and spring. Must be able to work a small nominal job, including some General labor and skilled trades assistant. Please email resume to Job Spot at 2303 W. 11 St. or 86-3497 as soon as possible with your class schedule. An equal opportunity affirmative action employment is available. LOST 1 pair of rim-less style glasses in brown case. Lost in the vicinity of Watson and Strong. Please call 843-2454. Thanks. 9-18 Reward for return of black notebook containing extensive research data. Inside blue backpack taken from my apt, at 1359 Ohio 844-751 or 844-753 or 849-16 No questions asked. I lost a brown billfold Friday (10/5) I was out of the house for Please contact Jack at 841-3435 914-762-8800 9/4 Leather I-pocket case (brown with black zipper) This one pass case Initiate DIP 8868 Keep Lift 22rd Street. REWARD. Phone 842-4718. Female grey kitten 6-7 months old. White feet, white collar. Ridge Court Area. Reward 9-17 481-4818. LOST: Maroon backpack. Left in 328 Strong, 4:00 Thursday. Reward. Call John, 841-8234 after 5. 9-22 Israeli Hebrew book somewhere on campus. *REWARD* 841-1658 after 5 p.m. 9-18 MISCELLANEOUS Yea-hah! September 19-21 is Blue Grass Time again. Camp out with SUA at the 8th annual Winfield Blue Grass Festival. Are they limited to sign up, say. 9-16 XENOPHOBIA: Lawrence's finest amusement magazine. On sale now at White Light Paraphernalia. 9-16 TEAM Water Polo Organizational Meeting Wed.. Sept. 17 Recreation Services 864-3546 Su. Sept. 17 7:00 p.m. Meet at Robinson Center Pool. All interested in playing should attend. Attention all interested canoe enthusiasts. plan your own ITS day, weekly weekend getaway or stay at a canoe center with a canoe national meeting on West. Sept 17 at 7:00 a.m. at the Student Union at the Student Union. See you there! There are pitchers of Budweiser and Natural Light for one dollar under the rainbow on 2 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, and Friday, 3-9 p.m. Greens Tavern. 9-19 9R NOTICE We want to work for you. Give us the chance. Vote Enterprise For Freshman Class Officers Free rainbows. 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavem DRINK AND DROWSN every Monday night I'll be back. I can host McDonald's on my own. You $= girls and boys. NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CLUB LOUSE. On Monday nights your room is locked and you can only sleep all night long Only at your place, the CLUB LOUSE where "Parying is our place" PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Counseling with bariatric surgery. Hospitalization. 842-3100, 4401. W. 10t St., Overland Park, Kansas. ftd LOUISEN'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday from 6-7. Enjoy 60 seats, $2c draws and $1.50 pitches. 7th and Mich. "Partying is our business." **t** HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUSE. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 hikings (75c to 125c) and a gymbag and the atmosphere of The Club. Books @ 849, 942. "Partying is our business." LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights); drinks are $100 for lancet and dresses are $250 for lancet. Only the Club Lounge: 500 Locust. 842-949-920 SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOUISE, 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. In keeping with her tradition of bringing announcements TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUISE. She makes only $25 at the club only. $25. Drink and drown at a club THE CLUB LOUISE. 508 Locust, her partnerships available. "9-30 is our business." PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY If you are undecided about a career but want to work in sales or business with a large eastern based company, our part-time internship may be right for you. For more information, call 800-542-1411. Equal Opportunity Employer M.F. P. 1411. **TGAT AT LOUSES BASE** with $12.5 pitch Friday from 11 o'clock in all 6 He there-Alawah of it! Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-669-760. Take a break after classes at LOUSE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. Afternoon specials every day until 8. tf TENNIS PLAYERS. There’s still a lot of anatomy to learn, but tennis will last it out. Cat David at 641-8109 and Benoit Marte at 641-8107 are girosis. M. Murray at Professional Stringers Amen and K. U. Varity Tennis Stringers. 9-18 Singing matches for all occasions. Deli-vive Singing with the ASTA A singer Telegrams. 841-6109 The Moffet Beers Band has an immediate opening for head crew assistant. Call 864-9253 or 842-5068 or 843-9354. Skydive. Look before you leap. Learn about an alternation in first jump instruction to avoid falls and improve safety record, 7 year history. Contact the proper Experienced skydivers enrolled in 12 + hours and trained in forming cabins in the Canadian Rockies. NSCR, I / E dive contact Rick (913) 283- 0425, 14 N. St. Brooks, T6Ape, K6617, K6611 ATTENTION: Established brass band is now holding auditions for talented drummers. Serious inquiries only. Call 841-7137. 9-16 ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED CANOE TRAVEL WEEKEND, getaway weekend the fall. Attend a canoe trip organizational meeting on the first Monday of each month. Room at the Student Union. See you there! Free Kittens. Guaranteed cute, cuddly and adolescible. Cell: 842, J588. 0-16 Over the hump! Boogie with, Tofu Teddy and Reno. 98th Street. 200 W. 34th St. Purchase tickets at www.renehotel.com or www.humph.co.uk. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs and excellent tapping equipment. 9-26 PSYCHIC SELF÷ AWARNESS CLASS: Learn about the akuas, chakraas, spirit guides, self-helping Sturts very quick. Cost $10 per week; for 10 weeks. Eve Lauren 841-987-94 9-24 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Pleepspers and 1943 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. I'RE COME TO THE MOUNTAINS Night at the HARBOUR LITES. All Busch 1uch book 60c from 7:00 p.m. The HARBOUR LITES 1911 Massachusetts Institution First-Class Dive. 9-16 TUESDAY NIGHT is Blue Grass Night at Stark University. See the movie Toxer Pellor and the Skunk Valley Differs. W4. 29th. #83-4000. 9-16 KU welcomes Pizza Pete's little sister little sister for a photo call. Cheerly. Meet me at G.P. Lloyd's Downtown all this week. drinks are cheap, service is excellent, and the guys are cute. Boo. 9-16 Attention: For those who have Fox or other imprint sirts and would like the real thing, I have authenticated alligator patches for sale. Reasonably priced. Call 864-1874. Instant color passport photos. Immigration. I.D. portraits, resume, portfolios, slides: color & B/W. Tom 641-7294. 9-30 SERVICES OFFERED GET PAID for doing homework. Babysitter wanted FOR KU football games and occasional weekends. Located South of campus. 842-8473. 9-18 THE BKE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage specialty-"Tune-ups" and "Total Overhaul" 841-781-2711. B. Chris I. W want you to know I'm crazy about you. See you at leeh and maybe at Kankanak. From somebody you don't know yet. 9-16 T.A.L. lending $10 discount to KU. Student fees, tuition and raising salary Lawrence, Guaranteed, Lawyer, and no danger ultraviolet rays. Call for investment. Monday thru Saturday. Call 917-534-2300. For the first complete service on most臣 service—STRAIGHT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Datum, Fiat Honda, Toyota 434-742-861 Patient tutor available for Germ 194. West Civ, and Eng 101. 843-9008, ask for Judy COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-10:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2 $ each EACH HOUSE OF USHE: RESUMES PREPARED to suit your budget. Professionally written and typed. Call 794- 2978 evenings. 9-16 Flute lesson-Experienced teacher accepts new students, beginning through advanced. Call Diane at 841-025 (evenings) 6-18 ENSTEIN'S TUTORS. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call DAVI. 841-7633 English, grammar, compus- sion, typing, research, typing. Call RANGE. 917-0400 7040. 1 Astrology provides a frame of reference for your career choices. It can help you identify if You are confused about where you are going in your life or want your strengths to shine. Astrology also gives you different directions for You Call 843-1953 for more information. Experienced K.U. typist IBM Correcting Experienced K.U. typist IBM Correcting Sandy, sandy and weekends, wkends Sandy, sandy and weekends, wkends Tutoring service for all lower level mans courses up to Calib. 115. Call Curtail 9-24 TYPING Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics editing self-correct Selecical Call Ellen or Jeannam. 841-372-12. 12-8 Experienced QuikItem paper, papers, thin- tissue and paper stock. Mail corrections spelling corrected bd-8944-Mc Wrigley Jr. Jr. I do damned good typing. PkgB8-4247. tf Accommodated, expertly typed IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. Typist Edit Fles / Ems, Quality Welcome editor, editing layout. Call Jean, J812 welcome / editing layout. Call Jean, J812 ON 8-2-2001 THE WORLD'S MOST NATIONAL ENCORE COPY CORPS Typing pennies discounted. Excellent work by Nicole and Elizabeth. Betty, 82-6997 after 5 and weekends. If experienced typist—thesis, dissertations, research papers, selective selection, Barb. after 5 p.m., 821-210. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Past re- venues to 11:00 and weekends to 48:25 if requested. FOR PROPESSIONAL TYPENG Call MTTR, 841-4900. Expist would like to do term papers, dissertations, or Call Game at 823-5001. WANTED GOLD-128-DIAMONDNS. Class ring. 41-588-7860 more. Free pick-up. 41-547-4748 41-588-7881 Buying gold. Paying 450-1400 for men's or women's dresses, $725-$925 for 120 w. Width, Holiday Plaza, N42-825, 9-29s. The University of Kansas, McColumbum Laboratory, laboratory equipment. Repair personnel. All students Roommate: Beautiful spacious home located 2-3 blocks from campus. Private Room, $110/mo plus 16 of utilities. Call 841-807. Dana. Roommate to share 2 bdm. apt. $10.50 plus half utilities. Call Al at 842-1821. - 16 Roommate for spacious new 2 bdm. apt. + 1u utilities. Contact Julie 5-17 0170 0170 5-17 Roommate at the Jayhawk Tower as Cabin 14. All utility paid Call 6-18 3014 Aviature Male wanted to share mobile home, non- employee student. BES. 1058, 749-2810. by 9-17 Roommate to share 2 bibm duplex $137.50 Roommate to share 2 bibm duplex $137.50 your bedroom. Call 841-129-129 Two people needed to tab-absease spacious Malls apt. with fireplace, balcony, 1½ baths, on bus route and other comforts Supported at 842-780-789 Call Dave or Dennis 8-918 Female roommate to share comfortable 2 room in campus call Campus mediately 718-084-1 Non-making roommate to share a room with 16 years old, furnished 3 bdrms, 2 baths, at Mile Oak Edge Lodge Apt. Rent $9.41. Contact Mary Forest 825-416-1. Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 16, 1980 PM420 California kids get starting jobs The Kansas youth movement will get its official start Saturday. Freshman quarterback Frank Seuer and tailback Kerkin Winell, the high-touted one-two punch from California, have been given the starting nod in the Jayhawk's home opener against Pittsburgh. The reason for starting the pair, according to head coach Don Fambrough, was their performance Saturday against Oregon. "Seuer and Bell can do just as good a job as Steve Smith and Walter Mack, so I'm not worried about it at all," Fambrough said. Smith was the starting quarterback last week and Mack, the No. 1 tailback. Seuer replaced Smith at the helm after Smith was shaken up on a third down keeper in the 'Hawks first possession of the second quarter. "I thought I could run over the middle linebacker," Smith said. "I felt a little dizzy, but ready to play by halftime." He never returned. "Sure, I would have liked to return, but Frank was doing a great job," Smith said. "Of course, I'd like to start." but we've got 10 more games to go and this is a week-by-week thing. Smith finished his abbreviated afternoon completing three of five passes for 18 yards and rushing for a total of three yards. "We used the two quarterback system here all last year and that's the way it be this year," Smith said. "I'm not throwing the towel in yet." Mack, on the other hand, who garnered the starting tailback role as the backup quarterback. Ex-Chief kills wife,then himself By Uniteu Press International KANAS CITY, Mo.-Former Kansas City Chiefs offensive tackle Jumie Tyler fatally shot his wife in their southside home yesterday, then turned the gun on himself and committed suicide, police said. Detectives said the couple's 17-year-old son Brad, heard two gunshots and discovered the bodies of Tyler, 41, and Jared, 40, 40, sprained in an inert bedroom. The officers said it appeared Tyrer "shot his wife and then took his own life." Sgt. Dean B. Kelly Jr., said both victims suffered single bullet wounds to the head. A .38 caliber revolver was found at the scene. Authorities found no motive and would release few details of the circumstances. Family members told the officers that Tyler, who retired from the Army in 2016, out of work recently, but that he gave no indication he was depressed. "In football, there is so much discipline and adversity involved that even though he was having some adversity you wouldn't think of him putting a gun to his head. But I know he was depressed." "It's a shock to me," said Len Dawson, former quarterback and a close friend of Tyrer. "He was always such a strong, stable guy. Something special about him." Dawson man. Doing something like this is completely contrary to his character. The Tyrers had four children, three of whom were in the home at the time of the shootings. Tyrer started each game since his rookie year, played in 180 consecutive games in his 13 seasons and started in the Chiefs Bowls in which the Chiefs played. He retired in 1974 after finishing his career as a member of the Washington Redskins. Preston Sturtles outrageous satirical face about a young girl (Betty Hutton) who gets drunk with some soldiers and ends up married to and pregnant by one of her peers. With a host of performances of hilarity, with a great performance by William Demarest as Officer Kockenlocker. Plus: Bugs Hutton. "Dr. Devil and Mr. Hare." (99 min). Color. Tuesday, Sept. 16 The Miracle of Morgan's Creek Mack refused to comment about Saturday's game or his future playing position. Jae-Luc Godard's breakthrough New Wave film, an amoral tale of a petrock moon, an amoral tale of a petrock moon, and Jean Simmons in *Jean-Simmon*, exciting rules of editing in its fast-paced, rules story (written by Truffaut). Plus: Godard's *Callation* is called *Patche儿*. **8/24** min. **BW 7-3**. SUA FILMS Thursday, Sept. 18 Orchestra Rehearsal Wednesday, Sept. 17 Breathless (A Bout de Souffle) in the middle of rehearsal an orchestra breaks down. Some want different instruments, but some don't want to play at all. Federico Fellini's allegiance, inspired in part by the music he composed for the clever, thanks to Felini's light touch and Nino Rota's test score, a delicious paraphrase of his poem "Pretender" prey to the historical-speculative impetus which grabbed Vincenzi and Rosellini, still he reveals that he is controversial about Taylor's parody of "18%" (72 min). Color. fall practice, carried the ball only twice on Saturday, finishing with five vards. Unless otherwise noted, all films will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in Boston on Tuesday and Friday, 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight film is $2.00. All film programs include a free screening as Union, 4th level, information 884-3477. No smoking or referections at auditions. "They (Seuer and Bell) showed a great deal of maturity and poise out there." Fambrough said. "They've always been smart." She will do the job, "will get someone who will." More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. The other change in the Jayhawk starting line-up will be see more Dave This coupon entitles you to a *free* blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 841-4488 CRAFTSMAN If your bicycle is in less than peak riding condition, come to us. Our professionals are specially trained to handle all aspects of bicycle servicing — from a simple tune-up to major repairs. Get the bugs out. "As I told them before practice today, they gave a tremendous amount of effort and you can't criticize effort. But we can correct our mistakes." Following yesterday's practice, Fambrigh said his major concern was taking advantage of all scoring opportunities. "We can't go down there and come away without getting anything on the scoreboard," he said. "We missed a lot of things, but we have to know what's on up front." No matter what condition your bicycle is in, we'll help you get the bus out. JAYHAWK NOTES—Cornerback Dave Harris was named the Big Eight Defensive Player of the Week. Harris, a fifth-year senior, blocked an Oregon punt to set up the Jayhawk's tying 65-60 down drive late in the fourth quarter. Franchised Dealer For Franchise Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AUSTRO DAIMLER We Service All Bikes RICK'S BIKE SHOP "I if didn't block that punt, someone else would have," Harris said. 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence, KS 66044 The Royals were idle, and Texas helped them out by beating the second-season Oakland A's 2-0. WE'VE BEEN OPEN ONE YEAR AND NOW WE WANT TO CELEBRATE TO THE MEMBER WEARING THE BEST COSTUME WITH A SGT. PRESTON'S THEME. $50 PRIZE Come Join Us For Our Anniversary Celebration SGT. PRESTONS OF THE NORTH The entire American League East took the day off, so Baltimore still trails New York by five games in that race. Hey-We Did It!! The Kansas City Royals clinched a tie for the American League Western Division championship last season, and they didn't even do anything. The victory assured Kansas City of the tie and reduced the magic number to one. SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH Kansas City, which won three straight division titles from 1976-78, and all last one championship series to the New York Yankees, is looking for its fourth divisional crown in five years. The Royals are second-best winning percentage in the majors, next to the Yankees. - REDUCED DRINK PRICES - REDUCED FOOD PRICES Sept. 17 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Texas wins; Royals can clinch today MEMBERS ONLY—SORRY NO GUESTS The major-league's leading hitter George Brett, who has been sidelined for eight games with tendinitis in his right hand, is not expected to play tonight when Kansas City hosts California. YOU'VE DRANK AT THE REST, NOW DRINK AT THE BEST! LAURA NEWMANN/Kensan staf 815 N.H. Kansas City Royals' Magic Number $\textcircled{1}$ BUY OR SELL BUT OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 1 New Hampshire 9 am-5 pm The slugging third baseman said, however, that he thought he would only have to play 14 of the remaining 18 innings. He needs to qualify for the batting title. In these 14 games, though, Brett would have to come to the plate four times each game. If Kansas City should beat California tonight, the Royals would clinch the divisional title, the first team to do so this year. PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND PEOPLE BOOK USE THEM OVERLAND PHOTO phone 841-8708 Village Inn PANCAKE MOUSE RESTAURANT All You Can Eat Pancakes $1.79! Served With 2 Link Sausages 4:00 p.m. to Close Wednesday & Sunday 821 Iowa Lawrence Anniversary SALE! 20 to 50% Off atlantic Ektelon Magnum Was $65° Now $4600 Trag Racketball Rackets Reg. $18° Now $950 RADIO 20%-40% Off Selected Ski Equipment Hanson Citation Reg. '1235⁰ Now $¹188⁰⁰ Hanson Lady Viva Reg. '185⁰ Now $¹41⁰⁰ FREE wax & lubrication on any skis brought in! ent FREE $^{14}$° nylon string job with purchase of any tennis racket. 20% Off Selected Warm-ups Uni Law S S The night prog Asso repo. 50% Off selected ladies tennis wear 50% Off selected Ski-Wear THE KU's piece effect By D Staff Ace Studl year vote Brittania blue jeans 30% Off! first serve SKI & SPORTS SHOPPE By Sta 840 Massachusetts 841-0811 Evenings till 5.30 • Thursday till 8.30 1 The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Wednesday, September 17, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 18 USPS 650-640 StudEx panel praises ASK; Senate acts on report tonight By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate executive committee last night voted to accept its subcommittee's progress report on student membership in the report to the Senate of Kansai University and the report to the Senat for its approval tonight. If the report is approved, KU will remain a member of the statewide lobbying group. According to the Senate's revenue code, StudEx must prepare a progress report each year on ASK and submit it to the Senate for a vote on continuing or discontinuing membership. THE NINE-PAGE report voices support for KU's membership in ASK and cities several pieces of legislation that ASK has lobbied for effectively. Among ASK's legislative successes are: killing the House bill to change the residency requirements for in-state tuition from one year to six months for those 21-year-old or older; killing a House bill to raise tuition for foreign students to 60 percent of the budget; and passing a House bill to give state aid to Washburn University and Kansas community colleges. The report, compiled by Jim Borelli, Matt Keenan and Bren Abbott, StuDEx members, said "ASK is effective in lobbying for those issues it addresses. The continued funding of ASK also be contingent, however, on the effective application of the KU ASK organization." The report then recommended that the Senate vote to fund KU's membership in ASK for 1980-81 and vote to approve several requirements concerning KU delegates. The second recommended requirement calls for the Legislative Assembly delegates to be chosen by a three-member selection board consisting of the campus ASK director, the Minority Affairs committee chairman and the Student Rights committee chairman. The first requirement asks for more effort at informing students of ASK Legislative Assemblies and the delegate selection, including advertisements before and after the assemblies. Getting minority students involved in ASK and the Semester has been a problem the groups have with the program. THE RECOMMENDATION originally called for the Services committee chairman to serve on the board. After some discussion and an unsuccessful motion to put the student body president on the board, the Minority Affairs Committee chairman was decided for the spot. Jeff Evans, KU ASK campus director said the students involved would help "to encourage community involvement." student body president assists in selecting the camus director. Matt Davs, student body vice president, dismissed the idea that the student body president should serve on the selection board. He said that it would be better to have more input in selecting delegates, and that someone with fewer time commitments should be chosen. The The third requirement concerned KU issues. After lengthy debate, the committee voted to recommend that KU ASK delegates, with the guidance of the commission, establish legislation and lobbying for those issues that specifically effect KU, as well as issues on the state level. BEFORE BEING AMENDED, the requirement made the campus director solely responsible for organizing lobbying efforts on KT issues. Bob Frigo, graduate student and former ASK delegate, said that that was not practical, however, because the campus director was hired by ASK and was responsible for state issues first. A sub item recommending that ASK's primary emphasis be on educational issues was struck According to Evans, "You will find that 75 percent of what ASK works on is educational." At the same time, he said, the proposed recommendation put undue emphasis on strictly educational issues and would have caused concern about whether lobbying on issues such as raising the drinking age was an educational matter ASK is against raising the legal age for the purchase of 3.2 beet to 21. Classified salaries on Regents agenda The report concluded that the need for an annual review of KU's membership in ASK could have been avoided. By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter One of KU's priorities at the Board of Regents meetings tomorrow and Friday is discussion of additional funds needed for classified employee benefits. The university also has a cooperative secretary of the University, said yesterday. Salary increases for classified employees are based on a three-step merit system, whereby employees with the best evaluations receive the largest salary increases. The Council of Presidents and the Board of regents will discuss which estimation to present (the report) at the meeting. Von Ende said the state budget director allocated enough money to cover an estimated average increase of one and one-half steps per employee, but the Board of Regents had estimated earlier that it would need an average of a two-step increase per employee. According to the new merit plan passed by the Kansas Legislature last year, a "three" evaluation would give an employee a 9 percent salary raise, a "two" would mean a 6 percent increase, a "one" would mean a 4 percent increase. An employee receiving a zero evaluation would receive no increase in salary. Classified employees are evaluated annually. and an employee may go up or down the evaluation scale each year. Von Ende said the first merit increases would be July 1 and the University budget had to be doubled. Martin Jones, University director of business and fiscal affairs, said the Board of Regents budget allocated $1.2 million for classified employees' salary increases and expected the state budget director's recommendation to be lower. Von Ende said it was important to get the higher average allocation per employee app- "We're going to do our best to get at least the average of two steps per employee," Von Ende He said the other Regents agenda items of importance to the Lawrence campus were consideration of the banner policy and the approval of the school's increased number of hours for graduation. The School of Education changed its program from tour to four years and increased graduation rates. KU's banner policy will be examined Friday morning by the Legislative, By-Laws and Policy Committee, which will make its recommendations to the Resents that afternoon. The banner policy has been under fire from free speech groups at the University, who most recently opened up of 12 students at the University last May. Von Ende said the committee had the report of the Blue Ribbon Committee on the Freedom of Speech. He did not know whether Acting Attorney General would be asked to report to the committee, he said. rine Regents have some "housekeeping items" on the agenda for KU, Von Wonde said, including approval of the purchase of three new vehicles for the University. The preliminary plans for the health science library at the University of Kansas Medical Center also will be discussed at the Regents meeting, Von Ende said. The Regents also will consider the proposed Med Center fee rate increases that will pay for the library. He said the fee schedule had to be included in the legislation that approved the allocation of funds for the project. The Regents also will discuss how to enforce legislation passed last session that authorizes any state agency to withhold paychecks if employees have outstanding fines or loans. von Ende said he thought the Regents would let each university develop its own policy as long as it did not become a university. The department of business and fiscal affairs would decide the policy for KU, he said. Temperatures plummet; storms batter state The unexpected wintry temperatures that swept through Lawrence yesterday were caused by a cold air mass that began in Canada and moved across the Dakotas and the central plains, David Rehlan, KU weather service forecaster, said yesterday. The fronts that moved across Kansas and Missouri also produced storms that caused heavy rainfall and hail in some parts of the two-state region. Relihan said the 69 degree temperature recorded yesterday set a new minimum high. the northeast Kansas counties of Nermah Brown and Jackson. Pea-sized hail and heavy rain accompanied by gusty winds were reported by police in northeast Johnson County. large region. Severe thunderstorm warnings were issued for The record minimum high temperature was 74 degrees and was set in 1895 and 1931. Elihan said that temperatures recorded by 6 p.m. yesterday missed the record low by 14 degrees. He said temperatures ahead of the mass were in the mid 10s, while directly behind it they were in the mid 30s. The cold air mass extended from the central plains to the Texas panhandle, he said. He said, however, that temperatures would not be as hot as they had been during the past few months. The cold front will be moving slowly northeast, Reilhan said, and a warm front will be moving southwest. FOOTBALL 1978-79 BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff Bob McReyer, Mission senior, twists and turns in an effort to kick a soccer ball during a recent practice near Memorial Stadium. Breweries hire student reps to promote campus beer sales Bv RAY FORMANEK The campus representatives serve as liaisons between the beer distributors and retailers and a variety of things just short of giving the students an opportunity to get thrury KU students to drink their products. Staff Reporter "I spend about 15-20 hours a week putting up posters, fliers and making calls," David O'Hara, Shawnee Mission senior and Schiltz campus representative, said yesterday. Breweries have been tapping college campuses in recent years to find representatives to help them promote their products. O'Hara, who has been a Schiltz campus representative for more than a year, said much of his time was spent trying to improve the image of the beer on campus. "The other reps have a beer with a good name to dae with on campus," he said, "I had to have a drink." He said part of his salary of about $100 a month was paid by the brewery and part by the local distributor. Other KU campus representatives were also paid. He refused to disclose the amounts they were paid. Another representative, Randy Knotts, Leawood junior and campus representative for Olympia Brewing Co., goes a bit further in his promotion. Knottas said he made a point of asking for Kyle when he went out and had asked his friends to do this. "If enough people ask for my beer, they'll get it," he said. KNOTTS RECENTLY USED the tactic successfully at a bar that didn't serve Oly. See REPRESENTATIVE page 5 Weather AUTUMNY It should be mostly sunny by this afternoon with south to southwesterly winds at 18 to 18 mph. The high will be about 75, according to the KU weather. Service. Service Skies will be fair tonight with light southerly winds and low temperatures KU prof interested in Creole culture Tomorrow there will be mostly fair skies with the high in the low 80s. About 15 years ago, he also fell in love with Harriet Croole, the language of Haiti's common people. By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Bryant Freeman was reared in Connecticut, where he teaches college French. But he is in Paris. This semester, Freeman rounded up scarce materials and advertised a class on campus bulletin board. "I've been at 60 countries, and Haiti is the most exciting and I freeman, professor of French." I wished to be there. As a result, the University of Kansas is one of Halton Universities in the country that teaches Halton College. A PROFESSOR AT Indiana University teaches Croole and wrote the textbook that The class is open to all students, Freeman said, but he recommended that students take at least two years of college French before trying to learn Haitian Creole. Once students know the basics of French, Creole is relatively easy to master, he said. Haitian Creole is a stripped-down mixture of African dialects and French. It is spoken by six million people in Haiti. There are no genders, few articles and no extra letters, he said. For example, "eau," the French word for water, is both spelled and pronounced "o" in words like *eu*. HAITIAN CREOLE was born 300 years ago when slaves brought from Africa to Haitian plantations formed a new language in order to understand their French masters as well as each "It doesn't comply with the ridiculous spelling rules that still are hanging on in French," Freeman said. "It combined several African dialects and French as heard by African ears," Freeman Everyone in Haiti speaks Creole, Freeman said, but the written form of the language was not standardized until 1940. 1979 was the first year that Creole was taught in Haiti grade Although Haiti won its independence in 1804, Frenchmen in the official Haitian language spoken by people in Haiti "They realized it was ridiculous to hit these students with their language like French on first day of school, of course." LAST WEEK, TIME magazine reported that teachers in some New York City schools would be required to learn Haitian Creole after thousands of Haitian boat people immigrated to that city this year. Hati is a beautiful, mountainous island with rich, dark soil. Freeman said, but it is also one of the nicest places in the world. There are now about one million Haitians in the United States and Canada, Freeman said, and many of them fled their country to escape poverty and illiteracy. Ninety percent of the people cannot read or use English language, and the average life expectancy is 80. Duvailer kept order with the aid of a secret police force called "Ton Ton Mecoute." The Haitian people are pessimistic, Freeman said. In Haiti, a common answer to "How are you?" is, "No worse." The people also have a saying: "Deye mon, gin mon." Alexandre left Haiti in the early 60s when he was 17 years old. He has not seen his country In the 68s, Haiti was ruled by Pressident-for- life Francis Duvalier, Alexandre said. "Literally, it means, 'Behind the mountains, more mountains.' " Freeman said, "but it also means. If you're not happy today, don't worry. You won't be happy tomorrow, either." SOME HAILTANS left their country to escape persecution, said Mario Alexandre, a Haitian graduate student who helps Freeman teach Creole. "The name is hard to explain, but the image is one of an uncle carrying an empty bag and you don't know what's in the bag." Alexandre said. "It's kind of like the booie, ie man." Haiti is about 90 percent Catholic, Freeman said, but almost all Haitian believe in dark secrets. "A lot of the people there who are into Catholicism are also into voodoo," he said. Freeman said he had been to about 25 voodoo ceremonies and was a close friend of a voodoo priestess. He said the dark religion was used to control people who believed in it. "I know that if you believe an Ouanga, or death curse, has been put on you, you could die," he Freeman said he had seen many sides of Haiti since his first visit 22 years ago. He has seen the manicured lawns of the elite and the mansions of President Jean Claude Duvalier. He also has visited the huts of the poor and understand their superstitions and their wisdom. H I HIS SOUENEVI-cluttered office, Freeman wrote two Haitian Creele handbooks that he said were "well known." Freeman said he probably would return to Haiti this year. "It's only an hour and forty minutes from Miami," he said. "You can get there in a day." Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International U.S., China open trade discussions WASHINGTON—The United States and China yesterday opened high-level talks that are expected to result in new agreements on civil aviation, shipping, textile trade and a consular convention. Chinese Vice Premier Bo Yibo, head of the Chinese delegation, said at the formal opening of three days of talks that preliminary discussions already covered topics such as cooperation on the new trade agreement. Treasury Secretary G. William Miller, representing the United States, said the meetings provided an opportunity for "final conclusion" of the plan. agreements. For a signing visit, the talks are the first session of the U.S.-China Joint Economic Committee, set up during Chinese Vice Premier Den Xiaoping's U.S. visit in January 1979. U. S.-China trade reached a level of $2 billion in 1979 and is expected to reach $4 billion this year. The United States is now the second-largest exporter to China,trailing only Japan,and the third-largest market for Chinese exports,behind only Japan and Hong Kong. Secretary denies he tipped off Billy WASHINGTON—President Carter's appointments secretary denied to a Senate subcommittee yesterday that he obstructed a federal investigation of Billy Carter's Libyan connections and complained bitterly about accusations that he had. Phil Wise, the secretary, swore to the panel investigating the Billy Carter affair that he cooperated with the Justice Department investigation, although he was so busy that the FBI had to make several requests for an interview. Wise, a native of Plains, Ga., who has known the Carter brothers most of his life, said he did not tip Billy Cartier off about the investigation, even though he had many personal and telephone contacts with him and his associate, Richard McNichols. He said neither man told him of their plans to kill him in 1787 and 1789. But, when asked about specific meetings and telephone calls shown on White House records or subpoenaed telephone company records, Wise repeatedly said he did not recall the contacts or did not remember what was said. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-InD, chairman of the panel, complained, "I have a bad memory, but I must say these repeated, 'I don't recall' are red flags." California court expands L.A. busing LOS ANGELES-The California state Supreme Court yesterday expanded a mandatory school busing program to include nine schools previously exempted, which created additional confusion on an already chaotic first day of classes. Less than an hour after the first day's classes ended, the high court overturned an appeals court ruling made last Saturday and put nine San Francisco judges on trial. The school board, dominated by busing opponents, immediately announced that it would appeal the decision. The appeal return to Superior Court Judge Paul Egly the power of deciding which schools should be included in the busing program. School officials called the first day of classes an "unfeuential" success. thousands of children were sent to a court-ordered desegregation program, in which the major breakthroughs Unlike three years ago—when the city faced its first semester of mandatory busing—officials, parents and children were calm. But there was widespread confusion, triggered by the flurry of last-minute court actions and complicated administrative reactions. Thousands of other children who were to be bused out of their neighborhoods showed up at their home schools. They will attend them for several weeks, and the teachers will provide care. Committee calls for nerve gas plant WASHINGTON—A majority of the Senate Armed Services Committee, citing a "significant" chemical warfare gap in comparison to the Soviet Union, yesterday called for renewed U.S. production of nerve gas after a 10-year shutdown. Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., backed by all but three members of the committee, proposed a $3.5 million production plant at Pine Bluffs, Ark., as an amendment to the military construction authorization bill. The House has approved the money. The Carter administration is opposed to construction of the plant. The plant, which would not begin operation until 1984, would produce binary munitions—chemical weapons that form a nerve gas by mixing two explosives of different densities. Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo, immediately offered a compromise calling for a review of U.S. policy on chemical warfare to be completed by March 1, 1981. "The Soviet Union today enjoys a significant advantage over the United States in chemical weaponry on the battlefield and, consequently, at the nuclear site. We had said: 'As a result there is little on no inducement for Moscow to respond an arm's control agreement limiting and reducing chemical weapons.'" Cessnas face emergency inspections WICHTHA—Emergency engine inspections have been ordered for about 600 presurved versions of the Cessna 210 Centurion, the Federal Aviation Administration inspec An AFA spokesman said the order and other restrictions were made to "reduce the possibility of engine detonation." The action follows an Aug. 29 Colorado incident involving the emergency landing of a Centurion that apparently lost engine compression. The FAA said a piston burned out during flight and the problem could have been detected in advance. Besides the Centurion, the FAA ordered an immediate inspection of the tail sections on 1,200 Cessna twin-engine 340s before they are flown. Emergency inspections had been ordered last week for every 100 hours of flight because of tail cracking problems. The plane's engine was the kind that is used only on the pressurized Cessna 210, the company's first single-engine pressurized model, officials said. The FAA grounded the planes until the inspections were completed and ordered additional inspections for every 10 hours of flight. Teachers' strike in Columbus settled The order followed a recommendation last week by the National Trans- mission Ground around the 340 models until the tail cracking problems could be checked. In the nation's largest walkout, 22,000 Philadelphia teachers stuck to their demands of a ceiling occupancy teacher layoffs, extending a 17-day-old school strike. Buses rolled yesterday in the Columbus, Ohio, school system, ending the nation's second largest school strike, but teachers and school officials still were deadlocked in nine states, where teachers' strikes affected more than 525,000 students. Striking members of the Ohio Association of Public School Employees ended an eight-day walk by accepting a $1.10 an hour raise in a 26-month Bus drivers returned to their jobs yesterday and began transporting about 40,000 of the system's 73,000 students, who are in their second year of court-ordered education. Teachers in Columbus turn the non-academic employee's picket lines and continued to work during the strike, but the lack of bus transportation was a major factor. Tehran Radio, monitored in London by the BBC, said Parliament voted by a "decisive majority" to create a special commission to review the hostage crisis. Parliament had been scheduled to begin its debate about the Americans in "open session" but decided to form the commission instead. Teachers in three other Ohio school districts were still on strike, affecting 12.700 students. Hostage review board set up Other states experiencing teachers' strikes are Michigan, Illinois, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Washington, California and Arizona. The Iranian Parliament yesterday voted to hand over the 319-day-old hostage crisis to a special review commission, but it was not clear whether the move would hasten or hinder the release of the $2 American canvases. THE RADIO GAVE no other details, and it was not immediately clear what kind of event it was. By United Press International President Carter, on the campaign trail, backed off from earlier optimistic predictions and told reporters in Atlanta, "We don't have any prospect for an early resolution of the issue at this time." deciding the fate of the hostages who were seized when the U.S. Embassy was attacked Nov. 4. Most members of the fundamentalist-dominated Parliament have said they favor trying the hostages as spies. Parliament was charged by Avatollah Ruhollah Khomeini with But Khomeini, in a rare comment on the crisis, said Friday that the captives would be set free if the United States fulfilled four conditions: returning the late shah's wealth, releasing frozen Iranian assets, dropping all claims against Iran and promising not to intervene in Iran's internal affairs. That seemed to take the matter out of Parliament's hands. At the time, it also appeared significant because of the omission of a demand that the United States apologize for its past support of the shah. But the speaker of the Parliament, Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani, later said that Iran had not dropped that demand. THE HOT AND cold signals blowing from Iran apparently caused some confusion in Washington and placed a new question mark over what amounted to Parliament's first direct action in the crisis. Observers said it was too soon to say what impact, if any, Parliament's decision to create a special commission would have on the hostage crisis. YOU'LL DO MORE THAN CHEER FOR THIS X DALLAS CHEERLEADER! UN-CUT THE BEST BETTING FORT HOME FOR TUMBLES CLASSIC CHAMPIONSHIP Debbie Dons DALLAS FRL. & SAT. AT MDHITE. MUST BE 18 OR OLDER Varsity Downtown 843-1065 It could, for instance, be a move to make the crisis less political and to steer away from a full-blown debate in Parliament, where calls to put the hostages on trial would be heard. That possibility, following Khomeini's statement Friday, could be a positive sign, the observers said. But Parliament's action could merely be a delaying tactic, another effort to prolong the crisis by pushing back the debate, the observers said. WARNING: THIS IS NOT A TRADITION! COLLEGE ISSUE! THE MS.COLLEGE SPECIAL! *The FIRST "Ms" THINK TANK OF WOMEN SCHOLARS *YOUR CAMPUS *The College President as Rebel *Advice for New Students ON SALE NOW HEART'S ANN AND NANCY WILSON *HEART'S ANN AND NANCY WILSON ROCK ROLL Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358. September 17,18,19 and 20 Power Glide Wednesday—Ladies Night free beer for ladies 7:00:9:00 PM (no cover) Thursday Drink and Drown $4.00 guys $3.00 girls Every Monday and Tuesday 99% pitchers—ALL NIGHT!! G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa THE RESET FROM NONFICTION COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 443-5788 Varsity Downtown 843-1065 Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7.30 & 9.30 P Boogie Man 7:40 & 9:20 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:15 & 9:15 2. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3. Urban Cowboy 7:10 & 9:25 Cinema Twin 31st & Ilewa 842-8400 1. Xanadu 7:30 & 9:40 2. Oh Heavenly Dog 7:30 & 9:30 TRUTH IN ADVERTISING BEWARE OF FALSE AND MISLEADING CLAIMS COMPARE FOR YOURSELF ATTENTION: THESIS COPIERS Copy Center "E" will make Thesis Copies for you for 6¢ each, *but* those copies are, according to their representative, made on a "Shiny-Surfaced" paper. In other words, made on a coated paper copier. Needless to say, "Most People want the real 25% Uncoated Rag Bond which is 76 a copy," not 6¢. Copy Center "E" will allow another 10% discount if your order totals over 50 copies. Since it's been brought-up, we invite your comparison of the following (we called and found) COPY CTR "E" HOUSE OF USHER Thesis Copying, cost per copy on White, Unprotected 25% Rag Bond ... 7¢ ... 5¢ (You don't pay for gathering at House of Usher unless you want it - it adds 16 per copy) Cost to make 5-Copies of a 100-page Thesis on 25% Unused Paper Bond, Inductible in security discounts $31.50 $25.00 ... HOW ABOUT THESIS BINDING? HOW TO COMPARE ITS VALUES Let's Compare Again: COST ... $66.00* ... $30.00 ... Hard-Bind 4-Copies with a 3-Line Title & Your Name Gold Stamped on Front TIME ... 10-days ... 2-3 days ... *To be fair, the above is Copy Center "E's" *Rush Service* — their regular service would be "Only!" $15.00, but would take 4-6 weeks. And while we're at it 200 copies 8½ x 11 White 20# Bond (including all so-called discounts) ... $8.50 ... $5.00 ... 1000 copies each of 2 originals 8½ x 11 20# ... $55.00 ... $42.00 ... H STU DISA p.m. Jean speak Facil Disal - COMPARE OUR PRICES * O - COMPARE OUR QUALITY * ROI PROF OPHO part o 8 p.m. will p alto panie perfo - COMPARE OUR EXPERIENCE * 6:301 AL to 8 r - COMPARE OUR SERVICE * And We Think You Will Agree, The House of Usher is .. Headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying in Lawrence HOUSE OF USHER BAT 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE (913) 842-3610 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY I OLD KU FACULTY RECITAL ROBERT STANTON, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF OBOE AND SAX- PHONE, will present a concert as part of the KU Faculty Recital Series at 8 p.m. in Swarthout廊馆 Hall. He will play the oboe, English horn and bassoon. The performance will be panied by eight members of the music performance faculty. HPER PROFESSOR SPEAKS STUDENTS CONCERNED WITH DISABILITIES will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in room 305 of the Satellite Union. Jean Pyter, HPER professor, will speak on "Physical Education at KU for People with Disabilities." KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Kansas University Parlors. SIERRA CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas State University. STUDENT SENATE will meet from 6:30 to 11 p.m. in 100 Smith Hall. ALPHA CHI SIGMA will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. in room 2011 Malet. THE ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES CENTER will hold three meetings. A contemplative prayer session will begin at 7:45 a.m. and will be guided by Thomas Merton's meditation of "Seeds of Contemplation, Part 1." The University Forum at 8:45 a.m. by Dr. Sandra Zimdare-Swartz, associate professor of religious studies. Her lecture addresses the topic "Visions of Men and Women in Contemporary Novels." The Theological Seminar at 7 p.m. will discuss readings on peace and nonviolence by William S. Shaver, Chavey and William Staree Coffin. KU WATER POLE TEAM will hold the event at 7 p.m. at the Ropahon Center Pool. KU VOLLEYBALL CLUB TROUTUS the south gym of old Rickman (Gymnasium) INTRAMURAL SINGLES TENNIS TOURNAMENT has an entry deadline of 5 p.m. Register in 298 Robinson Center. TOMORROW MUSLIM STUDENT ASSOCIATION all day at the Kaunas University Lobby. KU GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP KU GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP In Cork Room #18 in the Kangaroo Union. KU BIG BROTHERS/SISTERS will hold a training workshop for volunteers from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in 4033 Wescoe. KU GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 4965 Wescoe. THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SEXUALITY at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will meet at 7 p.m. to examine Bible visions on sex- SCREMEB will meet at 6 p.m. in 2007 Learned. CO-REC VOLLEYBALL MANAGER will meet in 150 Robinson Center. THE JACOB BRONOSKI FILM SERIES will continue with the showing "Ascent of Man: Grain in the Stone" at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wesco SUA ART EXHIBIT AND SALE will have the Level 4 Gallery of the Kansas University Lawrence police have no suspects in a bomb threat that was telephoned in to Hillcrest School, 1045 Hillcock, Monday afternoon, police said. On the Record According to police, a tran called the was a bomb in the school and hung up. He did not ask for any ransom, nor did he make other demands, police said. Shortly after the first call, the man died. As soon as the bernb was set to go off in an hour, no one was there. According to police, no search of the building was conducted, but the children in the school were given an apparent threat that came apparent the threat was a fake. LAWRENCE FIREFIGHTERS were unable to find the cause of smoke detected on the second and third floors of the building, said Jim McSwain, chief of the Lawrence Fire Department said yesterday afternoon. According to McSain, smoke from an unknown source inside the building set off smoke detectors at about 10 a.m. Lawrence said. The Lawrence Fire Department, he said. Four firetrucks responded to the alarm. Firemen hooked hoses to a fire hydrant and took a hose to the second floor. McSwan said the firefighters searched in vain for about 45 minutes for the cause of the smoke, but ended up thinking that she was the smoke in the building dispatched. Three firefighters returned to their stations, McSwain said, and a small group of firefighters continued to the building for about 30 minutes. McSwain said the building, which contains offices, laboratories and children's workshops, had been occupied by the time the firestruck arrived. Anderson criticizes Carter's turnabout By United Press International DENVER-President Carter has not helped the United States' foreign policy by his 24-hour reversal on whether there is increasing optimism for the release of American hostages in Iran, candidate John Anderson said yesterday. MEANWHILE, President Carter, said that the "stirring" of racial hatred could be seen in Republican nominee Ronald Reagan's campaign. "You've seen in this campaign the stirring of hate and the rebirth of code words like 'states' 'rights' in a speech in Mississippi and a campaign reference to the Ku Klux Klan," the president told 400 black leaders in Atlanta. "This is a message that creates a cloud on the political horizon. Hatred has no place in this country," he told the cheering crowd. Anderson, when asked about Carter's reason he did not consider Raeghan a racist. Monday, in Corpus Christi, Texas, Carter said he saw hopeful signs that the American hostages in Iran might soon be released, but yesterday the president conceded he had been too optimistic. Secretary of State Edmund Muskie Monday had refused to go along with Carter's optimism. "It seems to me that unfortunately the president has once again illustrated his talent for pointing up disarray within his own administration on important questions of foreign policy," Anderson said. "I don't think it it's terribly helpful to use a presidential policy to have the president, speaking." Candidate Watkins to appear at KU Dan Watkins, Democratic candidate challenging Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., for the 3rd District seat in the U.S. Congress, will hold a press conference on Wednesday at Union University to speak later this evening in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. The press conference, at 10:30 a.m. has been previewed by Watkins as a major address regarding Winn's legislative attendance record and his sponsorship of legislation during his 14 years in the House of Representatives. Anderson also said he suspected that Carter's remarks Monday were more politically motivated. "I think we have a fair right to be a little suspicious as to his political motives," Anderson said of Carter's statements. The meeting in the Kansas Union, scheduled for 7:30 p.m., is with the KU and Douglas County Young Democrats. and another way the following day, or to have him in disagreement for even a single day with his own secretary of state." In Atlanta, Carter spoke from the pulpit of Martin Luther King's Ebenezer Baptist Church before moving on to Spartanburg, S.C., for a mission trip. He also scheduled to campaign in Cleveland before returning to Washington last night. THE PRESIDENT's remarks about Reagan referred to a recent Reagan speech in Mississippi and the GOP candidate's comment on Labor Day in Detroit when he incorrectly identified Tucumbia, Ala., where Carter kicked off his campaign, as the birthplace of the Klan. The GOP contender, campaigning in San Antonio, Texas, said that it was true that he did not support the act when it was passed by Congress in 1964, but that he had since become an advocate. The president blistered Reagan's record on social issues and warned blacks that it was more important than white; it moved 4 because "the choice is so clear." "You remember 1968—how a divided Democratic Party deprived Hubert Humphrey of the presidency and elected Richard Nixon," he cautioned. "don't believe that the way to be president is to turn its leadership over to some who thought the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a bad bill." "Back then," Reagan said, "there were a great many people who questioned some things—not the fact of the need for civil rights, but provisions that might be setting precedents for everyone to have a voice in the world." Marked and. "I'm satisfied with it. If anything, I just like to see it better." Production increases may signal recovery WASHINGTON (UPI)—U.S. factories increased production in August for the first time in seven months, the government said yesterday in a report that suggests it might be pulling out of the recession. The 0.5 percent gain in industrial production was the largest since output sputtered 1.1 percent in May 1979. It also ended six straight months of declines, which began in November when the recession took hold. The production figures, released by the Federal Reserve Board, were the latest in a recent string of indicators that suggest the 1980 recession may have run its course in only about six months, making it the shortest of seven economic downturns since World War II. In recent weeks, government reports have shown retail sales rising, housing construction increasing, businesses rebuilding businesses and the United States exporting more and importing less. The August increase in industrial production, which followed declines of 1.1 percent in July, 1.6 percent in June and 2.9 percent in May. "Once industrial production starts going up, it's very unlikely that you'll see anything but a slight bounce up in unemployment," said David Erstad, senior economist with Evans Economics in Washington. The industrial production numbers lend some support to Commerce Department chief economist Courtenay Slater's contention last week that the recession is over. But economists say disagreement among economists over how robust the recovery will be. Alan Greenspan, New York economist who advises Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan, and Lawrence Chimerine, top forecaster at Chase Econometrics, think high inflation and escalating interest rates might hold back or stall recovery. The industrial production index now stands at 140.5 percent of its 1972 base of 100. Production remains stable where it was when the recession began. 7 LSAT CPA MCAT GRE GRE PSCH GRE BIO GMAT DAT OCAT PCAT VAT MAT SAT NAT'L MED BDS ECFGM FLEX VQE NDB NPB I NLE Stanley H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information, Please Call: 913.341.1230 913-341-1220 Bucky's Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb. Hamburger at regular price Get One Free One coupon per customer Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street Buckys Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 CALL TODAY! Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTELRESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVELINSURANCE - ESCORED ICURS travel service 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 ΣX 1980 1980 DERBY GAMES DERRY GAMES Sunburst September 17th 6:00-12:00 p.m. Potter's Pavillion Music by Moffet-Beers Band Gary's Country Western Band Tickets are $4.00 in advance purchase from any KU sorority. $5.00 at the gate. Souffle) SUA FILMS Wednesday, Sept. 17 Breathless (A Bout de (1978) Thursday, Sept. 18 Orchestra Rehearsal Jean-Luc Godard's breakthrough New Wave film, an amoral tale of a petrock and his gift friends, which ignored all the rules of editing in its fast-paced, exciting story (written by Troutman). Plus: Godard's *Catch-22*; *Calling Parish*. (8/924) 8:BW. 7:30. in the middle of rehearsal an orchestra break, down. Some want different music; some don't want to play at all. Fellini's Fitellina's adaptations in part by the band are a delight in dapping. In a clever, thanks to Fellini's light touch and clever, thanks to Fellini's delicate palpity of his other work. After prey to the historical-pischecture impetus which grabbed Viaconti and Rossellini, with a great sense of funny as ever. Plus: "Two." Ramez's fayreary parody of "82%" (12 min.) Color. Friday, Sept. 19 Rich Kids (1979) “Do you think it's easy sneak in enough so easily that your daughter won't get into it?” Mr. Benson's perceptive film, which convincingly shows the materialism is not related to age and lack of experience, directed with a sharp eye by Robert M. Young, a protege of Robert Altman (who wrote the script) and Alvarado, Ires Worth and Paul Dooley, color 3:300, lr red, “Balloon.” (87 min), Color 3:300, lr red. Fedora (1978) Billy Wilder's latest film is a descendant of his Sunset Boulevard. A down-and-out film that feels almost impossible to stage a comeback by luring the elusive, mysterious Fedora—obviously based on Garbo from her retirement movie, *The Miserable Heads*; this is a complex, sinister film. With Martha Keller, Hildegarden Kriel, and David Blythe, it concludes Monday's *14 8th Century*; 7/00. 2001: A Space Odyssey In the last twelve years, men landed on the moon, Skyll lab, fell, and Star Wars came out. But Stanley Kubrick, a prolific artist of gained stature. In space has only special effects are brilliant, but here for once they are secondary to the speculations on man's place in the universe. Experience. See it again. 138 mih Color. 12:00 Midnight. Saturday, Sept. 20 Rich Kids Fedora 3:30, 8:30 2001: A Space Odyssey 12:00 Midnight Unless otherwise noted; all tiffi will be shown at Auditorium in the building on Monday, Friday, and Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.00, Midnight films are $2.00, Serenade films are $3.00, Union, 4th level, Information 864-3477, no smoking or refreshments at Union, 4th level. I Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Opinion A big 'W' for wasteful The University of Kansas once again is suffering from withdrawal symptoms. The source of the University's lils is the withdrawal system, which is not much more than a confusing conglomeration of phases, petitions and schedules. Starting next semester, students will have an extra week to drop a class without receiving a "W" on their transcripts. The Academic Council, comprised of the University's deans, has recommended that "W's" and "F's" still be used in the withdrawal process. Yet each school will be able to formulate a separate policy if it chooses to do so. Under the present withdrawal system, students who drop a course during the first four weeks of class do not receive a mark on their transcripts. During the next three weeks, students simply receive "Ws." After the seventh week, students must petition for the right to receive a "W" instead of an "F." The Council recommended that students be given a five-week period to drop a class without a mark. During the next five weeks, they would receive "W.'s." After the 10th week, students would be forced to petition. The proposal would give students an extra three weeks in a class before having to decide whether to drop it or face the consequences. But the University needs to place less emphasis on its "W's." Better yet, it should scrap them during the first 10 weeks of the semester. After all, the "W" seems to be only an attempt to stigmatize students or scar their academic records, all without good reason. The intent of the Council's recommendations is to give students more time to progress in a class. But those pesky "W's," which under the new proposal would take effect five weeks into the semester, would rush students to the drop office instead of keeping them in class. The extra three weeks provided by the proposal would be for naught. During the first 10 weeks of the semester, schools should rid themselves of the stigmatic "W"-while they still have a chance. John Anderson a gentleman even when he has full deck John B. Anderson is a politician. When asked to comment on President Carter's bumbling foreign policy, the independent candidate quoted West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's impolite question in the question: "That is a very impolite question and I do not go to be so impolite as to answer it." It's not that Anderson the Candidate had nothing to say on the subject. Not at all. In fact, Anderson the Orator is itching to meet the president in verbal combat. But the president is not as eager to enter the arena. With his retusal to meet both Anderson AMY HOLLOWELL --- and Republican candidate Ronald Reagan in the legislature of Women Voters' debate this weekend, the 1976 Carter the Courteous has proven him most definitive to be Carter the Coward. Carter is a shrew man, particularly when it comes to politicking, and his Georgian cohorts are equally as adept at the game. It was most likely this Carter the Shrew who foresaw the outcome of the war and who realized the battering he would attack at the words of the independent candidate. What the Carter forces did not realize, however, was that the league was going to conduct its debate with or without the president. The Georgians didn't reckon that the league should shuad a good of boy. So Carter the Politician would to his wintertime self, to Carter the Carrierer. It seems the Georgians don't reckon that Reagan would shun a good 'oil' boy, either. But Reagan the Realist reads the polls and knows that his own campaign is being hurt less by Anderson than is Carter's. And the Republican will be more assertive if he refusal to debate will be to the Carter campaign. Neither Reagan nor Carter seem to fully comprehend, however, what a boost the debate will be for the Anderson campaign. At the very end of it, Mr. Anderson a much-needed invitation to legitimacy. Just as Anderson's opponents' propheies of the Anderson whimsey seemed near-real, a poll found that the Illinois congressman had the necessary 15 percent of the population behind him, qualifying him for the Sept. 21 League-sponsored debate. Even if the skilled Anderson oratory should fail to destroy Reagan, the fact is that Anderson will be appearing on national television and may questioningly legitimate campaign situation. Meanwhile, Carter the Absentee will watch from the Rose Garden as Anderson, with satisfaction, shows up Carter again. In this age of media politics, the absence of the president in the televised debate will not soon be forgotten. Exposure, courtesy of the media, is a crucial element in modern presidential politics. Analysts say, for example, that the 1960 debate had the power to unleash a wave of head, head,heading him heir to the soon-to-be Camelot "dynasty." These same debates, they say, cost Richard Nixon the throne. Carter shadders at the thought of both giving Anderson a credibility boost and of confronting him in debate. He senses the failure should either occur. But abstaining from Sunday's confrontation in Baltimore brings more failure upon the president than he perhaps fathoms. His absence is an issue now, one that Anderson and Reaan can banter into oblivion. Even if the president realized this and wanted to join the debate, the public wouldn't go for it. Such a change of heart would be yet another reason why indieversis we have come to know so well. But the significance of Monday's contest is more the Anderson appearance than the Carter absence. Anderson reached the mountainous 15 percent simply because, as in the access-to-the-ball battle, Anderson and company plugged on for support against steep odds. There is no disputing that Anderson's forte is his oratorical gift, his ability to move audiences. He logically disseminates even the most complex issue with finesse and fervent tongue. But Anderson is a civil man. Frustrated, perhaps, by the president's failure to meet the Anderson challenge, and elated, perhaps, with his newly won opportunity, Anderson will maintain his demaner; he will be a gentleman B. Anderson will be, as always, a polite man. DEBAIT The University Daily KANSAN US$595-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Tuesday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas $8 a week outside the county. Student subscriptions 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 Editor Executive Manager Gavin Baker Business Manager Margaret Editor Eileen Strawber Eugene Editor Cyduil Evans David Lewis David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Sports Editor Kevin Morrison Reilly Sain Manager Kevin Knotter National Sales Manager Nancy Clause Garcia Sales Manager Rick Light General Manager and News Advisor Rick Mullen Kevin Mullen Donna McQuinn ELECTION 80 HOSTAGE CHASSIS CARTER 52 Hostage 'breakthrough' no big deal Like the reappearance of Abbie Hoffman, a breakthrough in the Iranian hostage standpoint has been a hallmark. Like Abbie, this "breakthrough" underwent a nose job before showing its face again. The most recent list of demands, unlike other Iranian demands issued by Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini, is the mildest one of the three nations to offer the "great Satan America" or to the spy trials for the hostages, or even to the apologies for all the nautities the U.S. did for the late shah. All Khomini wants is the cancellation of all claims the U.S. has against Iran, the unfreezing of Iranian assets in this country, the return of the former shah's wealth to Iran and a pledge of non-intervention in Iranian affairs. If Khomini gets these, he may consider them the basis for negotiation of the hostages' release. The key words here are "may consider" and "basis for negotiation." While the old boy has softened his position considerably, the release of the hostages is as far away as it was 319 days ago. Even if the conditions laid down by Khomeini were given as definite terms for the release of the hostages, the process could take months. The lightning-fast U.S. court system would first have to make a decision about the millions of dollars in claims outstanding on this country. We could all be dead by then. Then there is the matter of the late shah's fortune, which he took with him when he fled Iran in 1978. The Pahlavi Foundation, which includes millions of dollars worth of U.S. assets, also would be subject to a court judgment against the iranians might have on it. Arain, delaws. There are no real problems with Khomeini's other demands, such as they are. Presumably the Iranian assets frozen in this case have been transferred with the same speed as they were frozen. And BILL MENEZES Bob Rush as for non-intervention in Iranian affairs, perhaps it would be better for the Iranians to face the oncoming Soviets on their own. Their hands would be so full they wouldn't have time to execute anybody, thus eliminating their current national pastime. The real problems lie, as they have since last November, in the idea of negotiations themselves. The approach taken by the Carter administration, one of being nice to the Iranians and hoping they would get tired of the whole matter and give up the hostages, has worked about as well as everything else the Carter administration has done. It is clear that such defensive negotiating does not get the job done in this case. What is clear is that the Iranians are getting more eager to resolve their financial wees. The restriction of the demands to basically financial ones illustrates the Iranians' cash problems. While it is ridiculous to believe that Khomeini has changed his views of the U.S. to the point where he does not want an apology to his country, it is not so hard to believe that he temper his demands for a settlement which still be greatly to his country's advantage. For its part, the U.S. should take advantage of this sign of weakening and refuse to negotiate until all 52 hostages are returned home safely. To continue to grovel before Khomeini would accomplish as much as it has in the past nine months. At the same time, the safety and well-being of the hostages has hardly entered into the question of negotiations. The reports that have filtered out about the state and the violation of their rights and the state of their mental health are grossly insufficient. Indeed, it is impossible to even ascertain whether all of them are still alive. Before any negotiations begin, the U.S. should be allowed to view the hostages, all of them together, not only as a token of Iranian goodwill towards the negotiations, but also as a means of seeing their condition. This would give the U.S. a better perspective with which to negotiate. Until then, all demands should be met with a firm, simple "no." If the Carter administration chooses to continue to let Iran dictate the course of the hostage crisis then it will in all likelihood continue at least until Election Day. How fitting that a new administration should be elected on the one-year anniversary of the hostages' captivity. Quotas on Japanese car sales necessary To the Editor: As world trader, the United States is falling into a multi-billion dollar pool of red ink. Last year's balance-of-trade deficit was way more than $24 billion—caused, in part, by the United States' tedium and lonely effort to negotiate free and fair trade. Kanan editorial writer Ted Lickeig, however, took a major step in distorting this fact in his Sent. 8 editorial. Lictigle is an obvious advocate of free trade and in a very real sense so is the U.S. government. In the international marketplace, however, free trade could only happen if it were coupled with fair trade. This is the point Lictigle fails to see. In actuality, the UNITED STATES has the lowest barriers to trade in the world. The tariff on imported cars here is only 2.9 percent—one quarter the level of Japan's. Coupling Japan's high tariffs and government subsidies with other non-tariff barriers make it nearly impossible to export to Japan. Why should present free trade policies continue to exist when it isn't fair to domestic producers? I won't disagree that Chrysler is a major loup-rou, nor will I excuse the company's ignorance. However, the American producer faces ridiculous difficulties in competing with foreign producers. In fact, it may be impossible for us to commute. Union wages are a great deal lower in Japan than here, and though it is no one's fault, it adds to our problem. Japanese auto makers persist self-subsidization is another factor facing American firms. Because the demand for cars in Japan is higher, high prices there are many times higher than here. Generally, this means a Datsun, for example, going for $6,000 here may go as high as $20,000 in Japan. Economically, Datsun makes enough profit domestically to sell cars in the United States below our production costs, which leaves Detroit little chance to compete. Logically this would translate into an increased market share for the foreign auto makers, which is why Japan's share has grown from 2 percent in 1969 to 17 percent in 1979. Many experts speculate that the Japanese merchants are plotting to eventually take the majority market share through this form of subsidization, to run domestic producers out of business and to drastically increase prices once the market is thirsty. From the American perspective, a major sector of the United States' general work force would be in danger of losing their jobs. Economic waters have boiled long enough. Unemployment has already soared, particularly in the auto industry. Lichtkeil wrote that widening auto import channels would only cost "some" jobs. He failed, or wished not, to point out the problem of $500,000 American jobs already gone and adding nearly a full percentage point to the overall unemployment rate. I think it would be advisable for Lickle to find more facts before he again tries to define the difference between right and wrong. Establishing quotas is not as easy he would believe. The federal government is rarely in the right. We shouldn't criticize when they are. Mark Sump Hutchinson freshman R We also attended the Summer Honors Institute in the summer of 1978. However, we both think that we received "the benefits promised." The summer proved to be challenging and stimulating one, socially as well as academically, for students fresh out of high school. We could not have asked for a better preparation for our later college work. Our instructors were neither "medicore" nor "incompetent"; rather, they were knowledgeable in In response to Brett Conley's editorial on Sept. 9, we would like to say that we have found the KU Honors Program invaluable to our educational experiences. Honors Program To the editor: their fields and proved to be first-rate instructor. Classes that Conley "suffered through" and "survived," we enjoyed as well as appreciated. The small number of students in the Summer Honors Institute classes, and in most honors classes in general, cannot help but "enhance intellectual stimulation" and provide a "greater development of ... academic abilities." If Conkey thought his science instructor "less expert than a text matter" in a small class, he should experience the intellectual 'communication' in a large lecture class. Yes, we have had a few negative experiences in the Honors Program, but the positive experiences outweigh the negative experiences by far The new honors program director does indeed have a difficult job ahead of him if he hopes to transform the Honors Program to satisfy Conley. The task cannot be done in six months or even a year, and we are not even sure it is worth the time. We are honored to be in the Honors Program. Roberta Winnem Lansing junior Lisa Fendorf Lansing junior Letters Policy 1 Letters must be signed 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. --- University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 in-eed as nerer aceter leff- eyer uaual exes- by eeded lesfisy or north nleim diorif Page 5 Representatives From page 1 "I used to bring a friend with me and we'd have a beer," he said. "I've got my beer on tap there now." Another one of Knott's 'favorite marketing tails is to buy an Olympia for bar patrones' specials. "I never tell them who I am," he said. "I just want them to try my beer." Other representatives concentrate their efforts in different areas. "I just try to keep on top of what a 'happening' he said. "Planning your jobs is my business." Randy Chilton, Wichita State and Coors keep their hands off the campus at all time, keeping ahead of activities on campus. Chilton, who is social chairman of Sigma Chi social fraternity, said Coors did not have college experience. He said Coors decided to jump on the bandwagon because it realized the college market was bigger than his own. COORS HAS CONTRIBUTED more than 1,000 words of promotional material for Sigma CHI. The company is committed to providing He said the project, which is the largest philanthropic activity at KU, contributed more than $5,000 last year to Wallace Village in Colo., Cabo, a home for brain-damaged children. Being a campus representative has more to offer than just good times, spending money and he said "a campus rep for two years myself," he said. "The majority of our regional college campus It's also a good source of prospective employees, according to Lloyd, manager of the company's travel division. Miller, which organized its representatives in 1972, was the first brewery to have an ongoing partnership with the company. "We are very pleased with the program," he said. "It has contributed a lot to the success of MCF." Facultv art displayed in Union Two schools of yellow fish with purple, yellow and magenta stripes swim in opposite directions across a wheat-colored bulletin board. A Styrofaum "schozoid" ladder intertwined with wire is perched on the board, while a coal-black bust wearing a flashing traffic light around its neck, titled "Stop Light, Inner-Self," sits in a glass case. These objects are figments of the imagination that have been transformed into art. They are on display in the Design Faculty Exhibit in the Kansas Union Exhibit Gallery. The annual exhibit began Saturday and will continue until Saturday, Oct. 4. Fiber, glass, metal, ceramics and weaving are just some of the media used by the 29 faculty in this department. Rv ROSE SIMMONS Warranties protect car buyers Staff Reporter It has taken the student two years and three part-time jobs, but she's finally behind the wheel of her first, almost-new car. It still handles as well as quietly as a day the she drove it off the lot. But suddenly there is a loud scraping noise and the car starts to roar. When she pulls to the side of the road, she sees the muffler of the car and can hear it. The entire exhaust system appears to be falling off. THE WARRANTY, which the salesman said would pay for repairs, might not cover the cost of replacing the muffler. "Used car warranties, if they exist, are only from the dealer and not from the manufacturer," he said. "If something goes wrong with the car, the warranty is limited to repair of power train parts such as the engine, transmission, suspension or sufferer goes out, that's too bad for the owner." Most dealer warranties cover only the replacement of major parts, Lonny Rose, director of the KU Legal Aid Society, Inc., said Wednesday. Federal law prohibits suppliers of warranties from backing out of them or changing them. But Rose said there were no laws requiring dealers to provide warranties for used cars. "A dealer can sell a car 'as is'," he said, "and not be liable to repair anything that goes wrong with the car after it is sold off the lot." Used car warranties from Lawrence car dealers range from 15 to 90 days, depending on the car's year and mileage. Some warranties call for the dealer to pay covered repairs and labor, and others require owners and dealers to split the cost of repairs and labor. The dealer pays the full cost of repair of parts that are covered in the warranty. There are depreciating rates and warranty coverage for cars produced from 1978 to 1976. Warranty coverage for cars in this age group are shared 50/50 between the owner and dealer. JIM CLARK MOTORS, Inc., 1212 W. 29th St. Terrace, offers a dealer warranty for 1794 to 1797 used cars. For a 1979 model with fewer than 30,000 miles, the dealer offers a 90 day or 3,000 mile warranty, whichever comes first, on the power train. Cars produced from 1975 to 1794 have warranty coverage for only 15 days or 500 miles, if the mileage is less than 90,000 miles, said L. Brubeck Jr., sales manager of Jim Clark Motors. *1 think 15 days is enough time for a person to find out that a car has a problem that we were told about.* Most dealers in Lawrence, such as Bob Hopkins Volkswagen Inc., 2522 St.江. St.: Jack Ellenna Buck Oldsmobile GMC Inc., 2112 W. 29 St. Terrace and Landmark Ford, 23rd and Alabama streets, offer warranties on used cars for 30 days or 1,000 miles, whichever first. Lawrence Toyota-Mazda, 2300 W. 29th St. Terrace, offers dealer discount on parts and labor for one month, said Bev Landes, sales assistant. CHRYSER CORPORATION recently set up a warranty arbitration board to provide unbiased resolution of dealer-owner warranty disputes in the UK. The firm is the director of the Consumer Affairs Association. Chapman and Steve Ruddick, director of KU Student Legal Services, were selected as members of the board. The board also includes a person from the auto repair field, a dealer and corporation representatives. The dealer and corporation representatives will not vote on problems brought before the board. Disputes are brought before the board when a customer files a complaint about the dealer who made the mistake. "The best way to know what is and is not warranty is to read the warranty." Chapman said. "It is the buyer's right to know what the warranty says before the car is purchased," he said. "Most people don't look at the warranty notice and purchase the car and some do not look even then." Rose said the consumer should understand who is responsible for repairs and know what parts are covered. He should also know what his share of the cost will be, he said. Jane Eldredge State Senate Republican 2nd District Paid for by Eldredge for Senate Committee, Kurt Watson, Treasurer Paid Pol. Adv. Cynthia Jane Eldredge State Senate Republican 2nd District Paid for by Eldredge for Senate Committee, Kurt Watson, Treasurer Paid Pol. Adv. SPECIAL OF THE WEEK! Order any one-topping or more 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only $5.40 Order any one-topping or more 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only $6.65 Pyramid Pizza FREE, Fast Delivery!! Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! We Pile It On! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) the GRAMOPHONE shop MITSUBISHI AUDIO SYSTEMS The first $275 speaker you should audition is $200. 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He The Traditional Women's Shop Wildebrook 841-7222 The Traditional Women's Shop Webrook ebrook 841-7222 SOLIDARITY PACIFIC CITY Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Films present unpublicized subjects By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter For many years, there has been a media blackout on politically sensitive events, according to independent video sources, which spoke last night in the Kansas Union. The program, "Experimental TV from the '80s to the '90s," was designed "to show the important developments in alternative media in the last 20 years" through a series of video tapes, Hoffman said. The program was sponsored by KUJ.Y. The tapes, which included alternative coverage of the 1972 Republican Convention, the Long Walk in 1978 and various anti-nuclear and American Indian events, were made by video artists who consider themselves part of the counter-culture. THE LONG WALK, a spiritual walk from Alcatraz to Washington, D.C., to protest 11 Indian-related bills, took nearly a year and drew more than $400 million from various sources and from a variety of religious groups, Hoffman said. The tape, put together by Top Value TV. a collaboration of two video groups, The film of the 1972 GCP convention, "Four More Years," did attract the attention of the news media, Hoffman said, and it was shown on television. "It was considered by many as the most important event of the 70s since the Vietnam War," she said, "yet it received hardly any media coverage." Freshman makes write-in bid Dennis Dupont, Lawrence freshman, yesterday declared himself a write-in candidate for treasurer in the freshman class officer elections. John Knightly, the Student Senate elections committee co-chairman, said Dupont failed to return his declaration on Tuesday. He was 5 p.m., last Friday, the filing deadline. Dupont said that his form had been stamped by Dean Jerry Lewis, director of Numeraker Center, by 5 p.m. Sept. 12, but that he did not have enough time to return the form to the Senate office. He was running on the Enterprise ticket. focused on the activity surrounding the convention rather than its business Knightly said that in fairness to the other candidates who did file on time, he could not accept Dupont's declaration. Included in the film were interviews with several network reporters on the convention floor, as well as footage of protesters outside the convention hall. Freshman class officer elections are Sept. 24 and 25. in one segment, CBS newsman Walter Cronek explained that he was busy working in the booth and could not stand up for the national anthem at the opening of the convention. In another segment, a state delegation passed around a petition to protest the policies to "the full extent of the law for providing aid and comfort to the enemy." DESPIEZE THE fact that the film was done with primitive portable black-and-white units, the film was just too large for the media to ignore, Hoffman said. Hoffman currently is working on a film about the movement to prevent the overuse of nuclear weapons. "Without the films done by the alternative media on these things, public information will not be shared," she said. Hoffman, who got her start taping alternative lifestyle groups in her native northern California, now spends a lot of time road showing alternative media films. By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter Students predict weather statewide After getting three busy signals and being put on hold, Randy Baker, Lawrence sophmore, called in a statement to Lawrence radio station KLWN that would affect many area residents. Baker, a forecaster for the KU Weather Service, checked his copy, cleared his throat and predicted that Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1980, would be partly cloudy and much cooler than Monday with the low around 58 degrees Fahrenheit and winds light from the east. The KU Weather Service, located in 420 Lindley Hall, is a forecasting service that provides daily weather predictions to the University Daily Weather Report. KANU and KJHK in Lawrence, WREN in Topeka, KNEX in McPherson, KIUL in Garden City, KGGF in Coffeyville and KRSL in Russell. The service also is located in New York for record forecasts. That number is 842-5249. ALTHOUGH THE National Weather Forecasting Office in Topeka has to issue forecasts for a general location, Baker said the KU "That's why stations subscribe to us." Baker said. "We also use a format that the stations like. That is, we'll take more time to explain developments than would the National Weather Service." However, Baker and Ed Lang, Sewell, N.J., junior and also a forecaster for the KU service, were quick to point out that the KU service cannot replace the national service, which has more sophisticated equipment to better monitor development. THE KU WEATHER Service consists of eight undergraduate student forecasters and four undergraduate trainees. They learn about weather forecasting in the practicum in weather forecasting class taught by J.R. Eagleman, professor of geography, and from the on-the-job experience of working six hours a week for the service. "In western Kansas, we've made big mistakes before," said Baker. "Out there the weather is quite variable because of the cool winds or Sometimes the on-the-job training can lead to embarrassing mistakes for the forecasters. chinkins coming off the Rockies. One time we were on our forecast by 15 degrees because of a sudden change in those winds." To check such mistakes, the KU service tries to stay within the broad forecast of the national service. If there are major differences between the two Lang said, the forecast better have a very good reason for differing. "A lot of times the national service will miss something because they have to forecast for such a large area," Baker said. "In those cases, you need to up with a more accurate measure for the local areas that we cover." DURING EACH OF three daily shifts, from 5:15 to 7:15 a.m., from 10 a.m. to noon and from 3 to 5 p.m. the KU service键盘 current weather conditions and adjusts the forecasts if necessary. However, if the weather changes suddenly, the KU service cannot quickly correct the forecast because it isn't staffed 24 hours a day. Another problem the KU service faces is having to use inexperienced forecasters at times. There are no forecasters working on Sundays. BOBBY BELL'S BAR·B·QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BOBBY BELL'S BAR•B•QUE COUPON SPECIAL! 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House Drinks $1.00 ALL NIGHT LONG! *Guys—don’t forget Thursday is Ladies’ Night! ... fall ’80 in clothes from Mister Guy for him and her ... ... perfect for football weekends ... ... free beer at all KU home games ... hours: M-T-W-F-Sat.-10-920 chusetts ... fall '80 in clothes from Min Lh By F Staf MISTER GUY University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Page 9 Students support Bolivia's recent military coup By IAN SIMPSON Staff Writer Staff Writer Political ambitions of officers and international rivalries might have fueled the coup that overthrew the Bolivian government in July, according to Bolivian students at the University of Kansas, but it was necessary for the nation's stability and prosperity. "Democracy works here but it doesn't have to work in South America," Javier Valencia, Bethesda, Md., graduate student, said this week. He taught that job who has lived in the United States for nine years. "I don't think South America is ready for democracy," he said. "Civilians have a way of messing things up, so they ask the military to take over." On July 17, army units seized control of the country and validated the June 29 elections, the only time the military had ever taken control. Radio and television stations and newspaper offices were seized. Interim president Lydia Gueller and her cabinet were imprisoned. The socialist candidate for president was killed, and several journalists were beaten and expelled, according to news accounts. HERNAN SILES ZUASO, the candidate with a plurality of votes, has gone underground, and Army Chief-of-Staff Luis Luis Garcia Meza has taken power and stamped all resistance. The students said reports of brutality had been exaggerated by the American press. Fernando Quiroga, who is visiting friends in Lawrence, said Bolivia's capital, LaPaz, was calm during the takeover. All the students their families had reported a nation at peace. "The news we have been receiving here through the papers is not true at all, not at all." Jorge Basaure, La Paz senior, said. "I would say it is a normal revolution." The Bolivians said democracy should wait until a stable government could heal the nation's fractures. Bolivia is one of the world's poorest nations; its per capita annual income is less than $500. Its foreign debt was almost $4 billion at the beginning of this year, and 60 percent of its export earnings去服务ing the debt, according to Latin American Weekly Report, a newsletter on Latin American political and economic affairs. "Most Bolivians love to see democracy, but we don't have the right kind of society." Basura said. "We need education and stability, but we haven't had enough." Valencia said, "If you have elections, too many people are thinking about politicians. But if you know that a guy is going to be in for 20 years, then you're going to 'forget' about politics," and go back to work. "That is what we need, people who will work." RUTH MARTINEZ, Lawrence graduate student, was in Bolivia from 1970 to 1973 as the wife of a U.S. military attache. She said the army provided one of the few means of social advancement available to those born outside the families that control the nation's wealth. An officer may think he can seize power, or help someone do it, she said. "It is a way of life, a way of socially and economically," she said. "How else can you justify so many coups?" It's not just power, I'm sure. "One of the dreams of officers is, 'I could be Garcia Meza wanted to keep the military in power, according to an informed Latin American historian. President of Bolivia.' That is why there are so many of them." "The government had been one of the military, and it had to be maintained," he said. "Garcia Meza simply was the force that took the initiative." He said the international politics of the "Southern Cone" of South America—Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Chile—had much to do with Garcia Meza's coup. BOLIVIA IS THE center of the continent and borders five nations. All are concerned with its political and economic development, because it has a pawn in the struggle with the other nations. Bolivia has not had access to the sea since Chile defeated it in the War of the Pacific a century ago. The diplomatic source said 70 percent of Bolivia's exports passed through the Chile ports of Antofagasta and Arica, to the resentment of Bolivian governments. "All the time the Bolivians are thinking about a return to the sea," he said. "The army also—it is a geopolitical constant." Argentina and Chile have had a long dispute over control of the Beagle Canal at the tip of Tierra del Fuego. A Bolivia unfriendly to Chile could tip the scales in the Argentines' favor and draw attention from the southern islands, the source said. Many Army officers, including Garcia Meza, were trained in Argentina, Martinez said, and the Argentine government in Buenos Aires was worried about a democratic Bolivia being used as a base for terrorists committed to its downfall. Argentine security forces reportedly aided Garcia Meza in the coup, and Argentina quickly recognized his government. "If the Bolivian military has the support of Argentina, it can be in power for a while," the source said. The diplomatic source said the halting of elections in Bolivia and grave consequences for the region. Living Resource Center lets handicapped test new waters By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Last year, Vernier Newman's hone- sroom was renamed to Newman's in- house for more than 12 months. Newman, an amputee, could not get out on his own because his house at 1112 New York St. was not designed for people in wheelchairs. Now Newman no longer has to wait for someone to carry him down the steps. A ramp and porch railings were installed at his home recently with the assistance of the Living Resource Center. 839 Kentucky St. Helping severely disabled individuals live more independently is the center's goal, said Mona K. McCoy, community worker for the center. The center's help has significantly increased Newman's freedom, he said. November through federal and state grants. It offers support services to severely disabled individuals between the ages of 18 and 65. THE CENTER IS a pilot project in Kansas, and was established last "I feel a whole lot better knowing that I can get in my car and ride around when I want, without depending on others," he said. "Some people are inappropriately placed in an institution," McCoy said. "With support, these people could live in less restricted environments." The center recently helped a partially paralyzed stroke victim move out of a nursing home and into his own apartment. Counseling on how to cope with the stresses of life is also offered. "Many of the disabled have questions about sexuality that doctors are too afraid to address," said Anita Siles, counselor for the center. "People want to know their options," she said. "They want to know what to do when the sight of a catheter turns off their sexual partner." Siles, a paraplegic, has often been called to the hospital to discuss sexuality with people who have recently been disabled, she said. THE DISABLED person's other questions might be answered by materials in the center's resource library. The library has books that discuss topics from sexuality to modifying homes to meet the needs of the handicapped. But according to McCoy, the major problem is the severely disabled is transportation. ASTA The city will install a sewer main through 7.2 acres belonging to Leland Cox to reach the subdivision, which was annexed several months ago. With an identification card supplied by the center, a disabled person is able to use the Jitney, a mini-bus service, 24 hours a day and seven days a week, she said. The usual service hours are from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Annexation of the subdivision left Cox surrounded by city land. The city wanted to annex Cox's land, thus forcing him to pay for his share of the sewer installation. City Manager Burdock Watson said that if the land was purchased in the meantime, installed, Cox later could decide to join the sewer line and pay only £2,000. Singing Telegrams AFTERNOON SPECIAL The Lawrence City Commission last night voted to annex 7.2 acres at North Second and Arkansas streets to provide water and sewer service to industries in the Earthmover's subdivision to the north. Buy one donut or roll, and get one free with your KUID. Good from 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. Monday Friday. CAROL LEE DONUT SHOP 70 WEST 10TH ST LAWRENCE, MASSACHUSETTS "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 The Douglas County Drug Abuse Council will sponsor an abuse prevention program for juveniles, David Rodwell, a council representative, told the commission. Through the program, businesses and volunteer agencies will provide jobs and activities for county youths, he said. Cox said he was willing to grant the city an easement to build the sewer, but commissioners voted four to one to commissioner Marci Francisco dissenting. Commissioners also considered a petition submitted by residents near the COX COULD END up paying more than $10,000 for sewer line installation For most disabled people, the center is a place to call when they need adaptive equipment repaired, personal attendants or help with public benefits. Flowers by Alexanders "The only thing we'll get out of it is a big bill," he said. By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter The commission also approved a request for a day care center at the school where two students and denied a sign variance request for Radio Shack, Sixth and Kasdak streets. Featureting one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to sull every taste. Let us serve you! Cox said he had a septic system and well water and resented paying for a new septic system. Residents complained about noise and litter around the club. The commission tookicials and the state liquor control board to investigate the club for violations. Meisner Milstead Liquor 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 ViN We style you to fit your t Commission annexes ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 GO We style your hair ... to fit your fashion At Gentleman's Quarters we offer personalized service to assure each of our customers a hair style that will complement their own "fashion." Call for your appointment soon. GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS 611 W. 9th 843-2138 Red Dragon Club, 19th and Beachus streets, to have the club closed. Tryouts will be held Wednesday, Sept. 17 and Friday, Sept. 19 at 7:00 p.m in the south gym of old Robinson Gymnasium. Come prepared to play. Any questions? K.U. Volleyball Club Fall Tryouts Call Stan 842-1114 or Steve 842-4387. DO YOU LOVE YOUR DOG? JOIN THE K.U. DOG LOVER'S CLUB Next meeting—Sept. 17 at 7:30 p.m For information, call 864-3440 or 841-0280 acres Place a want ad in the Kansan Call 864-4358. IN THE DENIAL OF SUSSEX IF ALL YOU WANT FROM CHURCH IS HELL, FIRE AND BRIMSTONE, BURN THIS AD. Hell, fire, and bristlestone you won't find in the Episcopal Church. But if it's warm fellowship and the love of a forgiving and understanding God you want, join us in worship this week. Holy Eucharist Thursday at 11:00 am. Chapel. Sunday evenings at 5:00 at Cainley House, 1114 Louisiana. GONE GONE WITH THE WIND FREE on Parent's Day September 20 7:00 pm at Hoch Auditorium presented by SUA SUA Don't Miss this Classic! All Students Enrolled In Courses offered By The College Of Liberal Arts&Sciences This Fall: Should be advised that the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 timetable are the correct drop dates. DO NOT USE the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 addendum. You've heard of a happy hour — but only G.P. LOYD'S gives you a whole happy night! THURSDAYS—ALL YOU CAN DRINK! $5.00-Gals $6.00-Guys G.P. LOYD'S 701 Massachusetts G. P. LOYD'S 701 Massachusetts 841-2745 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 New Haskell president sought By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter The first step in the search for a new president of Lawrence's Haskell Indian Junior College ends Sept. 30, the application deadline. The selection of the replacement for Wallace Galluzzi, current president, is being handled by the U. Interior Department's Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), which controls the school's administration. He has also served at Haskell for 17 years, all but five of them as president. Haskell is a federally funded junior college whose enrollment is restricted to students of American Indian descent. According to Galluzi, the BIA initially will be looking for a qualified American Indian to serve as Haskell's president. If that method is not successful, the search will be expanded to include non-Indians, he said. Galluzi is not an Indian. Applications for Haskell's presidency are being processed by BIA officials in Muskogee, Okla. The post has been advertised since late August, but officials won't reveal the number of applications they've received until after the Sept. 30 deadline. SOMETIMES NEXT MONTH, a list of applicants will be submitted to a Haskell student representative, a faculty member, three Haskell board members, a member of the National Indian Education Association and a member of the National Tribal Chairman's Association. The committee's selection must be approved by Haskell's board of regents, and the final decision will be approved before Nov. 1 by Earl Barlow, the BIA's director of Indian Education. Gallucci said he had no control over the selection process but hoped the most president would build on the skills he helped lay at the junior college. "Naturally, I hope that the person who comes after me will continue some of the programs we've initiated," Galluzi says. "I think we're leaving the college in a very good state as far as facilities, programs and budget are concerned. We also have good alumni relations, which I'd like to see continued and expanded." Haskell and the University of Kansas have a great deal of contact at the administrative and faculty levels, is sure to continue, Galluzzi said. Students at the two schools, however, have very little to do with one another, and the Haskell appliance is expected to change that, Gallucci said. IN THE PAST, fewer than 100 American Indians have been enrolled at KU each semester, according to Rita Napker, co-chairman of the University's American Indian Studies department. "I'ts the students' prerogative; it's totally up to them," he said. "I don't think it's our place to try to control that. Lots of our students are going to the schools their degrees, especially those in liberal arts and sciences." The department is part of KU's General Studies program, Napier said. Students define their own majors and take courses in areas such as English, anthropology, linguistics and speech, she said, and most graduates of the program plan to teach. Napier said the American Indian Studies department had had positive relations with Haskell faculty members in the past, but she would like to see more contact between the two institutions. The department hopes to develop a liaison with Haskell, not only to recruit students, but also to establish courses at UNIwer to junior students into an academic program at KU, Nanier said. Haskell now has a comprehensive educational program that features an expanded liberal arts and humanities program, as well as the traditional vocational training program, Gallucci said. Of the approximately 1,100 students enrolled this semester, 45 to 50 percent are in liberal arts, he said. The remaining students are divided between the vocational, technical and business programs. replacing it with an associate nursing program, he said. IN A MAJOR curriculum change, Haskell is eliminating its licensed practical nursing program and The new program requires a longer training period for nursing students, and those who complete the program will be working on a project to help improve the job said. Faculty members are working out the details of the program. The program is being developed in conjunction with the State Board of Nursing, and Lawrence Memorial Hospital as the clinical training site, he said. Several major building projects have been completed recently on the Haskell campus, including a learner center for students of food service building. Galluzzi said. THE CONSTRUCTION of a new field house is now 85 percent complete. It will contain a swimming pool, gymnasium, weight room, handball and basketball courts and a variety of other facilities, he said. Haskell is a two-year junior college, but some people still are talking about expanding it into a four-year college, Galucci said. Such a move would require substantial study and analysis, he said, and a final decision would be made collectively by the BIA, Haskell's board of regents and the Indian constituency served by the college. "Even if we do go to a four-year college, I don't see us eliminating the comprehensiveness of our program and becoming a general college," Gallucci said. "We would merely extend our current programs to enable students to obtain their B.A." K-State physicist says nukes best energy bet By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Reporter There "ain't no free lunch" when it comes to energy sources, Hermann J. Donnert, nuclear engineering professor at Kansas State University, told members of a science and technology in society class last night. There are problems with all energy sources, the nuclear power offers the most benefit now. Donnert acknowledged that because of his background he would always be accused of being pro-nuclear and one-sided, but that he thought of nuclear power as only one part of the answer to the energy crisis. THE ENERGY CRISIS is real, Dennett said, and the United States will run out of petroleum in a "couple of decades." Of the options for the future, conservation alone will not work, he said. Increased conservation hardships will "make the Depression of the '30s look like a Saturday night dance." Donnert has two Ph.D.s in physics and math from the University of Innsbruck in Austria. He later studied in Germany for six years at the University of Cologne and the University of Freuryg. For 10 years he was the chief scientist at the Army Nuclear Defense Laboratory in Maryland. Importing more oil makes the United States more dependent on foreign countries and causes inflation to rise, be said... The most practical option, Donnert substitutes, coax nuclear power and exotic sources such as solar, wind and geo-thermal. He dismissed biomass and wind energy as limited to the future and possible only on a small scale. He said he considered solar energy feasible only for single family dwellings, and labeled the buildings with solar equipment "eyesores." He also said there were hidden costs in solar energy, such as the costs involved in producing solar collecting panels. Coal would not be practical to use, he said, because of the effect on the environment of mining and burning it and for the future when petroleum runs out. Donnert defended the safety of nuclear plants by giving statistics of radiation levels a person might obtain from various places. He said that the average human took in 100 to 200 millirads of radiation a year. The maximum allowed average annual exposure is 500 millirads a year. Increased radiation exposure may take place in high altitude areas, during medical x-rays or in a power plant operating room. Flying in an airplane adds 0.5 to 1 millirem an hour, storing匀 gasoline lanterns adds 5 to 20 millirems a year, and working in a power plant adds 50 millirems a year. Donnert said the Three Mile Island Diversion was the student in March 1975 was caused by a leak. not properly trained and did not know what to do," he said. "What they finally did was the most stupid thing. If the cook out for a long coffee break, the operation would have switched itself on." back to the classics for fall penny and tassel royal college shop eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255 monday-saturday 10-6 Casual and Comfortable Comfortable For a totally great look buy a pair of cords or jeans and get 20% OFF on a top to match throughout September. Cords are available in a variety of colors. Clothes Encounter ~in step with your style Holiday Plaza 843-5335 25th & Iowa KINKO'S That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. And for dissertation copying, blinding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. No brag, just fact. 904 Vermont 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sun 843-8019 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri Now, You Can Be A Swinging Single! 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services The deadline for entering is Wednesday, Sept. 17, 5:00 p.m. Enter the Intramural Tennis Tournament (singles). Mick's Bicycle Shop 98 I'm heading to Mick's to get my tail light. BE SEEN BE SEEN AT NIGHT wonder bicycle light 1339 Mass. 842-3131 Bicycle Place an ad. Call 864-4358. RUSTY'S FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE KS IGA. NORTHSIDE 2ND & LINCOLN 843-5733 * SOUTHSIDE 23RD & LOUISEANA 843-8588 HILLCREST 9TH & IOWA 843-2313 * WESTRIDGE 6TH & KASOLD 841-0144 BAKERY 842-1473 Special Savings for Parents Weekend Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer 6 pack/12 oz. cans $1.59 Rusty's Own Dell Poor Boy Sandwiches Made Fresh Daily 89c each 6th & Kasold 23rd & Louisiana 901 Iowa 608 North 2 Ad Prices Good Thru 9-22 So 17 5:01 Roy dos Sta FM 8:30 vs. Looklr Tor 9429. C Open navall 75c sc Want to lowship Bible ! A & E Over to this W This I Take A retuallly Wed, and Si 3 Bee bath, You'll Townl For re Utilli Call 8 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Scorecard Page 11 Sports Calendar 17 5:05 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. California Angels, doubleheader KARL JAMM, KKK-KF- M VOLLEY vs. KENNEDY VOLLEY volleyball vs. Kansas State at Allen Field House. 18 7:30 p.m. — Kansas City Royals vs. California Angels at Royals Stadium (KMBZ- AM, KKKK-FM) 19 j 0 p.m.-Kansas City Royals vs. Oakland A's at Stadium (MNBZAM, BALMORE) — Men's league at Kansas Men's tennis at Kansas State Sports Quiz A AMERICAN LEAGUE The two most prolific male basketball scorers are not the two top scorers in KU history. Two women, Lynette Woodard and Alain Montoy, have scored 2,145 points first player to reach 2,000 career points and finished her four-year career in 1979 with 2,124 points. Woodard, a senior on this year's team, has 2,888 points. The two top male scorers, Lovette and Dave Roblick, have 1,888 and 1,754 points. Today's question: Who is the football player to lead KU in scoring four consecutive years? Q W 92 L 52 Pet. GB New York 92 52 639 - Baltimore 86 76 - 6 Milwaukee 76 77 539 14% Detroit 77 67 539 15% Orlando 73 70 510 18% Toronto 73 63 510 31 Yesterday's answer- Major-league Baseball | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 89 | 52 | .618 | -- | | Oakland | 70 | 43 | .562 | -- | | Palm Beach | 70 | 74 | .486 | 19 | | Minnesota | 63 | 84 | .441 | 19 | | Chicago | 61 | 84 | .432 | 37 | | Miami Beach | 58 | 84 | .428 | 37 | | Seattle | 52 | 92 | .408 | 31 | W W L Pct. GB Montreal 81 78 4.25 Philadelphia 78 96 3.08 Baltimore 81 78 4.25 SL Holder 83 80 448 16 New York 61 86 421 16 New Jersey 61 86 421 16 NATIONAL LEAGUE The University Daily Los Angeles W 82 L Pct. GB Houston 82 67 L 46.1 Ubera 81 67 L 39.6 Atlanta 78 68 L 328 San Francisco 78 68 L 328 Tampa Bay 78 68 L 312 6 Miami 78 68 L 312 6 Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one tie one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer $2.90 $2.90 $2.90 $3.90 $3.90 $4.90 $4.90 $6.90 15 words or fewer $2.90 $2.90 $2.90 $3.90 $3.90 $4.90 $4.90 $6.90 ERRORS AD DEADLINES Monday Thursday 3 p.m. Tuesday Friday 3 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 3 p.m. Thursday 3 p.m. Friday Wednesday 3 p.m. The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship book, study? There are 200 p. Paragraphs in the Book of John. Over the hump: Boogie with Tofu Teddy this Wednesday at Off-the-Wall Hall. $2 SCHOLARY LITERARY TECHNICAL BASIC BOOKSELLER HODD BOOKSELLER. We also have 25,000 % price paperbacks. Come in and browse— www.hooddbooks.com see you at 1411 Massau Street 841-664-1844 NOW FORMING: The Kelley Hunt Fan Club. If you love Kelley and the Kinetics, call 843-6455. 9-19 ENTERTAINMENT What's the deal? Lawrence's firebreathing horn band. Watch out! You are anized. 9-19 75 schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. tt Blue Grass Jam every Wednesday night on Tuesdays, Thursdays or come play. Greens Tavern Looking for something new on Sundays? 494. Come out for our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 5 p.m. t'3 a.m. Membership available. "Playing is our business." 9-30 Over the hump! Boogie with Teddy Fudd! Outdoor Roller skating 1012 Mace, Tues. - Thurs. 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. a.m. 13th and Oread. - Fridays 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. a.m. 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Deposit—image 1. D FOR RENT This week I'm bringin' it all back home. Take a close up video look at the Shells; it's really exciting rock and roll~only on cable 6.50, but on Sat., Sept. 20 at 10:00 p.m. on b-19 and Sat., Sept. 20 at 10:00 p.m. on b-19. barm, carpet, drape, parking, appliances office space at Area 1, 932 Mass. 830 sq. ft. Office space at Area 1, 932 Mass. 830 sq. ft. reception room and 8 roomers. Minor milestone 8 sq. ft. Call 843-184 or 843-0747 milestone 8 sq. ft. Call 843-184 or 843-0747 For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. tf 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 18- bath, attached garages, all appliances. pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Parkway townhouses, 28 and Kasid, 842-880. park New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdrms, study, kitchen, dining room, mansion. $149,000-$179,000. No pets. For more in- form call 842-4535 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Victoria Capri Apartments. Unfurnished 1-2 bedroom apts, available. Central air, wall to carpet, quiet location, 2% blocks south of the stadium, 940-903 after 3:30 a.m anytime on weekends. 3 bdm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across square and tennis courts $400. month, 81-053 613 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace 2 bdm. townhouse Will take 3 students. 2500 684. 743-2334 684. 743-2334 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt. 3. bathroom apt, and comfortable, reasonably priced. Call 842-759-0134. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. duplex, central air conditioning. Appli- tions include air conditioner and heat- ing system. These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers a 1/2 bath, garage" student area, 1/2 baths, garage" an opening, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and more for only $39 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-445-8 am.5.m. p KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished 2 bdmic RTL1 and RTL2; applidic RTL3- 4; call C192-838-2533; applidic RTL5-6 For fall or spring, Nalmish Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private bath. It is weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, full schedule of school and workday, booking for home or if an apartment isn't what you desire. HALL, 1800 Mammoth Drive, 843-859-7900. Beautiful old home older in law of Lawrence, farm mother; family '4' a barns, kitchen, dining rm. living rm. library, utility,妈 am. more information call 824 4455 am. $ m.-5 p. 9-30 information call 824 4455 am. $ m.-5 p. 2 bdmr. house, clean, quiet, close. 764-5207. Collect. 9-17 Roommate must for a 3 bdrm. house. $11 mo. + i_5 utilities Call Km at $141- $200 per month. Room close to Union. Utilities paid $90. Room close to Union. Call events 749-193- Keep trying 1 bdmr for non-smoking and non-drinking 2 margarita. For information Margarita 841-8376 9-19 Villa Capra Apct for sublease. 1 bdm. apt. m/f. Wall-to-Wall carpet. Have to leave. $180/m + utilities. Originally $320/m. Call villaproperty.com p.m. or anytime on week- 9: 841-5357. For rent to studenta 1 bdpm, apt. fur- rent, $125 + electricity at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdpm, basement with lots of windows at 1423 1473 + electricity at 873-7730 or 1419 $175 Near campus 2 Bdrm. apt. Comfortable for children 3 Bdrm. apt. Comfortable for 841-3215, 841-3570 a.p.m. 9-22 841-3215, 841-3570 a.p.m. 9-22 Apt. for rent Quiet student, 1 barm. furnish-able city on KU bus route $125 per month. Parking fee $30 per hour. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 863-9069, 3800 W. 6th. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $35.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843- 1386. **tf** New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding for children. 100 New York St. 94. London's Furniture. 1200 New York St. 94. Brand new Smith-Corona electric type- menter and an stegamer机型 9-17 544-383-383 Black Vinyl recliner, over-sized arm chair, inverted (no heater), cash only CALL 8-17 B-17 Unicycle. $50. Free lessons. Call 844-6549 and ask for Hammer or call 843-1485. 9-17 Musical Instruments: 1939 Gibson L-4 Wind Guitar, 1940 Neilson Upright Piano with case $425. 1912 Nelson Upright Piano with case $425. 1912 Gibson good tone $328. Nice solid top student cello and mandolin. Serious Instrument IQ only. pleaseg宝 483-765-656. 9-24 1975 TR7, perfect condition, low mileage, cheap, must sell. 843-9334. 9-17 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! On Sale! Makes sense to use them—1). As study materials, make sure you include one. exam preparation. "New Analysis of West- ern Civilization." Cities Books Bookstore and Oread Book Store. Water Beds, hybrid foam -n- water type. Water Beds, hybrid foam -n- water type. Shopping Center, #84-269-209. 9-17 MATPRESSER. Orthopedic sets from $30. FURNITURE. One piece of hardwood furniture. Furniture, one block west of 90 and low. Westnethaw Condo, 2 bdm. Home on top of a 175 sq ft apartment in central air, microwave, trash comp., dishwasher, private custom curtain, custom wallpapers, private pool, spa, golf courses. $46,000 Blaire or Tena & Quirk. 819-368-3333. 1982 2802. Datum S' speed all Luk. pkg. 83 150. Condition. Must be 83 150. Battery. 84-822 84- 9-17 AIM AD 1800 Cassette Deck—almost new Demographics: 1 Black, 1 Black Muscle, All White. Included: 2 Black Vinyl Tapes, 3 new-cine $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, new-ice $39, $5 Leather Jackets, brown, narrow jeans $5 Leather Jackets, brown, narrow jeans 5 bdrm., 2 baths, $42,500. 604 Church, Eudora. Qualifies for VA or FHA loan. 542-3162. 9-22 Harley-175 SS Excellent condition, 2200 miles. New battery. 40-50 mm. $600 firm. Harley? Harley? You need your camera. Harley? 811-667- Evenings. 812-624-284. Ask for Denali Dr. 9-22 Like new large plush blue darm carpet. Excellent condition. Must see. Call 9-123. Autumn Ford Tori, PB-PS, Air. Quad. Stereo. Automatic Trans, New Tires. Clean Interior. Good Condition. Call Mike or Gary at 841- 9-19 For sale now—1979 Rally Sport, fully equipped, low mileage, like new condition. 843-4431 or 842-9231. 9-29 75 Toyota, Corolla, 6x4. 4 cylinder, Best offer, 814-458-1859, Jayhawk Tower Apt. 2233 1975 Fiat 128—Good condition, high gas mileage, $1600 or best offer. 843-526. Must sell. 9-23 B. D.L.S. Church runum赦 this Fri, and Sat. 7 m to 3 p.m. at 1900 University Drive, Clothes, toys, appliances, plants. In-room carriage ruminates. ruminates. ruminates. michelleone. 1971 Pontiac Lemans, red with black vinyl roof. Good condition. Very dependable. $1300. Call 749-1277 after 6. 9-23 FOUND MUST SELL. 73 Mazda wagon. Good shape. Air cond, AM-FM stereo. $1100. 84-23 92-23 Red pocketbook in front of Bailey Hall Night. Please call 864-3928 and 197 506-7455. Film book in 205 Film旺 afteram, afternoon. Call claim. 843-114-17 wedge,下午 9 a.m. 9:38-18 Set of keys at University State Bank, Fri 9-5. 8-301. 3016. Black, wire rim glasses, west side of Potters. Carl Kulp, 4022 E. Learned Hall. 864-4108. 9-19 Bibop Milege class ring, Found on Sept. 11 in Wescoe. Please identify and claim 843-8734, after 5 p.m. 9-19 HELP WANTED Key ring with miniature yellow thong and whistle with 4 keys. Found between Summerfield and Military Science near the big tree on Mon. 9-15. Call 811-2681. 9-19 Needed Immediately–School and personal care attendants to assist a young female student in daily disability on call or call. Set hours. Call Dana Wray 843.1421, 843-7291, 843-1011. 9-23 GRADUATE ASSISTANT, ASSISTANT EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT OF KAWASAKI, Lawrence. Assist with special ordinate activities of all special committees. Occupation in office for 6 months. Position available immediately to match schedule. Applicant must be bility of renewal. Application deadline to file by May 15th. Description contact Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor 258 Church Street 60645, 913-864-4944. An affirmative action, equal opportunity employment. Research Asst. Wanted. Three-Quarter time experience in research environment. Experience ability to work independently in active research environment, teaching and typing ability. Elementary bookkeeping and typing ability. Elementary chemistry or a related science are desirable and pending on qualifications. Apply by 5 p.m., to Santa Paula, California. Chemistry to 2018, Santa Paula, California. Action-Equal Opportunity 864-4673 Informative Action-Equal Opportunity COUNSELOR. The University of Kansas, Office of Supportive Educational Services, offers a career and personal counseling to disadvantaged work experience required. Salary based on experience required. May start September 19, 1980. Interested apply online at www.kus.edu/education/Educational Services, Military Science Application Building, KU Campus. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action职等 Bursae of Child Research has opening for a position with 10-15 hours per week to conduct research on 30 minutes for adolescent use. Must have own laptop and telephone or evenings. Excellent interpersonal skills. Has bachelor's +86-25-47474955. Has bachelor's +86-25-47474955. We are an e.g. 9-18 professionally employed user. PROJECT COORDINATOR: The University of Kansas Service is seeking an individual to coordinate university counseling, recruitment, evaluation and staff training programs. The student work experience required. Salary $160,000-$180,000 per semester, 19, 190-. Interested applicants should contact the KU Student Portfolio Educational Services, Military School Lawrence, Kansas 66445. The University of Kansas provides an opportunity & employment lawyer. 9-19 SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART MEMBER granules, coordinate membership drives and programs. Provide orientation, degree, ability to work with people, organizational skills, typing proficiency, Send resume and names of 3 references to Ann Wilkinson KS. 66454. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. An equal opportunity/affirmative education. KS. 66455. Student help needed. Part-time for fall and spring. Must be able to work a full mornin' job. Req's 2 yrs of General labor and skilled trades assistant. Conduct Hazar work, maintenance. Prepare Wax. W. 12th Saturdays as possible with your class schedule. An opportunity/affirmative action 9-19 ployer. Position available: Classified (see 1.1) Sec. 625 Museum Excellent typing and office skills Senior Associate Sep. 22, to Mary Ann Murch K56 Dyke Associate Opportunity/AMB Act Action Employer 9-22 Need R. N. to supervise quadrille tighter* the tower to supervice quarterly GRILL COOK. All an around kitchen work-in-progress takes about 7:00 p.m.; about 30-38 hours per week. Prefer grill cooking experience. Perform Will be off when KU classes are out. Pay range is $24-$36. Union person office, Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Partner counter part, part-time 20-30 hrs. 9-10 takes on duties in NAPA, 23rd and Haskell 9-19 CASHIER part-time in Hawk's Nest 10-30 hours a day, 30% discount on lunch. Offer has 30% discount on dinner. Cashier register experience. Apply in person at portunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 9-18 Director: Junior year in Costa Rica. Feb. 1- Aug. 1, 1981. Proficiency in Spanish. Terminate or return to field at field. Application deadline Sep. 19. Product Anita Herzfeld. Office of Study Counsel. LOST 1 pair of rim-less style glasses in brown case. Lost in the vicinity of Watson and Foster when you were called once before. Ask for Warworn. Please call 845-2434. Thanks. I lost a brown billfold Friday (10/5) around the Campanile/Porter's Pond area. Please contact Jack at 841.5345. 9.14 9/8 Leather 1-pocket case (brown with color etching) containing contact and solu- tion pads, and face垫. Past initial 841-8868. Keep trying. LOST: Maroon backpack. Left in 327 Strong. 4:00 Thursday. Reward. Call John. 841-8234 after 5. Israel Hebrew book somewhere on campus. *REWARD* B-141-4658 after 5 p.m. 9-18 Reward for return of my passport lost 8-23 between University Terrace Apts and Law High School Call 842-0128 9-25 MISCELLANEOUS Black and silver puppy. White paws and stomach looks like a hustle. Lost near 14th and Kentucky. Rabies tag no. 168. Reward call 842-5872 or 843-9273. 9-25 Attention all interested canoe enthusiasts. Plan your own SUP day at the weekend get-together with your friends. A weekly meeting on Wed. Sept. 17 at 7:00 in the International Room at the Student Center will be held. TEAM Water Polo Organizational Meeting Wed., Sept. 17 7:00 p.m. Meet at Robinson Center Pool. All interested in playing should attend. Recreation Services 864-3546 45 V There are, pitcher's of Budweiser and parties on 3rd, 6th, 9th, 12th, Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday. CO-REC Volleyball Manager's Meeting CO-REC Thursday, Sept. 18 at 7:00 p.m. in 156 Robinson Center. Roster & additional Recreation Services 864-3546 information available in 208 Robinson Center information available DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night at LOUISE'S West, 7th and Michigan (hence McDonalds on 6th). $4-$guys, $3-girls—All the cold canoes you can drink. NOTICE 98 We want to work for you. Give us the chance. Vote Enterprise ATTENTION: Established brass band is music for the boys and girls of mars. Serious inquiries only. Call 841-795-2900. For Freshman Class Officers Free rainbows. B10 W 23rd. Greens Tavern. 9-18 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MUSIC BOOK. AT THE time you membership card gets you $1,000 highballs all night long. Only at your place, THE OUSE WHERE "Partying is the ness.". 9-30 PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- HIRTH 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISSE'S WEST HAPPY HOUSE Everyday breakfast with 12 & 16饼干, 7 and 17 Mush *Pertying HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $10 highbills (75c on the backgammon and the atmosphere of The Club. Be sure to attend @8:44 "Piertying" our business. www.piertying.com SUN TRAVEL SILVER DOLLAR CITY! September 26-28 $58.00 WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS: Come see the annual National Fall Crafts Fest at Silver Dollar City and attend the famous Shepherd of Omaha play on this weekend (*outdoor*) Reservations deadline: Wednesdav Sept. 24 For more information drop by the SUA office or call 864-3477. SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOISE. 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 on明晚. Every Friday from 5 to 7. LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are provided. There is no cover charge. Only at the Club Lounge. 508 Lourc. 842-9429. 9-30 PART TIME INTERNSPHEN OPPORTUNITY, willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern based company, our part-time information. Offer Term Wednesdays 8:45- 10:45AM. 814-243-9666. In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for less cash, Louise Drown at the CLUB LOUISE. Drown at the CLUB LOUISE. Drown at the CLUB LOUISE. Drown at the CLUB LOUISE. Only $1.00; only $2.50; and at a club! THE CLUB LOUISE. 508 Locust. The clubs available "Partying is our business." TGIF at LOUBES BAR with $12 pitch- less friday from 6 to 8 @ the Altoh—Altoh Friday from 9 to 11 @ the Altoh—Altoh Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it! ANTA Singing Telegrams, 16140 W. 23rd St., NYC. Post work after classes at LOUISENDA BAY 109 Mass. Afternoon occasions daily until 6. TENNIS PLAYERS: There’s still a lot of playoff teams in the league, and players will have it out. Call David at 814-8944 for great prices for string and balls, or K. U. Varsity Tennis Stringer. 9-18 Singing messages for all occasions Deliv- ing messages of relevance ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-619-6 The Motif Beers Band has an immediate opening for road crew assistant. Call 864-2933 or 842-5068 or 843-9334. 9-17 Experienced skydivers enrolled in 12 + hours and interested in forming Collegiate National teams with 74 jump teams (913) 68532, 02354, 144 W. 58th St., Topeka, KA 66117. ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED CANOE TRAVEL Weekend getaway this fall. Attend a canoe trip organizational meeting on Monday at the Student Room at the Student Union. See you there! Over the hump! boughs with Toby Teddy and Tina Teddy. Green trees. Free rainbow. 810 W.24. Greens Tavern, Brown. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs of ice that can be used in a PSYCHIC - SELF-AWARNESS CLASS: Learn about the aura, chakras, spirit guides, the energy centers, for 10 weeks. Eve Lessenberg 841-695-3020 Green's Lake has 1976 German Pleepsers and 1749 Napal Valley Cabinet Sauvignon. KU welcomes Pizza Pete's little sister little KU brings now her b college girl other attention. Attention is drawn to other imitation shirts and would like the real ones for sale. reasonably priced Call 846-1874 Wednesday in Ladies Night at the Billy Berry Theater and drink coupons for ladies. Featuring the winner of the "Halloween" game, you'll be surprised. GET PAID for doing homework. Babyfisher GET PAID for doing homework. Located South of cane weekends. Located South of cane **I's Wednesday and GNO. At the HARBOUR LITES, all SINGLE women receive $1.50** **and all DONATIONS are welcome. Get your ship together at THE HARBOUR LITES, 1031 Massachusetts.** 9-17 An open meeting with Dan Watkins, Demo- tor for the Kansas Tennis District at 3:30 p.m., Wed., Sept 17 in the Pine Room of the Kansas Minnapolis Muscle Car Museum. Minnesota Campus Coordinator 842-1177 www.minnesotamusclecar.com Tired of cleaning and jeeking 50 lb. beaks G. P.Looy's West now has their party truck rolling. Tap out of the side, anywhere in the room. Call in your reservations 841-848-846. 9-17 In eating driving with you BATTY? Don't KAT! We take the KATERS out of driving, to take the KATERS out of driving. GUITARIST is needed with acoustic and electric experience in a broad range of music for a young audience. Lawrence舞者 Tim 748-0891 or 845-5271. 9-23 Beginning band is looking for BASSIST with singing ability For auditions inquire with Jeff at 749-0474 or 843-3266. 9-25 SERVICES OFFERED Instant color passport photos. Immigration I.D., portraiture, rename, portfolios, slidesc or B & W. B/W 841-7294. 9-30 THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage specialty: 'Tune-ups' and 'Total Overhauls'. Call 641-278-121. For the finest complete service on most imports-STRAIGHT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Daterm, Flat. Honda, Toyota 843-244-7061. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2½ EACH COPIES Patient tutor available for Germ 104, West Civ, and Eng. 101. 843-9808, ask for Judy HOUSE OF USHER BIRMINGHAM QUARTET & LANEAGE & ALEXANDRA GREEN 1932842610 EINSTEIN'S TUTORS. For expert assistance in mathematics or computer science, call B41-7603. English, grammar, communication, research, tying, call B41-7604. research, tying, call B41-7605. 9-17 Flute lessons-Experienced teacher acceptor Flute lessons-Dance at 914-0429 (evenings) Call Diane at 841-0365 (evenings) Astrology provides a frame of reference for your life. If you are confused about where you want to go, Astrology can more clearly identified this could make a difference. You call 845-1095 for information. 9-17 Tutoring service for all lower level math courses up to Calc. 115. Call Curt at 842. 4016. 9-24 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-476. ff TYPING Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphic release, rieffichage, Selective 12-811-3272 811-3272 Experienced typist, eight pages, thuis, bushia, farm, or office. Must have spelling corrected, 843-9554, Mrs. Wright. If Experienced Typist, Correcting Qualify Referrer, Bushel Sandy, evening and weekends, 781-8602. Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-7244. tf Typical Editor, IBM Plex/Elite, Quality Control Software, Warehouse Webcome, layout/editor, Call Agent, 842-750-6391. 200-200 FOR YOUR NATIONAL CLIENTS ENCORE COPY CORPS 119 W. 4th St., Holiday Plaza 843-2001 Taping prices discounted. Excellent work by Betty, 842-6697 after 5 and weekdays. If Experienced typet-thesis, dissertations, Select bark, after 5 and weekdays. Select bark, after 5 and weekdays. B IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate, IBM pica/elite. 824-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4890. ff Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-8438. WANTED GOLD- SILVER - DIAMONDS- Class rings, Wedding Bands, Silver Coin, Sterling ear- we. we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 + 842-2688. 10-6 Buying gold Paying $50-$100 for men's class rings, used for ladies. RAD Coin Shop. 2120 W. 23rd, Holiday Plaza. 842-9628. 9-30 Roommate: Beautiful, spacious home located 2-3 blocks from campus. Private rooms $110 mo. plus 1.6 of utilities. Call 814-8670. Dana 9-17 Roommate for spacious new 2 berm. apt. ½ rent +½ utilities. Contact Julie 769- 0170 9-12 Roominate at the Jayhawk Tower as all 85 alliances paid call 9-19 2015. Anytime. Male wanted to share mobile home, non- mobil home. 195-210 responsible student. $85 495-210 Two people needed to sub-lease spacious Malls apt. with fireplace, bianca' 1/9 baths, on bus route and other comforts. Surprise amenities: Call. Dave or Drew at 943-278-378. Non-smoking female roommate to share a non-mom, bath and, of a large, fully furnished, a bain. 2 baths. 2 baths.Old Gold English Vi- tage. Inert R981. Contact Marty Furnish. 842-416-308 Female roommate to 2 bdm. apt. 21 blocks from campus. Call Donna N. 86-2395 9-10 Roommate wanted for mobile home $90. Nurse wanted for petrificum. Call John. 10-23 3449 after 8:45. Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 17, 1980 Rain doubles KC chances to clinch title By GENE MYERS Sports Editor KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Rain postponed the Kansas City Royals last night and postponed their chance to clinch the American League West. But today the Royals have a double chance to clinch the title because last night's rainsout has been a positive one. At 5:06 p.m., Dennis Leonard will take his 18-9 record to the mound to face the California Angels and winless Ralph Bottin. In the second game, Renie Martin, 8-9, will face winless Bob Ferris. KANSAS CITY's magic number is one. Texas, which lost 2-4 LITTLE to Oakland, has been mathematically eliminated. Oakland will be back to winning games and games today or if the A's lose tonight to The Royals, however, will play without George Brett, who will miss his ninth and tenth straight games. Brett, who leads the majors with a .396 average but has not played since Sept. 6, had the injury to his right hand diagnosed on Monday as tendinitis. "He has resolving tendencies of one of his wrist extensors," William Benson, Kansas City physician, said after a 45-minute examination. "I told him I was going to ask him playing until he was co-confident." "How long that will take is very unpredictable. I hope sometime in the next four to six days." PLAYING WITHOUT BRETT has been painful for the Royals. In the 43 games he has missed—nine with a bruise, 'beel, 26 with torn ankle ligaments and seven 'tendinitis—the Royals Kansas City Royals' Magic Number 1 LAURA NEWMANI/Kansan staff are 21-22. The Royals also lost three other games in which Brett could not start but only pinch hit. They are 68-30 when he has started. Even though the Royals are only a 50-50 shot to win without Brett, they have done fine when Leonard has pitched. He has not lost since July 31. In his last 10 starts he has eight victories, one loss and one no decision. Since the All-Star break, he is 11-2 with a 2.99 ERA. The game last night, the first rianout of the season, was called about an hour before the 7:35 starting time. The artificial turf was ankle-deep in water. Only a handful of fans were in Royals Stadium and a handful more were in their cars. The temperature had dropped to the low 50s. By 7:35 the rain had stopped and a bright orange sun shadowed the fast-moving clouds. The KU defense was the big surprise for Head Coach Don Fambrough last weekend. However, he says the defense must do better to surprise seventh-ranked Pittsburgh. The Pitt Panthers, who beat lowly Boston College 14-6 last weekend, play Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The Panthers had nine points in the opener, but Fambrillo expects that to end. "The defense played its heart out and never gave up," he said of KU's it-7 heart of Oregon last weekend. "The defense had something to prove. The players came out of the game with a lot of Both the KU defense and offense had a tough time in practice yesterday. Thundershowers cut the practice short by an hour. The practice had the advantage of being behind Allen Field House to Memorial Stadium. The defense, last in the Big Eight last year, had only one team to seven or eight points then. The offense, which was led by Rashaad Penny Glory escapes KU runners but dedication, fun does not By JIM SMALL Sports Writer She stood alone, hands on hips, with the hot Kansas sun beating on her body. Perspiration dripped down her temples and trickled down the end of her nose. Her red face was contorted with pain as she greedily sucked in more air. "I run," she giped, "because I am addicted." Regardless of her reasons, Nancy Rogowski, Belle Colo, Freshman, continues to run day in and day out. Women who work in women who make up KU's cross-country teams. "IT GETS REALLY hard sometimes," said Phil Broadack, Mission Hills sophomore. "I don't think a day goes by when I don't ask myself to play or enjoy running and it teems good once I'm finished." "It is easy to get down a lot," Rogowski said. "Running in 84° degree heat and high humidity is not easy." The cross-country runners are a product of the country's running craze. They feel the short-term punishment of intensive running. They are also more susceptible to long-term injuries. "ITREAT A lot of runners," said Don Mahrle, a Topoeda pediatra. "Their feet do take some wear and tear. But the foot is well adapted for running; it is designed to do well. "The problems occur when there is a structural deformation in the foot. The running may aggravate this deformation and cause problems for the runner. In the long run, however, the advantages of running far outweigh the disadvantages." Judging from an average workout, it isn't hard to see why runners suffer wear and tear. But the difference is that you can control them. "WE RUN ON our in the morning," Broadaus said. "Usually it between four and five miles. That part isn't hard and I don't even consider that part of our workout. 'one real work starts in the afternoon. The practices vary throughout the season, but usually we'll run another 11 miles or so in. We'll heat and humidity, that's a lot of running.' The rewards are small medalions and encouragement from coaches and teammates. There is no public glory for a cross-country runner. Bob Luder, Caldwell sophomore, said that at times everyone missed the attention that the glamour sports of football, basketball and baseball received. "Sure, sometimes I think, 'Where is this going to get me?' " Luder said. "I'll be here three more years and that's it. There isn't a lot of money in cross-country after college. "But I usually say that when I am feeling kind of down, like if a practice has gone bad. I know that as long as I am here, I'll keep running. I really love it." "WE WOULD LIKE it if there was some money in running after college," said Bill Allen, Port Angles, Wash., senior. "It might happen some day, but I guess not right now." The sport is also a burden in the classroom. The less glamorous the sport, statistics show, the higher the graduation rate of athletes. But it is not always easy. "I am putting all I can into my grades," Heard said. "Sometimes that means cutting my running down a little. For instance, I used to run five miles and run three to run three and spend the other time studying." DESPITE THE hardships and injustices that camerons run, sometimes presents, the camers run on. Rogowski, still gasping from her last energy- draining mile of the day, knew why. Draft pick comes to terms with Kings By United Press International ST. JOSEPH, Mo.-Charles "Hawkeye" Whitney, the Kansas City King's top draft choice, signed a multi-year contract with the club yesterday. He will be in training camp today "It can really help you in other things," she said. "You not only are building your body, but you also are building your mind." Douglas, the younger brother of Kansas City center Leon Douglas, whom the Kings acquired from the Detroit Pistons during the off-season, was an All-Big Eight player at KU. He was the final player cut in the Golden State Warriors team, the same team that released White last season. The 6-foot-5 1/2 swingman from North Carolina State had a 16.8 career scoring average. He will be used both at guard and forward. The Kings have 16 players competing for 11 spots, the roster, two of them former Kansas Kansas City Royals. Douglas spent last season splitting time bet- ween the college and university toward his physical education degree at KNU. JO JO WHITE signed with the Kings last week and John Douglas was invited to camp this season. "It was tough ... mentally tough," Douglas said about his first year without basketball since he was a youngster. "I wanted so much to be a part of what was going on out there, but I always was, comparing myself putting myself in someone's position out there on the court." DOUGLAS CAN thank his former coach, Ted Cormier, for arranging a pre-camp trial with the Kicks. Owens called Kansas City Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, who used to coach at Kansas State University, and asked him to take a look at the younger Douglas. Douglas spent two weeks with several players and showed enough talent to warrant a second look. "If we didn't think he could play, John wouldn't be here," Fitzsimmons said. "He's not here because of Leon. To tell you the truth, I didn't even know they were brothers until we got Leon in June. John is here because we think he has a chance to make our club." Of the 11 spots open on the team, at least nine are spoken for. BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE FOR USE WITH OTHER BRAKE BRANKS AND VEHICLES MAINTENANCE, WASHING, AND REPAIRATION INCLUDING REMOVAL OF ORIGINAL BRUSHES BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE Super Chrome Tape BASF II C-90 29¹⁵ CASE of 10 or 3.49 EACH FILL UP $1¥⁰ Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th CRAIG Language Translator ½ price ½ price only 99¹⁵ Hurry, Limited Quantities. AUDIOTRONICS THE BEST SYSTEM PRICES IN THE MIDWEST! 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN D3 discwasher FILL UP $1.00 Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 BASF 90 CHROMIUM DIOXIDE CASE of 10 or 3.49 EACH Super Chrome Tape BASF II C-90 FILL UP $1.00 Discwasher D-3 Record Cleaning Solution 1 fluid oz. Void Sept. 20 SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th CRAIG Language Translator 1/2 price only 99.95 Hurry, Limited Quantities. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWNTOWN HELP! for your hair from headmasters open most evenings till 8 809 Vermont 843-8808 ZERCHER PHOTO Where Cards & Gifts Abound! Let Us Help Decorate Your Room HILLCREST 919 IOWA Mon. Fri. 10.8 Sat. 10.6 ZERCHER PHOTO 1107 MASS. Mon. Sat. 9.30 5.30 Within walking distance MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas New tools exist to allow any normal person to draw on the 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate results. * LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHOBIAS * In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 FROM 2 to 9 P.M. LAWRENCE RAMADA INN 2222 WEST 8th MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. P.O. Box 442, INDEPENDENCE, MO 64051 (816) 252-8318 (913) 383-1432 BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbrier's Deli) Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa Use Your "People Book" Hailbut Steaks 4.13 Reg. 5.66 Mahi Mahi 2.08 Reg. 2.89 Jumbo Braided Shrimp 4.83 Reg. 5.81 Small Posted And Devened Shrimp 5.50 Reg. 6.95 Shogun Special: Tiger Prawns Now you can taste the ultimate treat of the Emperor's table. Enormous Tiger Prawns (combining the best of lobster and shrimp). Sold individually this week only (regularly available only in 5 lb. blocks for $47.50) $1.50 each through Saturday—average 2½ oz. each. Patronize Kansan Advertisers AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT Why Play At The Pladium? • Your Parents Get Their First Draw Free • Your Parents Can Play The Finest Game Room In Town Free • Our DJ Will Play Music From Your Parents Day As Well As Yours (4 to 6 PM Only) 901 Mississippi 841-4600 SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th SONIC QUALITY HEADPHONES 25% OFF Entire Selection Void Sept. 20th CRAIG Language Translator 1/2 price 1/2 price only 99'95 Hurry, Limited Quantities. AUDIOTRONICS 928 MASSACHUSETTS DOWN TOWN THE BEST SYSTEM PRICES IN THE MIDWEST HELP! HELP! for your hair from headmasters open most evenings till 8 809 Vermont 843-8808 ment for your hair from headmasters open most evenings till 8 809 Vermont 843-8808 HELP! for your hair from headmasters open most evenings till 8 843-8808 ZERCHER PHOTO Where Cards & Gifts Abound Let Us Help Decorate Your Room HILLCREST 919 IOWA Mon Fri. 10:8 Sat 10:6 ZERCHER PHOTO DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. Mon Sat 9:30 SAT 10:6 Within walking distance MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas Edison used no more than 10% of their mind's potential. New tools exist to allow any normal person to draw on the 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate results. * LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHOBias* In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 FROM 2 to 9 P.M. ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. REGULAR Tuition $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 LAWRENCE RAMADA INN 2222 WEST 6th MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. (816) 252-8318 ZERCHER PHOTO Where Cards & Gifts Abound Let Us Help Decorate Your Room HILLCREST 919 IOWA Mon. Jun. 10.8 Sat. 10.6 ZERCHER PHOTO DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. Mon. Sat. 9:30 5:30 Within walking distance MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists believe that even Albert Einstein and Thomas Edison used no more than 10% of their minds' potential. New tools exist to allow any normal person to draw on the 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate results. * LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHOBIAS* In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mind body relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 FROM 2 to 9 P.M. ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 LAWRENCE RAMADA'INN 2222 WEST 8th MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. (P. 816) 252-8318 (P. 813) 383-1432 M.P.O. Box 442, INDEPENDENCE, MO 64051 footlights Footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbriar's Deli) Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices SAVE UP TO 15% bud JENNINGS CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa • Use Your "People Book" Prime Schooner SEAFOOD Market 841-6810 123 Main Street Oakland Arquette from Dowling Iowa Open 6 days a week Playa Schroeter SEAFOOD Market 841-6610 Halibut Steaks 4.13 Reg. 5.85 Mahi Mahi 2.08 Reg. 2.99 Jumbo Breaded Shrimp 4.83 Reg. 5.88 Small Peeled And Devoured Shrimp 5.50 Reg. 8.95 925 Sweets at Holliesrest Access farm grazing lines Open 6 days a week AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT Pladium Why Play At The Pladium? The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Thursday, September 18, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 19 USPS 650-640 LEONARD 22 Royals Kansas City Royals outfielder Willie Wilson pitches Demis Leonard. Leonard shut out the defending Western Division champion California with champagne following the Royals' title-clinching victory last night. Angels 5-4. See story back page. Fans petition for new spirits at games By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter If some determined students have their way, a new type of spirit will circulate in the stands of the stadium. Mark McClanahan, Overland Park junior, is leading a battle to get beer served in Memorial Stadium and will meet with Acting Chancellor Del Shankel in two weeks to discuss the issue. McMlanan said he had discussed the possibility of beer in the stadium with Shankel "He said he thought it was feasible and could be a good idea, and would be a good way to make sense of it." A REQUEST FROM THE University of Kansas Athletic Board and KU concessions is needed before the chancellor will approve the idea, which he has called for Senate executive committee vice chairman. Venable said that the Board of Regents did not have to approve the idea and that all that was required was for the Board to review it. mcIcahanian said that Bob Marcum, KU athletic director, also supported the plan. "He said he would have a favorable reaction to a plan and if the administration said yes, it was The proposal for beer in the stadium also was endorsed by Student Senate last year. Senate approval was based on a study done by the now-renowned College of Dentistry for Higher Education, a KUL lobbying group. The CSHE report studied beer sales at the University of Colorado at Boulder, which has sold beer at athletic events for the past three years. The report emphasizes that revenue from beer sales could be used to help support intercollegiate athletics and alleviate some of the costs associated with athletic departments because of Title IX rulings. TITLE IX IS A federal law that prohibits sex attention in funding intercollegiate athletics. KU is under investigation by the U.S. Education for alleged discrimination in athletics. McClanahan said that the revenue from beer sales would not solve the problems facing the industry. He added that the John Novotty, director of the Williams Educational Fund, which provides athletic scholarships from summit donations, said in the stadium because it would help athletes. he saud he supported selling beer in the stadium because he thought there was an inconsistency in the University policy of selling beer in the Kansas Union and not in Memorial Stadium. He said that the Board of Regents had recognized that beer could be sold on campus and that he did not understand why there was an experiment with the stadium that prohibited the selling of beer. Beer costs $1 a glass at Colorado and a Coke costs 50 cents, McDell said. Spectators buy beer not so much to quench their thirst, but just to have a beer, he said. "We are 100 percent for it," he said. "Beer is not likely to be a revenue cut, anyway, not levy it directly." "It increased the total number of drinks sold at a football game by 10 to 15 percent," he said. He said the university was gaining on one end by beer sales, yet losing on Coke sales. Colorado police reported five or six incidents a game involving drunken spectators before beer was sold at the stadium 'and very few such incidents since. Colorado football fans drink about 200 kegs of beer a game, McDowell said, but there have been fewer incidents with drunkenness since beer has been sold. Captain John Mullens of the KU police records of incidents of drug use at football games. He said that officers had not been injured at football games because of drunken spectators and that incidents of rowdiness were all that KU police have had to deal with. Mullens said he could not speculate on what the crowds at KU would do if beer were sold in the city. The cost of installing the equipment to sell beer at Colorado was $200,000. McDowell said. According to a local distributor, installing the necessary equipment at KU could cost $1,990. That equipment would include eight keg boxes, faucets and tape for the kegs and an 18-by-18-foot ceiling. According to KU concessions, kegs would be set up at eight concession stands in the center of the arena. Somoza ambushed by 6 in Paraguay He said the concession areas would be con- stituted and situated away from established concession sites. McDowell said Colorado sold beer from bottles and cans poured into paper cups for the first year. ASUNCION, Paraguay (UFI)—Former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somosa was assassinated yesterday by six men who blew his gun and apart with a bazaoka on a downtown street. "It's more expensive," he said, "but we got a chance to try it out." Police later announced that two of the suspected assassins were members of the People's Revolutionary Army, an almost defunct Argentine guerrilla group. Police said all six assassins escaped after executing a carefully planned ambush a bouth half a mile from the 54-year-old exiled dictator's home. A driver and another man also were killed in the ambush. The government closed down Asunción Airport and sealed off Paraguay's borders. It posted an $8,000 reward for information leading to the death of a drug trafficker. The lookout for a young man with a bullet wound. THE AMBUSH occurred at 10:30 a.m. as he was taking his daily drive through the city following an earthquake. According to police, three men hiding in an abandoned house fired two rounds of bazooka shells at Somora's car as it passed through an intersection in downtown Asunción. At the same time, three other men in a small truck sprayed the car with some 25 rounds of machine gun fire. A man identified as a police officer was killed, and a passenger in Somoa's car, also was killed. The police escort following somnia returned the fire, wounding at least one of the assassins. The wounded gunman sped from the truck before switching to a stolen car about five The car, which was filled with machine guns, ammunition and grenade launchers, later was used to blow up the building. The ambush was the first major terrorist attack in Paraguay in 26 years of authoritarian rule. immediately declared a "national day of celebration" and residents in the capital hugged one another and danced wildly in the streets. The United States, Somoza's chief ally, tried to mediate that conflict but refused in the end to intervene on behalf of the dictator whose regime was notorious for its corruption. Senate vote cuts seats. quorum call questioned Bv DIANES SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate voted last night to cut its size from 120 to 65 senators. The petition passed 37-15 with 58 senators present for the initial roll call. Because 12 senators have resigned, the Senate quorum is 54 rather than 60. The petition is a result of concern about student senator absences and Senate inefficiencies. The petition proposed that the number of Senate seats be reduced from 128 to 65. Three of the seats would be special representatives to the University Council, 57 would be distributed to the schools and five would represent living groups. NUNEMAKER DISTRICTS would be eliminated. DISTRICTS would be placed in three other schools. Nunemaker consists of freshmen and sohomores who have not declared a major. An amendment added to the petition at last week's Senate meeting added the five housing representatives. The amendment gave Senate representation to the All Scholarship Hall Council, the Association of University Residence Halls, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and off-campus housing. The amendment, which was proposed by Bill Coyne and passed with increasing the number of proposed seats from 60 to The Senate was damned last week before a petition for pettion could be taken because of a lack oficks. There was little debate on the petition last night. Greg Schnacke, student body president, said he favored the cut because reducing its size should make the Senate work more efficiently. Only one senator spoke against the petition. Paul Baskirk, Senate parliamentarian and Nunmaker senator, said that cutting senators would alienate students and make the Senate more elitist rather than more responsive. The petition will be sent to the University Council for its approval. The council meets Oct In other action, the Senate voted to accept the Student Senate executive committee's ASK progress report and to continue membership in ASK. The report recommended several requirements for KU's ASK delegation which also were accepted. The first requirement calls for making a concerted effort to inform the student body of the significance of Legislative and the selection of delegates to the assembles. THE SECOND REQUIREMENT calls for delegates to be chosen by a three-member board consisting of the campus ASK director, the president, the chairman and the Rights committee chairman. The third requirement calls for KU ASK delegates to be responsible for monitoring legislation that sobely affects and lobby for universities and campuses director both at KU and at the state level. According to the Senate's revenue code, StudEx must prepare a progress report on ASK each year and submit it to the Senate for a vote on continuing or discontinuing membership. A sub-item recommending that ASK's primary emphasis be on educational issues was struck during the 1980s. Membership in ASK costs KU $1,571 a year or 28 cents full-time student each semester. AFTER APPROVAL OF the report, quorum was called and a round of applause followed when Craig Templeton, Senate executive treasurer, announced 58 senators present. See SENATE page 3 KU Turkish students describe effect of violence, marshal law Bv KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter During the two months he was home this during a basketball game, KU junior, didn't doze out after midnight. "It was kind of bad this summer," Aksewen said yesterday. "There were soldiers and police on all the roads. They were checking IDs and searching cars to see if you had any guns. If you didn't have your ID, they'd put you in jail and check you out." His home town of Istanbul, Turkey, was under marshal law, and while state police managed to maintain a semblance of control during the daylight hours, anything could happen after According to an Ankara graduate student, who THESE STUDENTS were witnesses to the political unrest and violence that has become a way of life in Turkey, a key NATO nation persecuted by Israel. The country end surrounded by volatile Midest countries. asked not to be identified, "terrorism was at home. People were being killed like crazy. “That’s part of the national character,” he said. “We do passionately like to take revenge. When someone is killed on one side, that side will go out and kill someone else.” The terrorism was born of political infighting between left-wing and right-wing extremists and fed by the problems of a failing economy. More than 4,000 people have died in the past five years. Last Friday, Turkey's military leaders staged a bloodied coup that ousted Prime Minister 快乐的森林里 Weather See TURKEY page 5 It should be clear with temperatures this afternoon in the mid-to-upper 70s, according to the National Weather Service office in Topeka. Winds should be from the southwest at 5 to 15 mph. Lows tonight should be in the mid-50s. Tomorrow should be clear with an afternoon high of about 80. The extended forecast calls for weekend low temperatures in the 60s and highs in the upper 80s. There is a chance of showers Sunday and Monday. Watson's first phase nears its end By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter The first phase of the Watson Library renovation is almost finished, Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said yesterday. "We recognize that this is an inconvenience for them and that. "Most people have been understanding." Only three more phases are left. The first phase consists of plumbing and electrical work and renovation of the basement, sub-basement and part of the third floor. It is scheduled for completion Nov.1. A list of electrical, dust, noise and lighting problems is posted daily on a bulletin board on the first floor and the library puts out a thermo with an update on the renovation. Rana said that the library staff tried to provide up-to-date information about the library. "We feel the renovation is beyond our control," Ranz said. "It has to be done. The thing that is within our control is to inform us early as possible what will be going on with it." Despite the renovation, the same number of people are checking out books, Ranz said, but not as many people are studying in the library. "This simply is not a place to study anymore," he said. The writers of library graffiti agree with Ranz. A cartoon pinned on the wall shows a reference librarian wearing a gas mask with a sign that says "Sign Language Spoken Here." Scrawled in magic marker on a plastic duct sheet is the sentence "Watson Library provides a nice, quiet, personal environment for its students," seriously. The education — 1979 KU enrollment brochure." The "Please Ignore Jackhammer" sign on the wall has been updated from "What Jackhammer?" to "Who is Jack Hammer?" and "No, who is ist baseman." Even with the noise, some students continue to study in Watson. All students are not as calm about the renovation. Gary Baird, Baton Rouge, La., junior, said he had always studied in Watson and he was not going to stop. The noise doesn't bother him, he said. She said she left when a third jackhammer started and she heard some bricks fall. SHANNON ZENGER, Hays, junior, said she went to the library to study for a test but left after 20 minutes because of the iackhammers. A student sitting next to her gave up and left at that point. Zenger said. "So I thought, I'm not going to give up like him," Zenger said. "Remember, the test was next morning and I'd hardly studied it all." "I didn't even look around to see where they were, so I had to Zinger seerer him going to try it and me just going to go back." "I told myself, is okay. Shannon you can get used to noises like this," she said. "Then all of a sudden a second one joined in with the first one." The noisiest part of the renovation is over, John Glinka, associate dean of libraries, said. there to get books. I guess I've just crossed it off my list." Ginka said the noise was worst in the summer when the west stairwell was removed the workman started tearing it out and the market worker dropped dropping debris to the floor as they went. Workmen are at the library from 7:30 a.m. to problem-solve, said no noise is to problem one evening. RENOVATION WILL improve the building, Glinka said, by making it more energy efficient, creating more reader space, and connecting the east and west stacks. Glinka said that as a rule, a library should have enough reader space for 10 percent of the student body. Watson has space for only about 4 percent of the student body, he said. Insulation of the outer walls, storm windows and new heating and air-conditioning systems will cut down on the energy loss at the library. Glinka said. When the renovation is finished, Glinka said, administrative offices will be on the third floor, most library staff will be in the basement, and the card catalog, circulation and reference desks and interlibrary services will be on the first floor. He said the sub-basement, previously closed to the public, would be open after the renovation and would have a lounge with vending machines and a drive-up bookshop. A ramp for the handicapped is being built outside Watson, Glinka said. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Disagreements stall OPEC meeting VIENNA, Austria - OPEC's ministerial conference collapsed yesterday when cabinet members failed to agree on a long-term price formula. Saudi Arabia said it would not raise its petroleum prices until others lowered theirs. Saudi Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yariam also said that his country intended to maintain production at the current level of 9.5 million barrels a day through the end of 1980, another stand that helped wreck the cartel's three-day meeting. The ministerial meeting broke down under the weight of solid opposition from Iran, Libya and Algeria to a Saudi Arabian proposal that would have linked OPEC oil prices to a variety of economic factors, including fluctuations on the world's money markets. The three hard-liners demanded that there first be a cutback in oil production by OPEC members, including as much as 2 million barrels a day. The key problems facing the ministers were the wide price range of OPEC oil—from a low of $28 charged by Saudi Arabia to a high of more than $37 charged by others—and high production, which is estimated at 27.6 million barrels a day. Salvadoran leftists take 6 hostages SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—Lefist guerrillas shot their way into the Organization of American States offices yesterday, wounding five people, seizing the building and taking six hostages. They demanded an end to government repression. The band at least 18 guerrillas was led by a woman, witnesses to the takeover said. Government troops in tanks and armored personnel carriers surrounded the mission after the takeover but later retreated when the guerrillas and a soldier commanding the operation talked through a megaphone, witnesses said. The hostages included Albino Roman, the Nicaraguan chief of the OAS office in Managua; two OAS officials, two secretaries and a cleaning official. The officers had fled to Peru. Cubans hijack plane despite warning MIAMI—Two young Cuban refugees, "tired of the robbing and killing" in New York City, hijacked a Delta Airlines jet to Havana yesterday despite Fidel Castro's warning that hijackers will be imprisoned or sent back to the United States to face charges. The two men, identified as C. Perez and J. Vega, commandered an Atlanta to Charleston, SC flight with 114 people aboard just before it made a turn. They took over the plane by splashing an inflammable liquid around the passenger compartment and threatening to put a torch to the aircraft. The hijackers were handcuffed and led away by Cuban authorities when the plan landed at Jose Marti Airport. After the hijackers were taken off the plane, the remaining 104 passengers and eight crew members flew back to Miami International Airport and then on to Charleston and Columbia. It was the 13th hijacking of the year and the 10th since last month when U.S. officials started tightening security at airports and putting air marshals in place to prevent hijackers from entering. Almost all of the recent hijackings have been carried out by hornsick Cuban refugees who had arrived in the United States via the Cuban sealift that began last April. Debate proceeds without empty chair Ronald Reagan called on President Carter yesterday to join Sunday's debate with he and John Anderson. Reagan, on his Texas trip Tuesday, said the unoccupied seat in Baltimore would not truly be empty, but "will be filled with the unkempt promises of However, the League of Women Voters decided yesterday against placing an empty chair on the stage as it had planned. one said the league's attorneys had also warned of "legal questions." Parental time during his commission in Texas, Raines responded to Curtis we do not intend to let the "empty chair" controversy overshadow the opportunity of the American people to focus on the candidates' discussion of the issues," said Ruth Hinerfeld, chairman of the league's Education Fund. (The release also included a statement of "legal questions"). Several times during his campaign in Texas, Reagan responded to Carter attacks by saying the president should be willing to debate those issues if he "I just don't know how much farther he'll go," he said, "to try and divert attention from the fact that he can say all these things to a nationwide Carter, however, showed no inclination to change his position. He signed a memorandum with members of the Congress in the October Garden and met with members of Congress in the October Garden. Meanwhile, Anderson wrapped up an 11-day, cross-country swing before flying to Washington for preparations for the debate which he considers to be U.S. China agree on four new pacts WASHINGTON - President Carter, declaring the establishment of relations with Peking "at last complete," yesterday joined China's vice premier in signing four new agreements on matters ranging from airline service to textile trade. Under the trade and diplomatic pacts, the two countries agreed to set up the first scheduled airline service between them since the communist takeover of China in 1949, agreed to increased access to each other's ports, settled levels of Chinese textile imports into the United States through 1983. The two countries also agree to sign their first formal treaty, to hold a medical conference and work each to open three more consultations and to conclude the agreement. "With the four agreements we are about to sign, the normalization of relations between the United States and the People's Republic of China is at last complete," Carter said at the afternoon ceremony in the White House Rose Garden. "It is an achievement with a bipartisan history," Carter said. Reputed crime boss killed by bomb ST. LOUIS—The reputed leader of an organized crime faction was killed yesterday by a bomb that blew his car apart while he was driving on Interstate 55. He said he considered the pacts one of the most important achievements of his presidency. The leaders of organized crime in St. Louis have been undergoing a power struggle since Anthony Giordano, who directed major organized crime operations in the city, died Aug. 29. Giordano, 64, had been suffering from lung cancer. Authorities said that the reputed crime leader, James Michael斯. Sr., was killed when a bomb ripped through his late-model Chrysler, scattering debris in all six lanes of the highway. Police were forced to close the busy highway during the evening rush hour. "It appears from recent events and changes in power that this may be the case of a police department of end of it." said Col. Gilbert Kinnickham, supervisor of St. Louis County police. Michaela, 74, had been the leader of a faction of organized crime in the city known as the Cuckoo Gang during the 1920s and 1930s. The faction ran the Authorities said they did not know where the bomb was placed in the car or what was used to trigger the explosion. Members of the police department's bomb and arson squad and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms were investigating the bombing. Cool weather, repairs ease Summerfield heat Business and economics students returned to 411 Summerfield this week after three weeks of hot weather had ended, and joined class in the overheated lecture hall. By PAM HOWARD Staff Reporter The recent cooling trend and minor repairs to the cooling system have made temperatures in the classroom bearable, students said. Joseph Cox, visiting assistant professor of economics, said that the temperatures in the lecture hall had been increasing while preparing his Economics 104 class on Sept. 8. Cox said the heat not only hurt attendance, but also impaired the students' ability to learn and his ability to present class material. Thomas J. Weiss, chairman of the economics department, said that he and business school representatives had advised the chancellor's office about the problem. James J. Scaly, administrative assistant for the chancellor's office. BUY OR SELL 731 New Hampshire SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm SPECIAL EVENTS CALENDAR FRIDAY LIMOUSINE SATURDAY RIVERROCK WEDNESDAY 24th Ape-Man Party Featuring The Lynch & McBee Band No Cover FRIDAY 28th John Hartford with Allen Welss Thomas Anderson, director of facilities operations, said Friday that he had been informed of the incident. He sent personnel to check the classroom. TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE FOR: ULTRAVOX and ELVIN BISHOP w/LARRY RASPBERRY said last week that he had received a letter about the problem a week before but had not had time to act on it. At Keff's, Better Days, and The 7th Spirit Club WATCH FOR September A large part of the problem, Anderson said, was that the classroom doors were being left open. He said this put unnecessary strain on the cooling system, overheating it and the classroom. 2 ELVIN BISHOP 16 CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN Anderson he found that the cooling system was 200 pounds low on Frenon, which raised the temperature two or three degrees. September 27 ALCHEMY 29 ULTRAVOX 30 ALLEN GINSBERG WILLMUM BURROUGHS THE THUMBS BAND 3&4 THE SECRETS Town House Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 lawrence Opera House SUA FILMS Thursday, Sept. 18 Orchestra Rehearsal in the middle of rehearsal an orchestra breaks down. Some want different music, some want a different conductor, some don't want to play at all. Federico Gianvito was a great Aldo Alto kidnapping, is simple but clever, thanks to Fellini's light touch and Nino Rota's last score, a delicacy pungent enough for the historical-spectacle impetus which grabbed Viaconti and Rosselli, fallini proves he is as controversial and funny as ever. Plus: "Twe" "Rin" (82%) Color: #30. Friday, Sept. 19 Rich Kids (1979) Rich Kids "Do you think it's easy sneaking in early enough so that my daughter won't catch me?" asks one parent in this perceptive film, which convincingly shows that a child of middle-class troubles is directed with a sharp eye by Robert M. Young, a producer of Robert Atlman (who produced), With Jeremy Lewy, Whirow Pharaoh, With Beth and Pereuth Pollany The Red Balloon." (97th Col.) Color 3:30; 19:00. Fedora (1978) Billy Winder's latest film is a descendant of his Sunset Boulevard. Dawn-and-down outfit, a long and flattering suit to stage a comeback by luring the elusive, mysterious Fedora—obviously based on Garbo—from her retirement. The sequel, "The Heads," this is a complex, sinister film. With Martha Keller, Hillegade Kruel, and James Gandolfini, it closes Monday's (11:48) color. 7.00. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) In the last twelve years, men landed on the moon, Skyllab飞船, and Star Wars came out. But Stanley Kubrick's vision of the future was gripped by a gained stature. The special effects are brilliant, but here for once they are secondary to the speculations on man's existence that make this a unique film experience. (a 138 min) Color. 120: Midnight Saturday, Sept. 20 Rich Kids 7:00 Fedora 3:30, 9:30 2001: A Space Odyssey 12:00 Midnight. Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Woolduff Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.50; Saturday at Saturdays at Woolduff Union, 4th level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Valuable Coupon T GRANDE 9th & Indiana 1720 West, 23rd offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. Buy Two Tacos Get One Taco Free with this coupon Good Until Sept. 26, 1980 "The Proof is in the Taco" --their guests guys $4 gals $3 ZERCHER PHOTO Where Cards & Gifts Abound! Let Us Help Decorate Your Room Within walking distance 15% off • Baskets • Glassware • Alarm Clocks • Bed Spreads • Lampshades • Tote Bags • Bamboo Curtain Let Us Help Decorate Your Room Within walking distance A cartoon showing a dog trying to pull a cart full of goods. A B C - Bamboo Curtains HILLCREST 919 IOWA Missouri 63085 ZERCHER PHOTO DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. Minnesota 62045 1c Seiferts annual 1¢ sweater sale Famous labels! Buy one at regular price and get another (equal price) for just a penny! Seiferts 821 MASS. 530 Wisconsin Enjoy the music of The Moffet-Beers Band Fri, Sept 19 & Sat Sept 20 From 10 pm-2:00 am O= HCH Tonight Initiation night All the beer you can drink 9-1 am, members guys $3 gals $2 Don't miss our T.G.I.F. 50' drinks starting at 3:00 pm Prices then go up 10' every hour until 10 pm when they return to regular prices. 1 University Dally Kansan, September 18, 1980 Page 3 X On Campus KU GERMAN CLUB The GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 405 Wescoe. Students from the 1980 Summer Language Institute will relate their JACOB BRONOWSKI FILM SERIES "THE ASCENT OF MAN." GRAIN IN THE STONE" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescoe. KU GRADUATE WOMEN'S GROUP will meet from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Cork Room No. 2 of the Kansas Union. SCoRMEBEE will meet at 6 p.m. in 2007 Learned. CO-REC VOLLEYBALL MANAGERS will meet in 156 Robinson. THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SEXUALITY at the Ecumenical Christianity Ministries Center will meet at 7 p.m. TOMORROW YOGA CLASSES will meet in 4047 Wescoe from 8 p.m. to 8 p.m. **STUDENT** SENATE RIGHTS in the International Room of the Union. THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will sponsor International Folk Dancing in Robinson Gymnasium. Beginning dances will be taught from 7:30 p.m to 9 p.m. and request dancing will be from 9 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. The BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP MEETING will be at 7 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. AZUKI AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts the VILLAGE SET the VILLAGE SET 9/18 thru 9/23 20% off any Purchase (does not include sale items) Metcalf South Blue Ridge Lawrence 922 Mass. Prairie Village Plaza By Sachel $59.99 to $69.99 Reg. $80 to $90 Blazers The Village Set is dedicated to your life style. Be a Village Set Girl. The free spirit in you will love the excitement of the fashions at the Village Set. Step into fashion & take advantage of this fashion saving coupon today! BIG BOY JB's Senate SEPTEMBER OLD-FASHIONED SPECIAL ® When you buy a Big Boy Combo or a Big Boy, Salad Bar and Fries at the regular price The Senate then voted to pass a bill that would give the Senate committees more power. The last bill passed last night makes student organizations who buy capital equipment with funds allocated by the Senate responsible for the replacement cost of that equipment if it is lost, stolen, destroyed or damaged. From page 1 They said that according to their count there was not a quorum when Templeton announced 58 senators present. 2222 W 6th When the 80-minute meeting ended, Dave Watkins, business senator and Scott McCallister, LA&S senator, voiced concern about the quorum call. A recount at the end of the meeting did show a recorded count of 53, one short of quorum. According to quorum records, it has taken before quorum is called is official. Because the call was contested after all business had been completed, Templeton's ruling stands and action taken on the last two bills is binding, according to Matt Davis, student body vice president and Templeton. 1C More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a **free** dry dress with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo **free** with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 Saturday 9-3 841-4488 842-7030 RAMADA INN All You Can Eat DELICIOUS APPLE PIE at the old-fashioned price of Sunday Brunch 11:00AM-2:00PM -Salad Bar -Bacon and Sausage -Danish Pastry Scrambled eggs -American Fries American Fries London Broil -London Broll Fried Chicken -Fried Chicken -Deep Fried Fish usually $4.95 -And much more Good until October 5,1980 This coupon worth $1.00 But only $3.95 with this coupon off any adult portion MIND Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas Naefdon used it to allow normal their minds to be potential. Need they to allow any normal to become potential? 90% of their mind that is seldom used. **Mind Potential Workshops** teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate results. POTENTIAL - LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHORIAS * WORKSHOPS In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. LAWRENCE RAMADA1NN 2222 WEST 6th REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. FROM 2 to 9 P.M. (816) 252-8318 (913) 383-1432 Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb Hamburger at regular price Bucky's - Fast Service (Week-10 Days) Expert Watch Repair Get One Free Midnight to 12:30 75° Hiballs Buckys - Master Watchmakers - 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 - All Work Guaranteed - Watch Batteries Replaced (All Makes) - Ultrasonically Cleaned Delicious Sandwiches, Popcorn, Peanuts After Midnight—Happy $ _{1/2} $ Hour TREVENA TREVENA 743 Mass. 843-4366 Lawrence Smokey & The Bandit Part II 7.30 & 9.30 P6 THE BEST FROM NOOL & WOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5789 BRIMAN'S Varsity Downtown 843-1085 leading jewelers Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 Boogie Man 7.40 & 9.20 1. The Blue Lagoon 7:15 & 9:15 2. Caddyshack Tim Stringer & His Blues Band 3. Urban Cowboy 926 Mass.-Upstairs Plus—Jazz Live Until 2:30 9 p.m.—Midnight 7:10 & 9:25 I. Xanadu Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 with the Scamps Tonite & Saturday 7. 30 & 9.40 2. Oh Heavenly Dog Jazz Up at Paul Gray's Jazz Place 7:30 & 9:30 A Private Club Come On Up and Dance Instrumental Jazz Group Sunday Kansas City's Finest Vocal & Earl Robinson & The 5 Scamps BORGEN'S LIQUORS 917 Iowa Millercrest Shopping Center . The finest selection of wines,liquors and beers in Lawrence. . Beers American & Imported from: - Mexico Germany Ireland England Australia Denmark Holland Whiskeys American & Imported from: Canada Scotland Ireland . American & Imported from: Vodkas American & Imported from: Finland Russia England . Rum American & Imported from Jamaica Puerto Rico . American & Imported Wines Denmark Israel Germany France Greece Japan Italy Portugal Spain Ugoslovia • Cordials & Liqueurs American & Imported from: Jamaica Switzerland England France Israel Italy Scotland Ireland Canada Denmark Halland Mexico Greece Belgium . Brandies & Cognacs American and Imported from; France Yugoslavia Germany Italy Spain Greece BORGEN'S LIQUORS 917 Iowa Hillcrost Shopping Center 842-3990 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 Opinion Better teachers on way Officials at KU's School of Education deserve good marks for changing the school's requirements. It doesn't take an educated guess to say that the move will be a beneficial one. Officials at the school have decided to expand the school's undergraduate teaching program from four to five years. Only several schools around the country have taken such a step, which proves the school this time has been the forerunner instead of the chaser. Beginning next fall, education majors will need about 30 additional hours to graduate. The extra credit will not be wasted. In that time, students will gain more practical experience in the classroom, where they belong. students will be exposed early to their professions, whereas most students now don't venture into an unfamiliar classroom until their last year in school. Upon graduating, students under the program also will be qualified to teach at two of the three educational levels—grade, middle and high school. Students now are certified at only one level. Besides, our future teachers need better educations and stronger backgrounds. Our future students deserve that. To be sure, the new program will make it more difficult to obtain a teaching degree. Students will have to make a stronger commitment to teaching. But education, at least a sound education, requires such a commitment. The new program will be tougher, but its results will be better instructors. And right now, they are in short supply. Mud wrestling frolics drag women's pride into the mud There it was, in all its grimy翻, spattered across page one of the University Daily Kansan. Surely it was the muck of a slow news day; it simply had to be. Slow news days aside, women's mud wrestling, "the latest craze from the West Coast," has sloshed its filthy way to the heartland. According to Monday's Kansan story, 5,000 gawker们 groveled into Benjamin Stables, a bachelor's dormitory. AMY HOLLOWELL and chills of mud wrestling. They paid $6 each night for a woman's women roll around together in a muddied room. Surely we have gone mad. Surely Chris Fritz, Kansas City promoter of music and other events, has succumbed to the absurd. We are playing with such turpitude be playning with a full deck. But this most recent degradation of women is less a reflection of the promoter than of the vile dust where he sprung. "It is indeed the loudness of the foumness of current American culture." It's not enough that America parades its women in bathing suits and wet T-shirts, that it exploits them in magazines and porno flicks, that it wishes to condition them to be submissive, secondary playthings. Now America has them pigging around half-naked in a murky pit, to the glee of the drooling, belching crowd. But what of the wrestling women themselves? Why have they given in to such hummilizing decadence? Could it be, perhaps, the money? No, mud wrestling surely could not be a lucrative occupation. Perhaps it is glory and fame they seek. But what possible glory and fame could be derived from lolling like pigs in a sty? Perhaps it has nothing at all to do with mud or with wrestling. Could it be that these women simply want attention, that they simply want to be recognized after all these years of never having been recognized? They have *le* zed stifled lives, subject to a chauvinist society that likes to watch them grove in the mud and wants them barefoot in the kitchen. These wrestlers apparently do not realize that their feats in the filth are perpetuating the degradation of women. They must not realize that the jeers and chortles from these vulgar "fans" are not recognition, but are, instead, humiliation. What about these masses payed to witness such vulgarity? Are they sick? Do they really enjoy these follies? They, too, are products of this misguided America, a Machiavellian whisperer who "soma" justifies the means. In other words, anything goes, as long as you get off on it. We are a people so advanced that we have reverted to the barbarism of pleasure as a raison d'etre. We have vainly given ourselves a mandate to banish compassion and civility from our "civilization," and even from our "games." It is as if we would be willing to forsake all deciency for the base satisfaction of witnessing this ultimate in absurd sports. So now we are plagued by this new spectacle. Americans are driven so blindly by pleasure-seeking that they will pay to watch women wrestle in mud. This is perverse; this is not a good idea, but it is humiliating degradation. This is fliity, baric and, apparently, bottomless muck. Too bad, isn't it, that Monday wasn't just a slow news dav? Foe Buntos '86 Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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. ...AND LOOKING OUT TO YOUR LEFT, OUR LAST STOP ON OUR TOUR OF KU'S IMPRESSIVE, EXPENSIVE, AND OTHERWISE TOTALLY USELESS LANDMARKS... ARCHIES WALL THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS → MAIN CAMPUS John Richardson KANSAS 80 Pet projects stonewall KU progress Something there is that doesn't love a wall. That sends the frozen ground-sweal under it. And spills the upper boulders in the sun. And makes out the two trees to touch them. And makes gaps that even two can pass a breast. —from "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost Frost knew about walls that the ancient Chinese, the East Germans and the University of Kansas dunked. The Germans built a wall of wood in an enclosure. The Chinese feared vicious Mongol hordes. KU happens to like wally walls. At least that's the explanation given by Keith Lawton, director of the office of facility planning. Lawton said the wall now under construction at 15th and Iowa was part of a project to improve the parking administration "enhance" that corner, used increasingly as a major access to the University. The wall, and landscaping in front of it, will complement a recently completed information center. Together, Lawton said, they will present a more favorable image to prospective students and off-campus visitors than did the empty lawn, single sign and dorm backdrop there. The area also will serve as a place for visitors to get their bearings. But with a tag of about $30,000 for the equipment engaged in a classic case of overload - and PHM-ware. For $30,000, the University could have commissioned art for the bare corner, instead of shelling out big bucks for a pile of rocks. Better yet, it could be built as thick as much and planted some trees and flowers. As walls go, KU's newest addition is a nice one. Double-thick slabs have been laid in repeating patterns, and it looks sturdy enough. But it doesn't wall anything in or keep anything out. The information center, labeled clearly in that unmistakable KU royal blue, also is a bit eloquent. "King Kong," it's written. SCOTT FAUST JANE WILKINS the display case aren't in themselves too much, but they're installed in a monstrous stone arch with a bench in the middle. Why not a simple phone app--display case and free-standing phone booth? KU, as has been noted ad infinitum, has a beautiful campus. To be sure, much money and work have gone into the improvement of Mt. Oread's appearance since roaring cattle shared the campus. First impressions are important, but a person's opinion of the University hardly hinges on whether a street corner looks like Versailles. The money for the 15th and 18th improvements came from an individual bequest to the Society of Friends, the last of whom was born in provement and upkeep of the residence hall system and the area surrounding the halls. The money could not have been used for valuable scholarships, long-needed equipment or research. Even so, people with Daisy Hill addresses each could have suggested ways to spend the money for the benefit of hall residents. Instead, the money was spent so Nebraska football fans can remark to one another what a "pretty entrance" KU has made of 15th and Iowa. The construction of a $30,000 wall is not really surprising at a school where officials refuse to accept the fact that grass simply goes dormant and turns brown when it gets hot. It appears that maintaining the vine perfection of the KU campus for returning alumni and visiting state legislators sometimes has taken a toll on education, bringing the highest quality education for students. Former Chancellor Archie Dykes' concern for appearances is legendary, and maybe it paid off for him in his ability to solicit state and private funds for the University. The neatly manicured sidewalks and neat lettering on all KU signs are testimonies to his priorities. Perhaps, then the wall could be put to good use before it bows to the elements. A plaque bearing Deyke name installed on the wall, along with other memorials to appear there, would be a fitting memorial. Then the University wouldn't even have to name a building for him. Letters to the Editor Reagan column a product of media biases To the editor: Allow me to congratulate the author of that brilliantly conceived editorial, "Reagan act flips without cue cards," which appeared Sept. 12. Because the words of that editorial surround on all sides a rectangular space containing both the name and picture of a certain Scott Faust, I assume that he is the one who takes full credit for that inspired heap of verbal refuse. He shouldn't. A large share of that credit, anyway, should by all rights go to the national news media. This is not because they have supplied all the facts upon which Faust, like us all, has formed his views, but instead because they consistently have presented those facts in a tone and format implicitly biased against Reagan, and thereby gradually have prepared us to swallow the otherwise unpalatable garbage that Faust offers as a now irresistibly delicious gourmet entree. This entree represents a potent and refined distillation of every innuendo, distorted fact, strained tone of voice, overplayed headline or any other juicy scrap concerning Reagan that addresses the problem in and day out over the past campaign months, in addition to the whole of Reagan's political career. Those who have allowed themselves to be brainwashed by these almost subliminal means will jump to have their appetites sated by what now becomes a mouthwatering delicacy. Again, my congratulations, Faust, for providing that all of us are aware of the editorial to distill the essence of all the media biases against Reagan subsult present throughout months and years of media coverage. I only hope that we can snap out of this journalistically induced traction, to which Faust hasunknownly become an accomplice. The ex-communist may be unpleasant, but regurgitationalways is. The alternative? Four more years of having to swallow Carter, and that would be poison. Eric Brende Toneka sonhor Erie Brede Topeka sophomore Gay legal services To the editor: I would like to correct an error made in a letter to the editor by Kathleen M. Conkey. She stated that "the house (of Representatives of the United States Congress) has decided that gays should not receive the benefits of those (their) This is a misconception. If the section of the bill in question, which was included in the letter, is examined, you will notice that her conclusion has no basis. The section reads: "That no part of this appl- lication requires the Corporation to provide legal assistance in promoting, defending or protecting homosexuality." Conkey incorrectly states that the doors of the Douglas County Legal Aid society are closed to gays. This is not true. The bill closes the door to cases representing a conflict resulting from prejudice against people with privilege of legal aid to these people. They have as much right as straight people to use these services. They are not being discriminated against. Daniel Vincent Grelinger Kansas City, Kan., freshman The University Daily KANSAN (SURFS 690-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas by mail for $16 to monate or $2 a year in Danley County and $18 per month on $5 a year outside the county. Send changes of address to the University Daily Kanun. Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Business Manager Elaan Elsharra Manage Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Make Up Editors Were Editors Copy Chiefs Chief Photographer Photographers Columnists Amy Hollowell, Ted Lackieg, Bill Menezes, Brett Conley, Scott Faust, Markham, Susan Schweizer, Susan Galloway Editorial Cartoonist Staff Artists Staff Writers Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Carpage Sales Manager Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Photo Desk Assistant Taskboards Manager Sales Representatives Business Manager Elaan Elsharra Dynal Hughes David Lewis Judy Woodburn Jeff Skegven Mark Spencer, Derek Munday, Cindy Whitcote Gene Myers Paul Armand Kevin Mills Ellen Iwanato, Bob Schaal, Jennifer Hofer Leo Winkelmann, Todd Teesch Ellen Iwanato, Gail Eggers, Tammy Tierney Claud Todd Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, Dave Kraus, Drew Clark, Susan Schweizer, Susan Galloway John Kinks, Michael Wunsch, Bret洛伦 Chick Howard, Daniel Ternau, Kathy Kacy Kevin Koester Nancy Clauson Brad Kirk Tracy Cron Jane Wenderott Jay Sullivan Brian Watkins Leslie Faggle Bob Spencer Rink Bicklin, Anna Correndan, Terrry Fli, Gill Broom, Larry Leibinger, Paul O'Connor, Paula Schweiger, Bill Roberts, Thaine Shutter, Kevin Weapon, Susan Birchman Rick Musser General Manager and News Adviser Kansan Adviser . . . . . . . . . . --- all the ole ip- she they she an e" ' illy to ant sec- ten tien for offffe areeed areeeded sing are, to University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 ing the d to r to from the ave ese ated ;man Page 5 Turkey From page 1 Back at school in Lawrence, the Turkish students who have seen their homeland in a state of turmoil, are harboring cautious optimism that the military takeover will help to stabilize the country and put it on the road to economic recovery. "The only reason the military took over was to stop the terrorism," Akseven said. "The prime minister is safe, the parliament is safe, no one The military leaders have ordered all Turkish workers back to their jobs, and the economy is struggling. was hurt. It wasn't like the takeovers in South America." Democracy cannot be restored for at least six months, however, and the world will have to wait at least that long to judge the outcome of the coup. Akseva said. ACCORDING TO THE Ankara graduate student, the coup has set back the democratic process for at least two years, and probably longer. National elections were scheduled for June Now, a constituent assembly must be formed to draft a new constitution, a process that will take some time, he said. By the time the nation's economy has revived enough to hold general elections, six or six years may have passed, he said. 181, and polls have shown that two right-wing parties would win a majority, he said. Turkey's six-man ruling military junta, led by Gen. Kenan Ewnert, dissolved the country's 19-year-old constitution, along with its parliament and all political parties, after the takeover. WITHOUT A CONSTITUTION, the military government has no fair way of trying the thousands of extremists that have been arrested since the takeover, the student said. The student said that "certain Western powers" had favored a friendly military coup over the election of a right-wing government because the military leaders would be more flexible in dealing with current area problems. For instance, the new officials have announced the resumption of long-deadlocked peace talks between the Greek and Turkish Cypriot communities on Cyprus, he said. The 25.000 Turkish troops on the northern part of the island, under Turkish occupation since 1974, have remained confined to their barracks since the coup. The student also questioned the practicality of the Turkish army. "Our army consists of men that are common people, 19 to 20 years old," he said. "What happens then the army decides to get tough with them or armists themselves atop people at that I’m probably sympathetic to?" The student said he would have to wait at least six months before he could judge the effectiveness of the coup. Anniversary SALE! 20 to 50% Off WILSON PATIENT BELT Ektelon Magnum Was *65° Now $4600 Trag Racketball Rackets Reg. *18° Now $950 Hanson Citation Reg. $125⁰ Now $¹88⁰⁰ Hanson Lady Viva Reg. $185⁰ Now $¹41⁰⁰ 20%-40% Off Selected Ski Equipment FREE wax & lubrication on any skis brought in! 20%-40% Off Selected Ski Equipment FREE wax & lubrication on any skis brought in! 20% Off Selected Warm-ups FREE $1400 nylon string job with purchase of any tennis racket. 1234567890 50% Off selected ladies tennis wear 50% Off selected Ski-Wear Brittania blue jeans 30% Off! first serve SKI & SPORTS SHOPPE 2. 840 Massachusetts 841-0811 Evenings (M) 5:30 Thursday (M) 8:30 ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF KANSAS Needs qualified student delegates to work with ASK lobbying activities. - Delegates discuss and priority educational issues pertaining to the wants and needs of the Kansas Higher Education student. Minorities Representation Needed Contact Jeff Evans, Campus Director 105B Kansas Union Associated Students of Kansas GET INVOLVED Students working for students ask - ASK contains delegates from the Kansas Regents Institutions. THESIS BINDING XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS IT IS PERMANENT BINDING - DOES NOT FALL APART WITH USAGE Old World Quality Handwork Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. Maroon Black CHOICE OF COLORS: Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEED - pockets for maps or engineering drawings SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE OUR CUSTOMERS RECOMMEND US - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no at - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge OUR CUSTOMERS COME BACK FOR SECOND We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 --september savings spree ! UP TO 30° OFF FOR 10 DAYS ONLY DENIMS reg. to 31.00...19.99 PANTS reg. to 30.00...19.99 SWEATERS reg. to 35.00...13.99 - 25.99 DRESSES reg. to 60.00...19.99 - 39.99 SKIRTS reg. to 30.00...19.99 - 29.99 SAVE UNTIL SEPT. 28 then items return to regular price carouse 10-8 30 Mon - Thurs 11-6 90 Fr. Sat 1-5 Sun Malls Shopping Center 711 W. 23rd 842-7409 VISA Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 KU Football Mum Corsages $3.75 礼 Flower Shoppe Open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 1101 Mass. $41-DNO Reward discourages false fire alarms Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves. & Sun. It's Party Time By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Make your post-game festivities a success with party food from our deli. Choose from an assortment of meat and cheese trays, or for something different, one of our new sandwiches. Several feet of delicious eating! Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa 841-8271 Sun.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri.Sat. 11-10 Several feet of delicious eating! Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEN Cheese Emporium Holiday Planta 2449 Iowa Sun. T 11 Fri. People who set off false fire alarms in rescue halls now have a price on these hacks. The office of residential programs will pay $250 for information leading to a reservation. Dexter Shoemakers to America WEST IS Pure American comfort and style. It's the best of the West from Dexter. Dexter western styled boots made of the most supple leathers to wear as comfortably as your favorite pair of blue jeans. McCall's Dexter Western Shoes 829 Massachusetts Mon.-Sat. 9:00-5:30 Thur. 8:00 setting off false alarms, Fred residential programs, said yesterday. Announcements of the reward were posted in residence halls two weeks a month. This semester. there have been 14 Ellsworth Hall has not had any false alarms since the reward noticed were posted, said Jane Tuttle, residence hall director. Prairie Schooler SEAFOOD Market 841-6610 Mahi Mahi 2.08 Reg. 2.69 Halibut Steaks 4.13 Reg. 5.65 025 Iowa at Milton 925 lews at Hillcrest Across from bowling lanes Open 6 days a week Jumbo Breaded Shrimp 4.83 Reg. 5.88 Small Peaked And Devised Shrimp 5.50 Reg. 6.95 Now you can taste the ultimate treat of the Emperor's table. Enormous Tiger Prawns (combining the best of lobster and shrimp). Sold individually this week only (regulatory available only in 5 lb. containers). Shogun Special: Tiger Prawns Meisner Milstead Liquor VIN Featureting one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to sut all sweet taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin hells have had four false fire alarms this semester. Since the reward was posted, however, they have not had any false fire alarms in the residence halls. Ewellsor has had three of them. BUT THE REWARD may not be the reason why the halls' alarmes are bad. Feer pressure also is a strong feature. It may be found in the field, principal direction of GBP-Corpile. In the field, principal direction of GBP-Corpile. "It makes residents mad when they have to get up and stand outside in their homes," he said. "And it is usually residents who tell administrators about persons making inappropriate comments." At Templin, there have been three residents. The director, said Resident Director Glen Allen, Residents were so irritated the first time a false fire alarm sounded, he. 1 2 3 4 "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Singing Telegrams ASTA Flowers bu Alexanders L. AMPER BROTHERS ANIMATION ART SALE TWO DAYS ONLY! Outside the Exhibit Gallery Kansas Union Lobby Thurs. - Fri. September 18-19 10 am until 7 pm By special arrangement with Gallery Lainzberg, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Jane Eldredge State Senate Republican 2nd District SUNY ATBANEEN Paid for by Eldredge for Senate Committee. Kurt Watson, Treasurer. Kurt Watson, Treasurer said, that they wanted to go looking for the person who pulled it. Paid Pol. Adv Allen said he had contacted the KU, president for advice about holding a annurator for the residence. "I don't think people are aware of the fact that could result from making false claims." Repeated false fire alarms could lead to the "cry wolf" syndrome, he said, a situation in which residents do not take fire alarms seriously. In the case of a real fire, the "dry wolf" attitude could end in tragedy, he said. ADMINISTRATORS ALSO worry that students will become less responsive to fire alarms and that this will cause a disaster. "There are inherent dangers in false fire alarmes," McEiblen said of the 57 false alarms made in halls last year. "They are toil people into indifference." Tuttle said 2 to 5 percent of Ellsworth residents ledged in clearing the building when the fire alarm sounded this semester. Besides the reward other measures are being taken to discourage fire alarm. Fire alarm boxes have been treated with a substance that turns fingers blue at air pressure. Persons found guilty of making false fire alarms could spend a maximum of one year in the county jail and pay a fine. A judge ordered Robinson of the KU police department. YOULL DO MORE THAN CHEER FOR THIS X DALLAS CHEELEADER! By B Staff W UN-CUT THE BEST LABYRINT FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT FREE WEDNESDAYS Debbie Dors DALLAS FRI. & SAT. AT MDNITE. MUST BE 18 OR OLDER Varsity Downtown. 843-1085 Da assaayeste Watk and sees Distu Wi spok in cong on w The a react a cong Watt port 8:00 PM - 1:00 AM SATELITE UNION PARTY ROOM ROCK ROLL G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa Tonight, Friday and Saturday W cum his legi Power Glide Tonight Drink and Drown $4.00 guys $3.00 girls O SEP19 FREE BEER! NEXT WEEK Wednesday—Ruby Starr Thurs. Sat.—Plain Jane TICKETS AT SUA AND SPANISH DEPARTMENT 3062 WESCOE 2.50 IN ADVANCE 3.50 AT THE DOOR CELEBRACION DE LA "INDEPENDENCIA" DE CENTRO AMÉRICA, MEXICO, BRAZIL Y CHILE. SPONSORED BY LATIN AMERICA SOLIDARITY University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 Page 7 Watkins calls for congressional reforms By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Dan Watkins continued his verbal assault on Rep. Larry Winn, R-Kan., yesterday but he added a new feature. Watkins presented a series of proposals and outlined four major issues, as he held in the race for the 3rd District seat. Watkins, a Lawrence Democrat, spoke at a press conference yesterday in the Satellite Union and cited the agency's refusal to issue on which he and Winn differed. The proposed Tallgrass Prairie Park, a recently introduced sports violence act and a proposed six-term limit for congressmen also were singled out by Watkins for criticism. Winn has supported all three. Watkins also criticized the incumbent's 1979 attendance record and his alleged inability to promote legislation. Watkins said that there had been no safeguards imposed to prevent lobbyists and special interest groups with the aim of reducing improper influence on congressmen. He said that special interest groups had special influence during election years, rewarding legislators with special privileges, or support of special interest legislation. Watkins said that Winn was one such legislator. Special interest groups form political action committees to contribute money to campaigns. "Last year, the House of Representatives passed a bill limiting the total amount of political action committee money that a candidate can spend in campaign contributions." Watkins said. "Our congressman opposed this measure." that would require registration of lobbyists, in addition to reporting requirements which would disclose how much money is being spent by individual lobbyists and which lobbyists have received the benefits of that lobbying. "We must stop this endless influence-peddling and gift-giving in Congress." Watkins supports a wholesale reform of the congressional bureaucracy, including decreasing the number of committees and subcommittees. A COMMITTEE ON committees proposed a reorganization plan to Congress, but it was rejected. Watkins said, and Winn voted against it. Winn's handling of the Tallgrass Prairie Park issue is a prime example of his inability to get anything done in Washington, Watkins charged. Watkins said that Winn introduced and reintroduced the legislation, but the new law was not adopted. After years of not being able to get his proposal before a committee or subcommittee, Watkins said, Winn gave up on the project. Watkins said he favored preserving the tallgrass prairie. "It is a hard commentary on how not to pass legislation, on how not to get elected," he said. The sports violence act, which Winn is co-sponsoring, bothered Watkins. He called it an unwarranted invasion into the everyday lives of ordinary Americans. He also said it was a ridiculous piece of legislation. THE BILL WOULD make it a federal crime for any professional athlete to engage in excessive violence at a sporting event. The proposal that would limit a congressman to six terms in office was sued. BICYCLE Get the bugs out. If your bicycle is in less than peak riding condition, come to us. Our professionals are specially trained to handle all aspects of bicycle servicing – from a simple tune-up to major repairs. No matter what condition your bicycle is in, we'll help you get the bugs out. Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AJUSTRO-DAIMLER RICK'S CENTURION We Service All Bikes BIKE SHOP 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence, KS 60644 Thurs. Sept. 25 THE HIDING PLACE. The story of a family's love for the Jews in their darkest hour. 7 pm Union Jayaawk Room Fri. Sept. 26 THE HIDING PLACE This year the New York City Plan has been announced by the New York State Department of Public Works. THE HIDING PLACE New York, 1960. A memorial to the victims of the New York City plane crash on December 28, 1967. The memorial is in the city's Lower East Side at the Riverside Park and at the Riverwalk. The memorial is a tribute to the lives lost in the plane crash. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. The memorial is a tribute to the memory of the victims. Sat. Sept. 27 the CROSS and the SWITCHBLade They thought they were tough until the stranger faced them with a book. PA EWEN | 2017 | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 7 on Union Gaukhawk Room THE BOOK OF JESUS'S SUNSHINE A story of Jesus's sung and told by Johnny Cash THE GOSPEL ROAD Mon. Sept. 29 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room THE WORLD'S GREATEST HEROES AND RACISMS GREAT PEOPLE HUMANITY RACISM CIVILIZATION INDUSTRIAL FOUNDATIONS 7 pm Union Gayhawk Room Can't Do A Thing With Your Hair . . . And Your Parents Are Coming This Weekend? B. H. SMITH BLEEDING It's Time To Consult Our Professionals! hair lords styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 REDKEN M-Sat. 9-9 Sun. 12-5:30 Sale JOGGING COORDINATES Tops — Orig. $21-$30 — Sale $13.99-$17.99 Pants — Orig. $22-$26 — Sale $13.99-$15.99 842-3963 (all available in pale blue acrylic or poly/cotton) 927 MASS THE ATTIC THE ATTIC sustain charge VISA master charge Dexter Shoemakers to America EASY DOE The going never gets tough in casuals by Dover. Superb styling and unequaled comfort makes the living easy in Flex-Dex, Hi-Dex, Lug-Dex, Swirl Dex and Dex-Lite casuals. Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 All Students Enrolled In Courses offered By The College Of Liberal Arts&Sciences This Fall: Should be advised that the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 timetable are the correct drop dates. DO NOT USE the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 addendum. RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR ROCK! ALK! WHICH WAY TO THE STADIUM? You'll find the right direcctions and an excellent selection of beverages for your post-game party Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue southwest Place Shopping Center scached behind Hardes s nd next to Safety 23rd & 11th 643 1:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Bring Your Parents to GAMMONS! Pregame HAPPY HOUR: 11:00 am $1.00 drinks (screw drivers & bobby mary's included) $ .50 draws $1.00 wine BROWN BAG IT to the game Gammons' Super Sandwiches (Your choice of Roast Beef, Turkey or Ham & an apple) Only $3.00 GAMMONS' EXPRESS: Avoid the traffic & parking hassles—come to the game with us! Round trip only $1.00! Round trip only $1.00! Postgame HAPPY HOUR (tl 7:30 pm) Hot Hors d'oeuvres! $1.00 cover—$1.00 drinks $1.00 wine — $ .50 draws 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS SNOWG Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 Register, lock bicycles to stop theft, police save The large concentration of student-owned bicycles in Lawrence makes it a prime target for bicycle thefts, but certain precautions to prevent theft can be taken, according to Jean Longaker, KU police lieutenant. Longaker said students should register their bikes with the KU or Lawrence police departments. Registration takes about five minutes, she said. Longeran also encouraged students to get their bicycles engraved with their names. Police department, 11th and New Hampshire streets. Engraving is free and is offered at all residence halls and at the KU police department, she said. Engravers can also be checked out at the Lawrence Students should always secure their bikes when unattended Longer said. On display at the KU police department are two kinds of bicycle locks which were recommended to KU police by local locksmiths, she said. Maupintour travel service ARLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTLE TOURS 900 MASS KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 Footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbriar's Dell) SPECIAL OF THE WEEK! Order any one-topping or more 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $1.70 $5.40 Order any one-topping or more 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.50 $6.65 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery!! Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! We Pile It On! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) "GONE WITH THE WIND" FREE on Parents' Day Sat. Sept. 20, 7:00 pm Hoch KU to welcome parents to campus SUA The University of Kansas has a full day of football, picnics andceptions planned for Parents' Day Saturday. "Parents' Day is more of a happening than it is a planned event," said John Myers, chairman of the Parents' Day Committee. It is considered a special day for parents who need an excuse to come to Lawrence to see their sons or daughters, he said. The day's events will begin with receptions for band and chemistry students and their families. The University reception, during which parents and students will be able to meet informally with IT faculty and staff, will be held in the main lobby of the Kansas Union. An Air Force ROTC reception and open house will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. in 108 Military Science Building. to 9:15 a.m. in. 104 Murphy. The room was built from be 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. in. 234 Malott. The room was finished at The band reception will be from 8:30 A free picnic lunch will be served in the University's residence halls for residents. Kickeff for the KU-Pittsburgh game will be 1:30 p.m. in Memorial Stadium. SUA will sponsor a free showing of the movie "Gene with the Wind" at 7 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. SUA scheduled the film because an SUA activity was needed for the parents staying in Lawrence Saturday evening, and a SUA activity, SUA Public Relations chairman. The Museum of Natural History will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the Spencer Museum of Art will be open from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Delicate L Discover the pure Gould feeling in a knit skirt and sweater. The new shag knit gives you an exciting choice with colors to mix and match. Now at 25% OFF! Clothes Encounter Holiday Plaza -in step with your style 843-5335 25th & Iowa free beer at KU home games... fall '80 in clothes from Mister Guy for him and her... we at Mister Guy believe in style not fashion . . . fashion changes with every whim style is enduring . . . never out of vogue we believe in tradition, impeccable tailoring and the finest fabrics . . . in clothing that becomes even better with age hours: M-T-W-F-Sat-10-6 Th-10-9 Sun-1-5 MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts 7 THE MARTINI HOME free beer at KU home games... fall '80 in clothes from Mister Guy for him and her... we at Mister Guy believe in style not fashion . . . fashion changes with every whim style is enduring . . . never out of vogue we believe in tradition, impeccable tailoring and the finest fabrics . . . in clothing that becomes even better with age hours: M-T-W-F-Sat-10-6 Th-10-9 Sun-1-5 MISTER Guy 920 Massachusetts University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 Valuable Coupon ACO GRANDE 9th & Indiana 1720 West 23rd 1 Page 9 Buy Two Sanchos Get One Sancho Free offer not good Wednesdays 5-11 P.M. BOKONON .841-3600. 12 EAST 8TH ST. Good Until Sept. 26,1980 "The Proof is in the Taco" SALE - 20% OFF PARAPHERNALIA PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND PEOPLE BOOK USE THEM OVERLAND PHOTO phone: 813-6720 516 870 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNING'S CARPETS AND SONS 29th & Iowa The University Daily Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES two ten three four five six seven eight nine十 eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteenth seventeenth eighteenth nineteen 15 words or fewer $2.50 $3.50 $4.50 $5.50 $6.50 $7.50 $8.50 $9.50 $10.50 $11.50 $12.50 $13.50 $14.50 $15.50 $16.50 $17.50 $18.50 $19.50 $20.50 $21.50 $22.50 $23.50 $24.50 $25.50 $26.50 $27.50 $28.50 $29.50 $30.50 $31.50 $32.50 $33.50 $34.50 $35.50 $36.50 $37.50 $38.50 $39.50 $40.50 $41.50 $42.50 $43.50 $44.50 $45.50 $46.50 $47.50 $48.50 $49.50 $50.50 $51.50 $52.50 $53.50 $54.50 $55.50 $56.50 $57.50 $58.50 $59.50 $60.50 $61.50 $62.50 $63.50 $64.50 $65.50 $66.50 $67.50 $68.50 $69.50 $70.50 $71.50 $72.50 $73.50 $74.50 $75.50 $76.50 $77.50 $78.50 $79.50 $80.50 $81.50 $82.50 $83.50 $84.50 $85.50 $86.50 $87.50 $88.50 $89.50 $90.50 $91.50 $92.50 $93.50 $94.50 $95.50 $96.50 $97.50 $98.50 $99.50 $100.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Munda 5 p.m. Thursday 5 p.m. Friday 5 p.m. The Kanas will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be displayed in any location to be called the Vendor Business office at 843-4588 FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible Study, every Tues. 7:38 p.m. Farians A & B Union. The Salt Block. 10-2 NOW FORMING The Kelly Hunt Fan film follows the Kelly and the Kellie 842-6455. 9-19 ENTERTAINMENT the schoolers of cold Coors every Monday at LOUSES BAR, 10@ Mass. fi Blue Grass Jam every Wednesday night on the lawn in the green or come play Greta Tavern at 10am. What's the deal? Lawrence's firebreathing piece hen bard. Watch out! **9-10** 9-15 Looking for something new on Sundays? Come out of our SUNDAY SPECIALS. Open from 5 p.m. "11 a.m. Membership available. "Partying in our business." 9-36 Outdoor Roller skating 1012 Mass. Tuesday, 6:38 p.m. 12:15 p.m. and Christmas Day, 6:30 p.m. 12:15 p.m. Sat. & Sun, 10:00 a.m. 12:15 p.m. Deposit-见图 FOR RENT This week I'm bringin' it! all back home. Take close up photos of the table and solder played visually exciting rock & roll & only on cable & the DVD. See it on Sat. 9 to 10 p.m. & Sat. 7. 29 at 10:30 p.m. 3 Bedroom Townhouse Rental now! We have two bedrooms like ours, southern Parkway and the 2nd floor. Sweet deals. Call us at (800) 245-1234. For rent, six apt for租金, not to campus. May work out part of rent. Call 841-185. 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt. 3. laundry room, reasonably priced. Call 1-800-564-9711. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic water heater, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call B41-1212 or B42-4855 a. 8 h - 5 p. m. 3 bdrm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across ten mile stretch and trails court 460 room, 811-053-52 3 berm, townhouse with burning fireplace 849 - 853 Will take 1 student 250 flats 849 - 853 Take 1 student 250 flats Perfect for 14 students. Close to bus route and a reasonable distance from campus. duplex, central air conditioning, all appl- lications, Wi-Fi internet access. Villa Capi Ag apartments. Unfamiliar & 2 bedroom apartments. Available. Central air, wall to floor, quail location, 25 blocks south of Friar's Square, 445-7630 at 1:30 a.m. on weekdays Office space at Area 1, 932 Nas. 600 sq. ft. reception room and 3 interior morns. Minor reminding. Also conference room, first- admission 820 sq. ft. Call 453-424 or 8-922 KUMC displaces—newly refurbished. 2 bdm. carpet, draps, parking, appliances. beautiful housing! Call 313-381-2890. 10-3 1 bdrm. for non-smoking and non-drinking person. Share utilities. For information Call Margarita 811-8756. 9-19 New and contemporary 2-level duplex Available immediately. 2 bathrooms. Kitchen; bathroom. Full baths garage room. All in. No pets. For more information call 842-4555 a.m. 9:30- 10:00. For fall or spring, Naisim Hall offers you a special service of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room and provide schedule of meals and much more, making for a home or if an apartment (im's not you) wants it. Naisim Hall, 1800 Mason Drive, 843-8559, tldn@naisimhall.com Beautiful older home in love of Lawrence, she is a dedicated grandmother, family 't' a dams, kitchen, dining rm, living rm, library, utility rm, and 2 full baths. Family is on hand for information formation b-844-2543 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Villa Capi Apts. for sublease, 1 blem. mnt. $275 - per week. Toilet, WC and Wall-to-Wall carpet. Have to leave. $180 mnt + utilities. Originally $230 mnt. Cash $30 p.m. or on any day. 9-10am 841-553-378 For rent to students in 1 bdrm, apt. fur- mance. $250 a month. $195 + utilities at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdrm basement with lots of windows at 1423 Ohio; $175 + electricity, $673-770 or $875 per month. Near campus 2 Bdpm, apt. Compatible for computer 841-251, 841-307 after 6 p.m. 9-22 841-251, 841-307 after 6 p.m. 9-22 For rent. Qualet student, I begin furn- overaging city on KU bus route. $725 per overlooking city on KU bus route. $725 per overlooking city on KU bus route. 2 bdrm, apt. furnished, $235, water paid, air conditioning, cable, on bus route, call after 12:00 p.m. 841-8402 9-24 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, fq 960-968, 3800 W. 4th. tf 83 WATERED MATTRESSS $35.89, 3 year WATERED MATTRESSS $35.89, 3 year WHITE LIGHT, MASS. $45, mas. $45 New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic furniture. The Furniture. 1800 New York Bldg. 94th St. 22nd Fl. Musical Instruments: 1939 Gibson L-4 Music Box Instruments with case $42.5, 1912 Nelson Upright Concert guitar with case $42.5, 1912 Nelson Upright Concert guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello good tone guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello good tone guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello very nice guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello very nice guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello very nice guitar with case $325. Nice solid top cello cello very nice guitar with case $325. NICE SOLID TOP CELLO Westheads Condo. 2 bdm. Home on top of the building. Central air, microwave, truss dish, compartment central air, microwave, truss dish, compartment wallpaper, private garage, swimming pool, pool. $400,000 Car rental. 841-1838. $400,000 Car rental. 841-1838. MATTESTREES, Orthopedic sets from $29. FURNITURE, Bedding sets from $39. Furniture, one block of 9th and 10th furniture. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Call or visit the website at Makenze.com to use them—1. At study makes sense to use them—2. As study preparation, review Analysis of West African exam preparation, view Analysis of West African Cler. Mails Bookstore and Oread Book Store. Cler. Mails Bookstore and Oread Book Store. Like new large plush blue dorm carpet. Excellent condition. Must see. Call 841-9760. 9-19 R. D.L.S. r库rumage m娃这 Frl and Sat, 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 1900 University Saturdays, houses, appliances, plants, books, books, furniture, furnishings, michellean. 9-10 Ford Torino, PB-PS, Air, Quad. Stereo. Automatic Trans, New Tires, Clean Interior. Good Condition. Call Mike or Gary at 841- 6214. 9-19 AIWA AD 12560 Cassette Deck—impost new Denverizer, Blank Maxx Tape, All- pen Magnetizer, Black Maxx Tape in box or on stand, All-Premium Barrel with $32 lbs of oil at $40, $18, $41-881. Tomorrow, narrow narrow up to $40, $20, $41-881. Tomorrow For sale now-1979 Rally Sport, fully equipped, low mileage, like new condition. 843-4311 or 842-9231. 9-29 Harley-175 SS Excellent condition, 2200 miles. New battery. 40-50 mpg. $500 firm. Why buy a Moped when you can buy a BMW. Mopeds. 864-353-6121. Ask for Dennis Doran. 9-22 5 bdmr, 2 baths, $42,500. 804 Church, Eudora. Qualifies for VA or FHA loan. 542-3162. 9-22 Steel B & O or O turntable. Like new with B. I have steel binder and noise reduction system range, enhance sound and noise reduction系 统. 1068 Popular Tulipa, red with black vinyl 1293 Caryl, red with black vinegar 13100 Caly 769-1277 after five 9-23 1975 Flat 128—Good condition, high gas mileage, $1600 or best offer. 843-5256. Must sell. 9-23 75 Toyota, Corolla 1600. 4 cylinder. Best offer, 841-4859. Jayhawk Tower Apt. #603 D 9-23 dJUST SELL_ 73 Maards wagon. Good shape ir cond. AM-FM stereo 510-849-6125 8-923 1972 MG Midget, reconditioned, like new. mpg. city. fun to drive. Call George 9-22 8-23 Greek paddles, jewelery, rings, ceramics, tools. Sport Shop 942 Mass. St. 9-18 Sports Shop 942 Mass. St. 9-18 1978 LT Camara, Pully equipped, low mileage, new condition, Call Todd at M-414-2625. Bookcase $28. record cabinet $35. I also bookcase to m. C. J. Storry # 803-894. 9-24 cust. mc. M. J. Storry # 803-894. FOUND PUBLIC SALLE FURNITURE: saffa, coffee chair, chairs, chester, king-sized headboard, twin chairs, chests, king-size headboard, twin chairs, antiques AND COLLECTABLES size furniture, typewriter, railroad picture, 40 yr old KU band uniform, National Geographics AMERICAN INDIAN COOLCABELED MORE & MINOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHICS AMERICAN INDIAN COOLCABELED MORE & MINOR LANEOUS: housewives, small appliances, framed pictures, men's and women's gilded picture frames, TO MENTION 8:00-4:00 Sat. and Sun. Prices: $195 every hour after hires. Shines reduced 10.7 every hour after hires. Set of keys at University State Bank, Fri 9-5. 8-191. 296 Film book in 205 Flint Wed. afternoon. Call and claim, 843-1144 after 6 p.m. Ask for Pat. 9-18 Bishop Miege class ring. Found on Sept. 11 in Wescoe. Please identify and claim 843-8734, after 5 p.m. 9-19 Black, wire rim glasses, west side of Potter's Carl Kulp, 4022 E. Learned Hall, 864-4108. 9-19 Key ring with miniature yellow thong and small strap. Note the ornamental moulded and Military Sleeves near the Big Grip button. Found young female doth at 27 and fown Golden in love. Calm in claim 81-450-696 9-22 A dorm key on a silver key ring, found at the back of the bed, set up on Sept. 14. Call 861-1867.EML 10617 Color slides of polar bears, brown bears, grizzly bears, and a jaguar at a lost and 失踪 at Hoech HELP WANTED Neced Immediately—School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate in daily disability生活. Live 841-297, Dana Warner 843-2423, 841-2972, 843-1011. Bureau of Child Research has opening for appointment to conduct behavioral observations in treatment facility. Applicants must be 18 years old per year and possess behavioral observations in treatment facility transportation and have a licensed schedule personnel. Please submit resumes by September 15. Committee will consider 11 Haworth 641-641-2000 and 11 Haworth 641-641-2003 deadline in September. We are an equal opportunity employer. 9-18 COUNSELOR: The University of Kansas, in collaboration with Educational Institute seeks an individual education career and personal counseling to disadvantage students who work experience required. Salary range is $25,000 per week, September 19, 1880. Interested applicants must have a Bachelor's degree or Educational Services, Military Science - Anatomy, Educational Services, Military Science - Anatomy, Kansasan Kansasan PROJECT COORDINATOR The University of Tennessee is seeking an individual to coordinate university services in a counseling recruitment, evaluation and staff training environment. Work experience required. Salary $140,000 per year. September 19 - October 18, 1938. Interested applicants must be a graduate degree or equivalent educational Services, Military Selffaculty Lawrence, Kastanien 60435. The University of Tennessee requires equal opportunity employment enquiries. Position available: Classified (sec. 1) Sev- curity Manager, Department of the Museum. Excellent typing and de- sktop skills. Send resume to Sex 22, to Mary Ann Munchem, 609 Dyke Road, Philadelphia, PA 19128. Opportunity: Aircraft Action Employee. SHIP ASSISTANT. Develop special pro- tection skills, drive and commit activities. Halftime a degree, ability to work with people or ope- rationally, communicate with campus and community. Resume en- gagement and names of 3 references. Send resume KU, KU, KU. An equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. Applications sought re- portable skills, experience, status, national age, eng- iversity, veterans status, national age, Student help needed. Part-time for fall and spring, but a full day or a half afternoon 1-5 p.m. General labor and skilled trades assistant. Shop at 2302 W. 15th St. or 864-2997 as soon as possible with your class schedule. An opportunity affirmative action. Player. 9-19 Parts counter phone, part-time 20-30 hrs. Parts counter phone, part-time 20-30 hrs. taken at NAPA, 20-30 and Haskell 9-19 Need R.N. to supervise quadriplegic's care, and train attendants $10/hour. Time of work negotiable. 843-4423. 9-23 **GRIILL COOK.** An all around kitchen work environment is 7 to 9:00 p.m.; about 38-43 hours per week. Prefer grill cooking experience. Perform will be off when KU classes are out. Pay range up to $22 hour. Apply in person or visit online at Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer website. CASHIER part-time in Hawk's Nest 10:30 am hour plus 30% discount on lunch. Pre- fer cash register experience. Apply in person at the Job Center or call 918-265-4760 for portunity/Affirmative Action Employer. 9-18 Director, Junior year in Costa Rica. Feb. 1-8. Travel required for degree or comparable appropriate to field. Application deadline Sep. 19. Attend Annala Herzfeld, Herzfeld Center, 9-19 Part-time all night stocklers wanted to work week starting at 9 am. Applicants must be week start of 9 am. Apply online at www.careers.mc.gov.uk/JobSearch. Maid for sorority 4 hours per day. 5 days per week. $4 hr. Call 843-2705. 9-19 LOST 1 pair of trim-less style glasses in brown case. Lost in the vicinity of Watson and Strong. If you have eailed before, call Thank for Wattons. Please call 8-49-138. I lost a brown billfold Friday (10.5) Phone contact number 841-365-9098. Please contact phone at 841-365-9098. 9.8 Leather 1-pocket case, brown with gray cord. I-zip front and pass initials DF- MA. Made in Japan but pass initials DF- MA. LOST. MAREN backpack. Left in 237 Strong. 430 Trouw. Reward. Call John, 118. 9-12 Israel Hebrew book somewhere on campus. *REWARD* 814-4658 after 5 p.m. 9-18 Reward for return of black wallet lost near 23rd and Naismith. 749-2043. 9-22 Reward for return of my passport lost 8-23 Sunday, May 17, 2016 High School Call. Cat 8048-925 *** *** *** Black and silver puppy. White paws and stomach looks like huskie. Lost near 14th and Kentucky. Rabies tag no. 168. Reward call 842-8782 or 843-9273. 9-25 MISCELLANEOUS CO-REC Volleyball Manager Volleyball Manager's Meeting Thursday, Sept. 18 at 7:00 p.m. in 156 Robinson Center. Roster & additional information available in 208 Robinson Centers Recreation Services 864-3546 NOTICE There are 14 pilfers, of Bodswayer and Sherwin, on 2nd Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 3rd Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 4th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 5th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 6th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 7th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 8th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 9th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 10th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 11th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 12th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 13th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 14th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 15th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 16th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 17th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 18th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 19th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 20th Monday. 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Tuesday & Wednesday, on 897th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 898th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 899th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 890th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 891th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 892th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 893th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 894th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 895th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 896th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 897th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 898th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 899th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 890th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 891th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 892th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 893th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 894th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 895th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 896th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 897th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 898th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 899th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 890th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 891th Monday. Tuesday & Wednesday, on 892th Monday. 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Tuesday & Wednesday DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night at LOUISIN WEST, 7th and Michigan behind McDonalds on 6th. $4--guys, $3--girls—All the cold COOK you can drink We want to work for you, Give us the chance. Vote Enterprise For Freshman Class Officers **NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE** **MEMBERSHIP CARDS** that membership card gets you $1.00 highbills all night long. Only at your place, the LOISE LOUISIANA "Partying in our 9-30 ATTENTION: Established brass band is masters. Serious injuries only. Call 212-809-7443. Serious injuries only. Call 212-809-7443. Free rainbows. 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. 9-19 PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHRIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISEN WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday from 6-8. Eight scoon schools, 3d draws and $15 pitcher's 7th and Mich. "Partying is our business." **tf** FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth care. Emergency care. Admission app, call 9 am to 5 pm. (913) 624-3100. 4401 W. 91st St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax (913) 624-3100. HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUIS. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 highhalls (75c of each) backpacking and the atmos- fax of The Club. Contact: 842-3629, 842-3499. "Partying is our business." if LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louse on Wednesday nights). Drinks are free, but there is no cover charge. Only at the Club Louse, 508 Locus, 842-9248. 9-30 SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB LUOUE 3 for night from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday tnight PART TIME INTERNSPIRIT OPPORTUNITY willingly to explore the opportunities available within to探寻 the opportunities available large eastern based company, our part-time information call; Call Westfield. St414 2570; info@westfield.com. **TGIF AT LOCUBES BAR with $125 gifts** Free Friday from 2 till 6eb There—Alobah from 3 till 6eb In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more fun, she takes TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the tables are covered only $1.00; only $1.00 applies. $2.00 and drowned a club. CLUB LOUSE. 580 Locust. Membership available. Our business is "our business." 9-30 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-6169. tf. Take a break after classes at LOUISE'S BAR, 1099 Mass. Afternoon specials every day until 6. Singing messages for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Program. TENNIS PLAYERS. There's still a lot of playoff games to come, and the strings will last it out. Call David as 811-8844 for great prices on good strings and strings with better sound. And K. U. Variety Tennis Stringer. 9-18 Experienced skydivers enrolled in 12 + hour and intermission training for the SCRC SCRS, Free rainbows. 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs and excellent tapping equipment. 9-56 PSYCHIc SELF - AWAKENESS CLASS: Learn about the aura, chakras, spiral guides, self-holding. Starts very soon. Cost $10 per session, for 10 weeks. In教室 L-924 841-9687 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Piesperpots and 1943 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. Attention: For those who have Fox or other animals in their homes, please inform I have living animals. I have food盟盟 patches and a bedding cover for them. GET PAID for doing homework. Babysitter can help with homework, study stims, weeknights. Located South of carr ing. Call (801) 547-3266. In enjoying driving your BATTY2 Don't KAT you can use the KINKS out of your compact we take the KINKS out of your compact GUTIARSET is needed with acoustic and electric experience in a broad range of music for a young audience. Law enforcement dance classes are offered at Tim 749-6881 or 843-5721. 9-22 Beginning band is looking for BASSIST with singing ability. For auditions inquire with Jef at 749-0474 or 843-5566. 9-23 Thursday is 2 for 1 night at the Billy Sparks Country Playhouse. You get two Bar Drinks for the price of one with the Billy Spars Band. W4. 80. 24h. 835-2000. 9-18 SKY LWAKALER you left your toys at HAWK'S CROSSING. you left of the art museum. in the north of campus. HAPPY HOUR 4-6 week with $12 pitchers. 9-23 WOMEN 18-60. Scientists, attractive, good teammate. Join the team; nurse, designer, inventor, cook, dancer, etc. SEE MILLA. Write a book on relationship, etc. Write M. P. Box 2215. Airlines. SUNDAY DINNER EXTRAVAGANZA! This creatively devised, exquisite diner at the famous Famous Inn sub sandwiches also served from 11-5 p.m. 9-19 It's the Commodore's CRAZY QUART NIGHT at THE HARBOUR LITES. cold quarts of COORS are only $1.00 from 7-10 AM. The BARBOUR LITES, 1031 Massachusetts, 9-18 $25 Women's Self Defense. 12 hours of instruction by married couple. Classes mms up on Monday, March 31st and mmm startning 9-23. Sponsored by the K U Gung FU Club $25 per person—organized at 641-7803, or show up first class. 9-23 Notice—For the benefit of all past, present, and future members, don't harden the news! Can't afford no shoes? Goose On the Ronald MacDonald of the nouva-abrutes. Will blank all your people. I'm a little pimp with my hair gassed. I'll shine black. Hey anybody can you spare a shined NuCoS: Birthday Party, Tuesday, Sept. 27, at the Fabulous Duplex. 9-22 SERVICES OFFERED Instant color passport photos. Immigration. color & B.W. Torn. Tom #41-7284 9-20 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-9:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2 VaEACH THE BIKE GARAGE - Complete professional garage service. Wheelchair accessible. Only performed *Garage specialty* - Transportation. COPIES T.A.N. Ltd. offering $10 discount to A.L. of its clients. In Lawyers, Guaranteed tan, no burning, and no dangerous ultraviolet rays. Call for appointment. Monday at 5 a.m. Saturday HOUSE OF USHER BORN MALCOLM J. K. INLAWRENCE, CAMPAIGN, KANSAS 62704 Flute lessons - Experienced teacher accept- ance call, Call Diane at 814-942-0035 (evenings). Call Diane at 814-942-0035 (evenings). For the Bind Terminal, prices are: BVWL 4899 - $150.00 BVWL 6299 - $200.00 ICWL 4899 - $150.00 ICWL 6299 - $200.00 Print Bind Terminals: 842-242 Have you had trouble losing weight or having the smoking habit? Possibly you have difficulty breathing. You can change this and hypnosis help. You can change this and hypnosis help. Call 813-1959 for more information. Accurate, experienced typist HMN correcting Selecric. Call Dana 182-74744. fff Tutoring service for all lower level math courses up to Calib. 13. *Call Curt. Attn* *9-24 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476 ff TYPING Experimented ttypem –trif paper papers, thesis, booklets, and conference presentations spelling corrected. B4-934-954, Wright I.I. Experimented K.U. typem IBM Correcting Paper, notebook, and computer paper Sandy evening and weekend. 78- 166. Reports, dissertations, returns, legal forms. Reporters: John Emanuel, 841-212-7360; Sebastian Ellen or Johnson, 841-212-7360. 12-8 Typed Editor, EISM Fees/Elite, Quality Editor, editing layout, Cohn. James 826; editing layout, Cohn. James 826. 02-2001 IOP-YOUR MARK DOWN ENCORE COPY CORPS 214-8-12, home - walking patio 6/2/2001 Typing skills discounted. Excellent work in typing. Bach deg required. Bette, 82-6997 after 5 weeks, if weekend. Experienced typist-abess, dissertations. Applied to music editing, selective batter. bar 3, after p 845 - 829. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE Part #10-42 evenings to 11:00 and weekends to 11:00 FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-080. tt Exp. tystist would like to do term papers. expist, et al. *Cool Gait*; atl. 43-13 103. WANTED GOLD-51VER-DIAMONDS Class rings. 41-47mm. Free pick-up. 814-47-69 www.magic-case.com Buying gold, Paying $0-$10 for men's class ring, less for ladies. IndR Coin Shop. 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza $42-9628 9-30 Roomate at the Jayhawker Towers as all of them. All付费垫钙 Call 9-19 Anytime Roommate to share 2 bdrms; duplex $137.50 Roommate to share 2 bdrms; duplex $137.50 your bedroom. Call 841-1829 - 19 Two people need to sub-lease spacious Matis apt with fireplace, lamps, 1½ bath, on bus route and other comfort. Surprise rate: Call Bave Call at 842-780. Dates: 9-19 Non-smoking female roommate to share a non-bath and bath, of a large (fully furnished) bathroom, at Malk One English language apt. Apt. B81-651. Contact Me Roommate 82-416-819. Boormate wanted for mobile home, 890 - + 1425 for furnished Formsed. Cabinet J-923, 3449 after 6. Need a female normate to share 2 bdm. Please give $17.40 + / utilities Call Safer 740-949-649 GUITAR. Somebody has got to want to sell their guitar. They don't play any music. 864-544-741 9-10 BabySatifying—Have own transportation. Can charge up to 498. Call - 854-748- aftermorns - evenings. Manual Pica Typewriter in good condition. Call 842-5200 9-24 Drummer for working rock band. No punk. DJ for playing rock 'n' roll "Kinky" 84-2876 Keep typha. 9-54 Roommate for 2 bdm, ap—Jayhawk West. 120+ to utilities. Call Brit. 743-856-396 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 18, 1980 2071 Royals capture AL West By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo.—The pennant the Kansas City Royals lost last season and the individual they have thrived on all season have returned. The Western division crown, which eluded the Royals last season, is back in Kansas City for the fourth time in five years. Paced by the pitching of stopper Dennis Leonard, 19-0, the Royals clinched the title from the defending champion California Angels 5-0, last night. It was the return, however, of George Brett that thrilled most of the chilled 25,000 spectators in Royals Stadium. Brett, out of the lineup since Sept. 6 with an injured hand, started the second game of the double-header and in the division-clinching opener, Leonard, who has won 12 of 14 decisions since the All-Star break, handcuffed the team in a tiebreak. The Royal with the most wins this season. continued his quest for a .400 batting average. "WELL, THAT'S that," Leonard said of his clinching performance. "There wasn't't that much pressure on me, with a 17-game lead. But with the people yelling so loud I couldn't concentrate at the end. It kind of gets you nummed up." Leonard breezed through the final five innings, retiring 18 straight batters until the final out in the ninth. With a crowd standing and roaring with every pitch, Leonard walked Jason Thompson out and Harris to ground out and end the game. Offensively, Willie Wilson stole the spotlight. Wilson supplied the Royals with the only runs they needed in the first when he singled and stole second. Following a walk to U.L. Washington, the pair executed perfectly a double steal. Wilson then came home on a sacrifice fry by Hal McRae. IN THE SECOND Inning, Wilson singled home Frank White and Jose Cardinal with the second and third Royal runs. Kansas City closed out its scoring in the fifth when Willey Mays Alkens walked with one out and went to second on John Wathan's single. White drove in Alkens with a single and Clint Hurdle, batting for Cardinal, singled home Wathan. The clubhouse celebration following the title-clincher was a dry one. A subdued happiness replaced the usual bubbles of victory champagne. "We can't get off and go out there," "We've got another game," "We've got another game." to play. I know it's kind of ant-climatic. this game is over it'll be a blow out. Probably the most elated Royal was Manager Jim Frey. "I THOUGHT I could go through this thing blase," Frey, a rookie manager, said. "I got excited riding out to the bail yard and was disappointed we didn't play. "I'm thankful to everybody associated with this ball club. It's the greatest thrill of my life. A lot of people I, just happen to have a good one." Frey's employers, Owner Ewing Kaufman and General Manager Joe Burke, were the highlights of the celebration. The pair waded through a string of reporters to shake each player's hand and offer congratulations. "IT SEEMS THE first time I come back from an injury I get a hit." Brett entered the room and proceeded to throw, it 'easier to bit on bench. There I was hitting at 600." The Royals got behind early in the second game and were forced to play catch-up most of the game. The Angels chased Kansas City starter Larry Gura, making his fifth attempt at victory No. 19, for three runs in the first, a run in the third and more in the seventh. The Angels won a 7-4. ROYALS NOTES—The Royals' four stole bases in the first inning of the first game set a new club record. Previously she was three, accomplished three times. Maranatha Christian Center Bible Studies Maranatha Christian Center Bible Studies Tues. 7:00 pm Jayhawk Room KU Fri. 7:00 pm 1144 Rhode Island St. corner 12th & R.I. George Brett compared this year Royal's team to the 1977 and 78 clubs and said, "This is the best team since I've been here. With Willie Wilson, our coach, we've had a basic experience we have we're better. I think I'm a better player now too." Following the not-so-festive clubhouse activities, the attention shifted to George Brett, the life of the Royal's season-long party at the top. The All-Star third baseman lined singles his first two trips to the plate, but finished the night where he began, with a .396 average. Holiday Flights Are Filling Fast! Make Your Reservations TODAY! "There is no extra charge when you buy your airline tickets at Maupintour." Maupintour travel service K.U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 Tobacco Smokers The loudest cheer of the evening went to a spectator who burned a New York Yankee pennant between games of the double-header. A classic by CHECK-POINT— You'll enjoy wearing it often. It's wool with a velvet trimmed collar. color—taupe & brown sizes—5 to 13 $110 Jay SHOPPE 835 MASS. ● 843-4833 ● LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 WELCOME BACK STUDENTS 2408 Iowa WELCOME BACK STUDENTS 2408 Iowa COME DISCOVER ONE OF LAWRENCE'S GREATEST WATERING HOLES!!! take TIME OUT to take advantage of these pitcher prices! TIME OUT HAPPY HOURS MON.-5-8-1.50 TUES 7-1.00 THURS 8-1.25 9-1.90 10-12-1.75 FRJ.-3-6-1.50 KEG PARTIES! 2.5¢ POOL TABLES HAPPY HOURS MON- 5-8-1.50 TUES- 7-1.00 THURS/8-1.25 9-1.50 10-12-1.75 FRI- 3-6-1.50 KEG PARTIES! 25$ POOL TABLES now serving Lawrence's best cheezburgers It's Football Time Stop in before or after the game for a great sandwich-over 30 delicious sandwiches to choose from-and a tasty assortment of homemade soups, salads, and desserts. Eat In or Carry Out! Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium Sun.Thurs. Holiday Plaza 2149 Iowa 841-8271 11-9 Fri.Sat 11-10 SUA FILMS Presents What happens when kids grow up and parents don't. Robert Altman and George W. George present "RICH KIDS" Executive Producer Robert Altman Produced by George W. George with Michael Hammann Directed by Robert M. Young. Written by Judith Ross. Tinti Alverado Jasper Levie Katiya Waller John Lithgow Terry Pews Rachel Snyder Roberta Schmidt Joan Dooley Isaac Worth Read the Bantam Book - A Loni Gate Production United Artists MARKETING DIRECTORS Copyright © 1971 United Artists Corporation A Brands & Companies Friday — 3:30, 9:30 Saturday — 7:00 Friday and Saturday, Sept. 19-20 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium — No Refreshments allowed HELP! HELP! for your hair from headmasters open most evenings till 8 809 Vermont for your hair from headmasters open most evenings BROOKLYN COFFEE SHOP 843-8808 a touch of CONNE you can walk for miles and miles in our casuals that's no exaggeration either! he weatherman comfortable why with the soft padded knee surmount real leather tops and bespoke sove, there's no pain to wrinkle that you could seem to work powerfully quick next top to get your Conne casual that take off comfort Tie in BROWN, $34. Perfed-top in WINE, $29. J. J. Angela's Shoes Hours M-1 10-8 Fr & Sat 10-5 30 Sun 1-5 25th & Iowa 847-3007 Holiday Plaza SVA FILMS Presents "GLORIOUSLY FUNNY...so wise, so humane and so witty...Orchestra Rehearsal' is of a piece with this brilliant director's very best work." -Vencant Carley, New York Times "SEE IT! Fellini has given us another exhilarating experience." -Gene Shaik, NBC TV Federico Fellini's ORCHESTRA REHEARSAL The decline of the West in C" major. an opportunity of GALMONT PARIS SACS ROHE produced by RAI & GALMONT SACS NEW YORK FILMS release Thursday, Sept. 18 7:30 $1.00 Woodruff Auditorium — No Refreshments allowed University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Friday, September 19, 1980 Vol. 91, No.20 USPS 650-640 Consultants advise against mall development Staff Reporter By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter Lawrence could not support a major downtown mall, and a suburban shopping mall would devastate the city's downtown, consequently City Commission at a workshop yesterday. Teska Associates, an Evanston, Ill., community planning firm hired by the city at a cost of about $25,000, said the city's best option was to add at least two major department stores to the existing downtown business district. The Teskia firm presented results of a study conducted by Melianphip and Associates, an urban planning firm hired by Teskia to help the city explore its potential for retail growth. THE CITY'S DOWNTOWN shopping area is good, but the area needs two strategically placed department stores, said Robert Teska, president of the firm. "Our focus is on the retail potentials of Lawrence and its relationship to downtown," Teka said. "The strengths of the downtown area are the streets, the parks, the bridges." The Lawrence area is losing about 15 percent of its potential retail dollars because shoppers go to Kansas City or Topeka, the Melaniphy study said. An improved downtown shopping area not only could keep those shoppers in Lawrence but also could draw shoppers from as far as Ottawa and Leavenworth, the study said. Although downtown shopping malls in other cities have helped revitalize dying areas, the study said the benefits of a Lawrence hall did not justify its construction. Jacobs, Visconsi and Jacobs, a Cleveland developer, had proposed a major downtown mall of 479,440 square feet near Ninth and Vermont streets. The Melaniphy study said the area could support only 20 square feet, a little more than half of a square foot. THE CITY WOULD lose retail sales tax revenue from stores torn down to make room for the mall while it was being built, the study said. Also, regular downtown shoppers would change their habits and buy elsewhere during mall construction. The study also considered the effects of a suburban Lawrence mall. The downtown area could lose half its business to a suburban mall, the study predicted. Vocancies caused by the suburban mall, proposed for SSRd and Iowa streets, are expected on the downtown area. The study recommended the commissioners reject that option. The city could act as its own developer to add to the downtown shopping area, the study THE CITY WOULD have to provide about $10 million for parking, building demolition and street improvements before stores would move to the area. The city could use these improvements and its benefits to attract full-line stores down town. A local developer could purchase the land for the department stores or the city could use federal grants to buy the land itself The downtown area should be the city's focal point and needs to be protected,HEALTHY. Bruce Heckman of the Teska firm characterized the city's present retailing as a doughnut with small shopping areas surrounding the city. Some buildings of historical significance in the downtown should be preserved, he said. HECKMAN SAID MORE special events at the Lawrence Arts Center and the public library would keep people coming downtown all year. "The future of downtown is dependent on the commitment the community makes to it." bt.860.251 Commissioners agreed that the city was ready for some downtown development, and asked Tsika to explore the possibility of major stores to the downtown business district. City Manager Buford Watson stressed that the commission could not have taken official action yesterday on the retail proposal. The workshop was just a study session. The commission may take official action after the firm's second workshop on Oct. 23. COMMISSIONER BOB SCHUMM, who owns several restaurants in the downtown area, said he was pleased to see that the customers did not recommend a downtown mall. Schumm said he preferred the idea of free-standing department stores, rather than a chain. "It's more convenient," he said. "I'm happy to hear it's a real, viable alternative," he said. Mayor Ed Carter said he thought the city got its money's worth from the study. Groups drop requests error found in funding He said he was interested in serving the community's best interest. improving what you do so you can make it more enjoyable. think we’ve done a hell of a job in that regard.” By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Two student organizations have withdrawn their requests for Student Senate supplementary funding thus fall, but an accounting error in the day earlier has further reduced the funds available. Although there are only 55 groups requesting a total of $85,181.35, an accounting error discovered by Bren Abbott, Senate appropriators, led to the amount available for funding to $1,967.35. According to Abbott, the Student Senate executive committee granted legal Services $2,587 in supplementary funds this summer, so he would consider when determining this fall's amount. THE SENATE PASSED a resolution last spring that gave legal Services supplementary funding, and would have acted on it this fall if StudEx had not already enacted it this summer. According to Senate rules and regulations, StudEx can act in behalf of the Senate during break periods in situations requiring "immediate action" to situations or to situations requiring action within one week. According to Matt Davis, student body vice president, Steve Lebon, the director of Legal Services, said he needed to know whether they would be paying the money to begin hiring people for the year. Davis said StudEx thought action needed to be taken. Initially, there was $17,337 available for supplementary资金 before Abbott found the The two organizations withdrawing their requests, totalling $1,161,80, were the Linguistics Graduate Student Association and the Pre-Physical Therapy Club. John McLaughlin, president of the Linguistics Graduate Student Association, said his club had requested $949, thinking it was for the yearly Senate revenue code allocations. They withdrew the request because they said they did not need supplementary funding. THE MONEY HAD been requested for publishing the Kansas Working Papers, two volumes of papers written by students on linguistic issues The Pre-Physical Therapy Club also withdrew its request for $212.80 Rick Kristoffersen, president, said they learned after making their request that the Association for Combined Health Services had received $400 for advertising expenses, $100 of which was to be distributed to the Pre-Physical Therapy Club. Although this was not as much as the club had requested in supplementary funding, Kristofo-18, a junior football player, was able to The club had requested the money for advertising meetings. Because of the extensive number of requests this year, Miki Gordon, Senate finance and auditing committee co-chairman, said that the committee go away unhappy and without money this fall. Mondale blasts debate stance delivers civil rights challenge Staff Writer By IAN SIMPSON In remarks made during a press conference at the Radisson Muehlebach Hotel, Mondale said President Carter was willing to debate Reagan and that the Republican challenger had declined. KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Vice President Walter F. Mondale yesterday assailed Ronald Reagan for his refusal to debate President Carter individually and called upon Reagan to prove his commitment to civil rights through support of current legislation. Mondale was in Kansas City for a banquet celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Kansas City Star and to attend the funeral of Bruce Mills. The Democratic leader who died Saturday of cancer, "Mr. Carter's position on the debates is identical to that of the candidates in 1960 and in 1978. He is the second president in American history to agree to debate anybody, and he is the first president in American history to agree to debate a minor candidate, provided the Republican opponent will agree to debate (one on one)." he said. "Reagan refuses to do what the major candidates did in 1960 and in 1976, to have debates over the budget," he said. REAGAN AND independent candidate John Anderson will face off Sunday night in a nationally televised debate sponsored by the League of Women Voters. Carter has refused to appear in any debate that includes Anderson unless Reagan first debates him alone. "The real question is, why does a person—who has never had a moment in federal office, never had a moment in foreign policy, never had a moment in intelligence of security matters, never had a moment's experience in economic management or dealing with the Congress or any of the broad complexities of the federal government," she said. "Who is in that position, refuse to have the kind of one-on-one debates the American people are really entitled to?" Mondale asked. MONDALE SAID he wanted to debate George Bush, Reagan's running mate, once the Republicans agreed to a debate between Carter and Reagan without Anderson. Mondale said that Carter agreed to participate in debates sponsored by CBS, the National Press Club and the Ladies Home Journal, but that Reazan had refused. The vice president defended Carter's record on civil rights and said the president had championed them as Georgia's governor at a time when it was unpopular to do so. Black leaders such as Corbett Scott King, the widow of Martin Luther King Jr., and Atlanta mayor Maynard "I don't know when we will have those debates. we must await the resolution of the presidential meetings." Weather See MONDALE page 5 It should be sunny, windy and very warm. today, with a high in the low 9 according to the National Weather Service. Skies should be partly cloudy tonight with winds from the southeast at 5 to 12 mph. tomorrow, with a high around 90. The extended forecast calls for a chance It should be partly cloudy again of thundershowers on Sunday and Monday, with leaves in the 40s and 80s and 100s. Monday, with lows in the 50s and 60s and highs in the upper 80s to low 90s. DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff 81 A man who called himself Lester Baker Who? teases Cindy Lasseter, an evangelist who is visiting the KU campus this week. Who? dressed in a devil costume, passed out samples of what he called "devil's brew" (beer) and popcorn that he claimed was "roasted over the fires of Hell." See story page 6. KU not alone in its use of videotapes By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter A camera lens pens the crowd and follows a plain-clothed policeman up a flight of stairs and into the crowded bleachers as he tries to reach the men wrestling in the aisle. He leans over the struggling man, breaks them apart and points to the camera. Obscenities fly, burying themselves in his blood. Such a videotape camera is used at the University of Kansas to record events where violence might erupt. Similar filming is done at three other Big Eight schools. Such videotaping has been done at KU since April 1978, when a speech by former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was interrupted more than 26 times by demonstrators. The police had failed to identify the offenders then, but has videotaped demonstrations since the Rabin incident. TEMPORARY VIDEOTAPING guidelines in May 1890, a permanent policy was established. That policy was first published this week, after months of negotiating between the administration and the University Senate executive committee. The guidelines approved by the University Council and the chancellor permit videotaping only with the recommendation of a committee composed of Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor; George Worth, University Senate executive chairman; Vickie Thomas, University general counsel; Jim Denney, director of KU police; and Greg Schnacke, student body The guidelines include requirements that videotaping be done in an open and non-secretive manner, that a record be kept of all videotapping not used in criminal proceedings be erased. If the committee recommends videotaping of a specific event, then six guidelines must be Videotaping cannot be used for intelligence or training purposes by the police and should be used with discretion, according to policy guidelines. The policy also states that, "videotaping should be considered only in those cases in which there is the potential for violence during demonstrations." That potential for violence is what KU police and other university police departments are accusing of. Football games are the main events where videotaping is used by universities. THE UNIVERSITY OF Missouri at Columbia has been filming events for at least 10 years. Capt. Jack Watrin, MU police department, said yesterday, and the filming has reduced the number of violent incidents during football games. "We only use it when an incident occurs that we think may cause us problems later on." Wait, that's a bit of double含义. "We use it all the time but haven't had to use it in any court proceedings," he said. MU uses two movie cameras and three 35mm still cameras to record university events. Watrin said the movie cameras used approximately one camera for each 35mm and 65mm cameras used three to four rolls per game. Cameras follow policemen into the stands, he said, and pictures are taken of the people who were involved. "We do it for our own protection," Watrin said. BON ANICK, University of Colorado director of the Center for Clinical was done if an event must lead to arrests. "There have been a few incidents every four or five years." Anick said, "but they have never been of any great concern. It's for the protection of the officers as well as the people." Capt, John Towle, CU police department, said the use of videotaping at concerts and football games since 1972 had reduced the number of injuries to police officers and citizens. "It's been effective." he said. It's been effective. he said. Anick said, "It's been extremely effective. They're very, very reticent to do anything out of line when they find out they're being filmed." However, Capt. James Mustoe, University of Oklahoma police department, said he did not think filming was a deterrent to violence during football games. "I don't think we have done it enough to have any effect on the crowds." Mustoe said. HE SAID OU had based its system on the MU program and this was the second season filmed using a computer. Filming is done for possible use in criminal See VIDEOTAPE page 5 --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Titan II explosion rips Arkansas silo DEMASCUS, Ark.—A Titan II underground missile exploded early this morning and juvenile technicians who were at the base left a fire that lasted last night. Strategic Air Command officials could not confirm whether the underground Intercontinental Ballistic Muscle was armed with a nuclear The blast caused SAC officials to begin a temporary evacuation of the area and moved the site. Demascus is located 40 miles west of Little Rock in central Arkansas. Witnesses reported that the 3 a.m. blast shook the countryside for miles and then sent a hue orange fireball of hundreds of feet into the sky. SAC reported that Air Force repair technicians were working on the ICBM attempting to repair a fuel leak that started sometime last night. About 12 of them were still present. Umanian reports report eight people as injured, several of them critically. There are Titan II missile sites in the United States, more than 12 of the 14 where the bombs landed. Defectors housed in U.S. embassies The State Department said yesterday that four U.S. Embassies were now involuntary hospitals would be allocated to SOS defenders, including two low-income children. The department confirmed that the two Cabanes had been in the Ethiopian embassy since May 23, seeking asylum and safe passage out of the country. The Ethiopian government has refused to let the Cubas be flown out of the country to the United States because they have not formally requested permission. Earlier this week, a Soviet soldier took refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan and also sought political asylum. He also was unable to obtain a visa. In addition to the defection efforts in Addis Ababa and Kabul, a large group of Russian Pentecostals have been in refuge in the Moscow embassy for more than a year. In Havana, a large group of anti-Castro Cubans have been in refuge since May. According to State Department spokesman John Trattner, the unidentified Cuban soldiers in Addis Ababa were climbing the wall of the U.S. Embassy on the evening of May 23, the same time that the hordes of Cuban boat people were arriving in he United States. Sirhan eligible for sentence reduction SOLEAD, Calif. – Sirtan Bhalla, behind bars for the past 12 years for a broken neck and for a parole hearing Wednesday to ask that more time be taken of his sentence. It was the second such appearance in two months for Sirhan, once condemned to die in the gas chamber but spared by changes in California law. Subsequent changes in the law have reduced his life sentence to 18 years and caused him to be jailed on parole, over the objections of law enforcement officers and political leaders. Sirhan met with parole officers at Soled in July, but the hearing was rescheduled after the 36-year-old Palestinian immigrant demand—and the police officer involved in the incident later agreed. He has spent the past five years in protective custody at the Correctional Training Facility in Soloaded, a prison in the lettuce fields and vineyards 120 miles north of San Francisco. Last year, officers reviewing Sirhan's behavior noted that he had aban- doned hunger strikes and protests and had begun taking self-improvement con- gruents. At that time the officers awarded him the four-month sentence reduction that serves as a routine induction for well-behaved inmates. That sentence reduction has been suspended for the first time. Gangster's death signals mob dispute ST. LOUIS—Investigators say they fear the car-bomb killing of 78-year-old men. "Horseshoe Jimmy" was last survivor of a bombing that killed at least six for leadership in the race. Explosives experts returned yesterday to gather more evidence from Interstate Highway 55, where a powerful blast ripped apart Michaels' car Wednesday. Debris from the black Chrysler Cordoba was scattered over a quarter-mile area. Area authorities have been braced for a possible eruption of violence since the Aug. 29 cancer death of Anthony "Tony G" Giordano,报头 of the area. Still, police officials said they were surprised by the killing of the aging Michael, who肩头被 the so-called Serving Fist rests on the armor diorama. "I was astounded when I heard of it," said L.I. Column William E. Brown, assistant chief of police. "I thought he was ready for the old folks' home." But the prison was hardly on the rooftop's walls. Other investigators said they had met with the syndicate had been on relatively friendly terms in recent years. They said the bombing might have been a warning to the Syrians to stay out of the fight to succeed Giordano. Police accused of KKK membership HARRISBURG, Pa. — Authorities yesterday were checking reports that displayed and sold Klan medallions while in prison. Mayor Paul E. Douthrif Jr. ordered an inquiry by the Internal Affairs unit of the police department. Other investigations were started by the human rights commissioners. Michael Bowes, leading the investigation by the state and city human relation commissions, and his study started when a black city employee was fired. Dutchish said the matter may have begun as a joke when an officer bought Klan medalation as a "a curriure item" at a local flea market and displayed it on the wall. Doutrich said, however, that the police department's inquiry would seek to determine what happened and were actually members of the KKK. He said he would be fired if they were Keys ridicules Jeffries in radio spot Bowles he also was checking into allegations that white officers used racial slurs in the presence of black officers, that there was racist graffiti in the men's room of the police department and that black officers were the only ones of supposedly humorous printed matter containing racial epithets. TOPEKA—The 2nd District Congressional race is heating up with Congressman Jim Jeffreys, a radio commercials and his attacks on Republican Congressman Jim Jeffreys. In an attempt to pullkeys up from his low standing in the polls, theKeys campaign yesterday was to begin broadcasting a radio advertisement of Jeffries' speech to an April 1979 Kansas Farm Bureau meeting in Washington. The ad is a two-minute actual recording of Jeffries laughing uncontrollably throughout his introduction of a Kansas colleague. "The voice you heard was Congressman Jim Jeffries," the ad says, "an embarrassment to Kansas." Jeffries' campaign manager, John Palautos, said the radio commercial "medication announcement" of the keys campaign, when the best thing they were up with was a partnership. Keys turned on the campaign heat after Jeffries suffered from two blows to his image. Jeffries kicked off the turnoln when he admitted投票 for a bill without knowing that $7.4 million for two Kansas military projects had been deleted from it. That was followed by a front-page story in the Wall Street Journal as an example of the ultra-conservative "New Right" political movement. WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Carter, saying "the press seems to be obsessed with this issue," said yesterday that he did not think Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan was a racist and that he regretted the issue was ever injected into the campaign. Carter says Reagan campaign not racist During a half-hour nationally televised news conference, the president faced repeated questions about his suggestion at a predominantly black Atlanta church last Tuesday that "stirings of hate" had been injected into the campaign by use of "code words." "No, I don't think he's running a campaign of hatred and racism," Carter replied when first asked about what he was about Reagan in his Atlanta remarks. He said at another point that he ad-mired Reagan for rejecting the Ku Klux Klan's endorsement of his candidacy "I do not think my opponent is racist in any degree," the president said, rejecting the notion that he personally was running a "mean" campaign. positive listing of his administration's accomplishments. Questions centered on politics and recent developments in Iran. While the president's last news conference on Aug. 4 had been devoted entirely to his brother Billy's Libyan ties, Carter opened yesterday with a In reaction, Reagan's campaign director, William Casey, fired off a telegram to all three commercial networks to demand equal time for Carter's five-minute opening statement, which he said "could not have been a more blatantly political commercial if he had paid for the time...an obvious partisan announcement, not responsive to questions from the press, separate from the press conference." Court puts Anderson on Ohio ballot By United Press International He now lacks his name only on the New Hampshire and Arizona ballots, which have late firing deadlines that the team anticipates no difficulty meeting. Independent presidential candidate John Anderson got two big boosts yesterday when the U.S. Supreme Court blocked Ohio's attempt to keep a ballot from being filed the required ballot petitions in his 48th state, South Carolina. The petitions have been certified in 33 states, and are awaiting certification in other countries. Anderson is in the Washington area to'or the rest of this week, as is Ronald League of Women Voters debate Sunday in Baltimore. In New York, ABC-TV announced it would not provide live coverage of the presidential debate. Without President Carter's participation, ABC said, it did not qualify as a presidential debate. Anderson's petitions have been rejected only in Carter's home state of Georgia, where elections officials said there were too many invalid signatures. Anderson's campaign in the state has challenged the counting procedure in court and is awaiting a ruling. Anderson declared his independent candidacy April 24, and his individual state campaigns, mostly made up of volunteers, began the ballot procedures earlier. Anderson boasted from the state that he would be on all 50 state ballots. already had passed at that point, but the campaigns filed suit, challenging the constitutionality of requiring earlier deadlines for candidates other than those of the Democratic and Republican parties. The deadlines of several states In every case so far, the courts have ruled in Anderson's favor. The certification in North Carolina still is on appeal, but yesterday's high court ruling seems to have put an end to the dispute. Ohio Secretary of State Anthony Celebrezwe sought Supreme Court review of a federal district court decision that allowed Anderson's nudge on the bailout. The high court in August declined to give the case faster-than-usual treatment, but changed its mind without explanation yesterday. On Iran, Carter flatly ruled out U.S. apology to Iran as part of the price for the release of the American hostages. "The United States is not going to apologize," the president said. He added that the United States should support the idea of an international forum for Iran to air its grievances. Carter said there had been some apparent progress with the formation of an Iranian parliament, the naming of a prime minister and the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's statement outlining Iran's demands. Carter said the administration was pursuing every "possible legitimate means" to both preserve the nation's honor and integrity and to free the hostages without harm. But, he said, "I predict an early resolution" of the crisis. However, the questions kept coming during the news conference about whether Carter was running a "mean campaign, and why, if he did not wish to inject racism as an issue into the campaign, he used "code words" and "hatred" in his campaign trail comments. Carter, replying near the end of the news conference, at one point paused in apparent frustration and seemed to be searching for words. He then said he had been speaking to a black group in Atlanta who understood 'the code words, the use of the language,' and she wrote that the words states' rights in the South." "My message to them was that the 'presidential election' is no place for the reviving of the issue of racism under Jimmy Carter and that's how I feel about it," he said. When you need some notes at 3:00 a.m.,you find out who your friends are. MOTION PICTURES You left the notes for chapter 6 in the library. A sure sign that tomorrow's test will be heavy with questions from chapter 6. Someone you know is about to get a phone call. He's not going to like it, but he's going to come through. When this is over, do something special for him. Tonight, let it be Löwenbräun. MILTON HEAD Löwenbräu.Here's to good friends. University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Page 3 Cuba sends hijackers to U.S. COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP1)—In a deceleration-shattering move yesterday, Cuba agreed to turn over two hijackers who Wednesday had commanded a plane to Havana. A government plane was set on fire when it entered the United States for prosecution. It marked the first time that the Fidel Castro regime had responded so quickly and firmly to put a stop to the air piracy. Thirteen flights have been diverted to Cuba this year—10 of them within the past two months. It also marked the first time that the Cuban government has handed over Cuban hijackers, although some authorities have been called on the Cuban eventually have been returned. THE GOVERNMENT plane, a Lockheed Jettstar belonging to the Federal Aviation Administration, left Washington shortly before noon, and after a stop in Atlanta to pick up two marshals who were make the official arrests, headed directly for Havana. The hijackers, identified as Juan Adega-Fresneda and Chincicori Perez-Perez, were to be returned last night to Columbia, where they had taken over an Atlanta-to-Charleston, S.C., Delta flight about 2.15 a.m. Wednesday. ARRIVING IN Columbia, the two will be turned over to the FBI and taken before a U.S. magistrate for a bond hearing. "They will be treated like anyone else, advised of their rights and all the normal procedures," said Thomas E. Lydon Jr., U.S. district attorney for South Carolina. He said a magistrate would determine whether the men could afford their own legal counsel or would be assigned public defenders The Jetstar left Atlanta at 1:30 p.m. and the officials anticipated would be a 4½ hour flight. IN TAKING OVER the Delta flight, the hijackers, thought to be refugees who came to this country via the Cuban seafit earlier this year, resorted to the oft-used tactic of sloshing what appeared to be gasoline around the plane and threatening to set the aircraft ablaze. On the way to Havana, the two told a Spanish-speaking passenger they had been in the United States for four months and had lived and worked in Manhattan. "They were tired of New York and robbed and stalked. They wanted home to their kids, wives and families," the passengers quoted them as saying. Just one day before the hijacking, Cuba announced it would deal harshly with air pirates and warned they could expect jail terms or deportation or answer for their crimes in the United States. Security forces track Somoza killers ASUNCION, Paraguay (UPI)—Argentine and Paraguayan security forces yesterday began a massive manhunt for the death squad that assassinated Anastasio Somoza. The former vice president will be buried in the United States. "A large number of people" have been detained by police in this capital city of 400, 000 since the bloody bazaok and machine gun ambush Wednesday. Police sources said four Argentines who were attempting to cross the border into Argentina were among those taken into custody. In Washington, the State Department said that, in accordance with the wishes of the state's governors, the Somoza, a U.S. citizen who lives in the Miami area, Somoza would be buried somewhere in the United States in private funeral ceremonies. But the exiled Nicaraguan leader's long-time girlfriend, Dinora Sampson, said his five children were to arrive in Asuncion from the United States, and that he would decide to decide if the remains will be taken to the United States or buried here. "The best homage for the valiant Paraguayan people would be that the general be buried here" in the South of Peru, at San Juan de la Laguna since festing Nicaragua in August 1798. Associates of the exiled Nicaraguan leader, who died when his lousine crash landed. Police said all those involved in he attack escaped. the car's roof, said they had "no doubts" that the morgan government was aware of the damage. Miss Sampson, visited by Paragayu's president, later said, "I have been destroyed by the loss of my friend of 18 years. I feel very lonely." She said the Nicaraguan government's decision to declare Wednesday a day of national celebration "gives an opportunity of people who are ruling Nicaragua." Somoa's remains were moved to his house, where family sources have said that he was taken to the hospital. On Campus An SUA ART EXHIBIT AND SALE continues today in the Level 4 Gallery at The Art Building. ART EXHIBIT BIOLOGY CLUB BIOLOGY CLUB THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union. TONIGHT An INTERVARISITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP meeting will be at 7 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will sponsor international folk dancing in Robinson Gymnasium. Beginning dances will be taught from 7:30 to 9 p.m., with request dancing held from 9 to 10:30 p.m. TOMORROW A PARENTS DAY PICNIC, sponsored by the School of Architecture, will be from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Potter Pavilion. "GONE WITH THE WIND" will be presented by SAU Films in Hoch Auditorium from 7 p.m. until midnight. Admittance is free. A MASS sponsored by the St. Trevor School will be held p17.89 a.m. in South Hall. SUNDAY CIRCLE K will hold its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in 401 Murphy. MONDAY A concert of JAPANESE MUSIC will be at 11:30 a.m. in 330 Murray Hall. The WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will feature "Death in the Morning," about gold's role in history, and "Miri," a "Star Trek" episode, at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall. The KU MODEL UNITED NATIONS international Room of the Kangas Tajong, international Room of the Kangas Tajong, Yoshio Okawara, the JAPANESE AMBASSADOR to the United States, will speak at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. A MARIMBA CONCERT featuring Swabhorn Regional Hall in Harpery Hall The Kanaan welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus." Organizations should submit written information on scheduled free activities to the campus editor at least two days before the events. Get Your Ship Together At THE HARBOUR LITES Harbour Specials JOHN KENNETH WEDNESDAY'S "GNO" NIGHT 7-10 p.m. MONDAY NIGHT TV SPECI 7-10 p.m. A11 LITE Beers 60¢ LIT Pitcher $1.50 7-10 p.m. All SINGLE Women receive $1.50 pitchers/60¢ cans CRAZY QUART NIGHT 7-10 p.m. Thursdays Coors' Quartz $1.00 TUESDAY'S IN THE MOUNTAINS 7-10 p.m. BUSCH Long-necks 60¢ TUFIF FRIDAYS 3-6 p.m. Pitchers 1.50/Cans & Bottles 60c (Wear a Harbour Lites "T"-Shirt or Hat and receive $1.00 Pitchers) Get your card to join the HARBOR LITES' PITCHER CLUB Ride the HARBOUR BUS on game days THE HARBOUR LITES A FIRST-CLASS DIVE A FIRST-CLASS DIVE 1031 Massachusetts Jazz Up at Paul Gray's Jazz Place TREVOR THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 BURT REWOLDS JACINIE GLEASON SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT II PC AINTERNAL PICTURES 7:10 & 9:30 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 SAMUEL FULLER'S THE BIG RED ONE 7:10 & 9:35 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 THE SPECIAL EDITION CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THREE KIND 7:15 & 9:25 2 SOME PEOPLE JUST DON'T BELOW. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3 Fame 7:20 & 9:20 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 1 PETER SELLERS BEING THERE 7:20 & 9:30 "GONE WITH THE WIND" 7:30 only Sunset West Dinah 843-6172 Eager Beavers Sex Education starts at dusk 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club Hillcrest 5th & 7aws 842-8400 1 THE SPECIAL EDITION CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE TWIRD KIND 7 15 & 9 25 2 SOME PEOPLE JUST DON'T BELONG Caddyshack 7 20 & 9 20 3 Fame 7 20 & 9 20 Tonite & Saturday Tim Stringer & His Blues Band Cinema Twin 21st & 1st love 842-6400 1 PETER SELLERS BEING THERE 7:20 & 9:30 "GONE WITH THE WIND" 7:30 only Sunset Blvd. West Bilt St. 842-8177 Eager Beavers Sex Education starts at dusk After Midnight—Happy $ \frac{1}{2} $ Hour Midnight to 12:30 75° Hiballs 9 p.m.—Midnight Plus—Jazz Live Until 2:30 Delicious Sandwiches, Popcorn, Peanuts Kansas City's Finest Vocal & Instrumental Jazz Group Come On Up and Dance with the Scamps Sunday Earl Robinson & The 5 Scamps SUA FILMS Presents Two Lawrence Premiers What happens when kids grow up and parents don't. Rich Kids THAT'S KNOW! Robert Altran and Manatee W. George present "RICH KIDS" Executive Producer Robert Altran Producer Jeffrey Kushner Producers Michael Haussman Directed by Robert M. Young Written by Judith Rous Trial Advice Jennifer Lowe Jewelry Law Altran Lowe Librarian Lulu Lehre Fossil Finder David Dooley Lewis Worth Read the Banani Book A Lions Gate Production United Artists **BROOKLYN COPYRIGHTS 1983 BY LIONS GATE PRODUCTION** A联发公司 Friday and Saturday Sept. 19-20 Friday 3:30, 9:30 Saturday 7:00 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed WILLIAM HOLDEN · MARTHE KELLER with Jose Ferrer Henry Fonda Michael York Billy Wilder's FEDORA Friday and Saturday Sept. 19-20 Friday 7:00 Saturday 3:30, 9:30 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed Page 4 University Dally Kansan, September 19, 1980 Opinion ASK money well-spent The Student Senate, with or without a quorum, made a wise move Wednesday night. The Senate's vote to retain membership in the Associated Students of Kansas ensures that at least a few people will be watching for student issues in the Kansas Legislature during the next session. It does not necessarily guarantee success. No lobbying group in its right mind would. But ASK promises to try. That is more than anyone else is willing to do. Because of the demise of Concerned Students for Higher Education, a student lobbying group for the University of Kansas only, ASK is even more necessary. The 25 cents a student pays each semester out of his or her activity fees seems a small amount to guarantee that student representatives and ASK staff members will speak to legislators about raising student salaries, increasing the percentage of graduate teaching assistants' fee waivers and increasing financial aid. In the past, ASK has lobbied against raising the drinking age for 3.2 beer from 18 to 21. It has stood up for amendments to the Landlord-Tenant Act to improve housing in university communities. True, ASK has not always been on the winning side. But most students don't have time to write their legislators or to visit them in their Topeka offices. ASK staff members, hired by an ASK board of directors made up of campus representatives from each of the seven university members and paid with members' dues, do have the time and the experience to speak up on student issues. Bob Bingaman, executive director of ASK, has had a year to make contacts in the halls of the Capitol. He can provide organization and continuity to an effort that could be too diversified and sporadic to attract attention. All in all, the service isn't bad for a quarter. State's plentiful water supply dwindles, signals hard times Bowntown Kansas farmers are riding a wave of bountiful agriculture that eventually will recieve, Water from the Ogallala Aquifer, the underground water source that has produced the bountiful water conditions, is being drained by a stream that spills over 100 times faster than new rainfall can replace it. The aquifer, which is plugged with wells that average 200 feet in depth, is in a stage of what will be called the ultimate sinkhole. That is a nice way of saying, "Sorry folke, but this American Desert is making a comeback." Officials say that, far short of camels migrating to the western third of the state, the TED LICKTEIG TERRY MILLER area will not run out of water except in isolated pockets. This is no solace for farmers in the area, however. The Underground Water District in the area has planned a 2 percent depletion of underground water. At this rate, according to one government report, the aquifer could be dry by the year 2000. Never fear, state officials say, dry land farming methods have improved dramatically since the Dust Bowl. Crops can be more varied, and the fertilization of crops helps avoid wind erosion. Besides, 40 percent of the applications for water drilling permits are rejected by the Division of Water Resources. So, no shock abounds. And farmers who don't properly will hit the area after the water available to farmers is sufficient only to sustain limited irrigation. Times are relatively good for the western Kansas farmer. Soybeans and milo are up at least a dollar on the major midwestern grain exchanges compared to last year's prices. The thinking among farmers in the area is to make haw while there's water in the ground. Kansas water officials say the state is fortunate to be in the position that it is. The aquifer, which provides an irrigation source from South Dakota to Central Texas, is not guarded by all state governments as it is in Kansas. A 1945 Kansas law asserts that all water in the state belongs to the state, not the landowner. In Texas, the reverse is true. The inevitable is approaching. The results could be damaging to the farmer. It is estimated that 300 gallons of water are required to produce a loaf of bread, from farm to factory, and 1,000 gallons of milk, from farm to factory, of beef. But if the water isn't on the farm end of the equation, production will drop. The only hope for continued high water supply is the possibility of importing water. The state requires that it be able to import farther north or near for technology to provide answers to desalination and iceberg transfers. But there is a legal problem in the first hope. The state once tried to tap the rivers and streams flowing from Colorado. The issue of tapping rivers still is not clear cut legally, despite the precedent. Forty years passed before all related law suits finally were settled on the matter. As a compromise the state's strategy is to get farmers to balance their farming methods by moving them out of agriculture. Fortunately, the water situation is not so drastic in the central and eastern portions of the state. The central area receives about 25 1/2 inches of rain a year and the eastern third about 35 inches annually. The western third manages do with an average of 18 1/2 inches a year. But for farmers in western Kansas, the loss of the underground water supply signals hard time. Farmers in Dodge City must gump when they enter the Arkansas River without water in it during rainy days. Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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 University Daily KANSAN USPS 68540-4410 Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Tuesday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas on Monday and Tuesday and delivery by air or ship to the $5 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are #2 a semester, paid through the student activity. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint Hall. The university of Kansas Full staff: Editor Carol Beiler Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Associate Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Makeup Editors Writing Editors Copy Chiefs Art Photographer Staff Photographers Columnais Editorial Cartoonist Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Advertising Manager Staff Artist Staff Photo Manager Photo Desk Assistant Tearsheets Manager General Manager and News Adviser Kansas Advisor Business Manager Elaine Strahler Cynad Hughes David Lewis Judy Woodham Judy Sherwyn Jody Sperson Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Chrysia Whokona Gene Myen Pantil Killin Kevin Killin Eliwan Iwamoto, Bob Schaud, Jennifer Robles Wiley Fitzgerald, Wakhtiman, Tory Teackle Eliwan Iwamoto, Gail Egger, Tammy Terrency Liam McClardy Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, Scot Hooker, Dave Kraus, Drew Ternswill Amy Holwell, Ted Litletgt, Bill Meneses, Breed Conley, Scott Faust, Fred Markham, Shawn Sharp Jason Burtus John Burton John Jenkins, Nicholas Slayen Kevin Kauter Nancy Clausson Berry Light Tracy Coon Jessica Mannell Judy DeMarsel Judy梅尔 Leslie Feagler Barb Spooler Nikki Nester Chuck Chowns I'M TRYING TO CHRONICLE THE EVENTS WHICH CAUSED WORLD WAR III. WHAT DID PRESIDENT REAGAN SAY WHEN THE BUTTON WAS PUSHED? HE SAID: "THAT'S NOT WHAT I MEANT!" Reagan extremism may help Carter By WILLIAM M. LUNCH By WILLIAM M. LUNCH New York Times Special Features In all three, an elected president has sought reelection, and the major political party out of power nominated a relatively extreme candidate to run against the incumbent. SAN FRANCISCO—The presidential-election years of 1964, 1972 and 1980 are quite similar. The campaigns of the challengers—Barry Goldwater's in 1964, George McGovenn's in 1972, and Ronald Reagan's current campaign—appear to be cut from the same cloth. They are bound together by at least four elements that spell trouble for the Republicans in November: They offered principled opposition not only to the other party but also to moderates within their own party. In the battle for nomination, extreme positions may be helpful, because the limited numbers of citizens who vote in the primaries and activists who participate in party caucuses tend to be more extreme than typical voters. In addition, the primary process needs the support of moderate leaders and voters who may well have been alienated during the struggle for the nomination. 1. The candidate prior to nomination. The three were darlings of the extreme ideological wing in their party, Goldwater and Reagan on the left, right, McGovern on the Democratic left. 2. The delegates. Each of the challengers in the eight-year cycle since 1644 has been propelled to the presidency. Goldwater made no effort to moderate his views in 1964, believing he would be elected by a "hidden conservative majority." It stayed hidden. McGovern tried to adopt a more moderate stance but was confronted by a demonstration of his own supporters in the lobby of his hotel at the 1720 convention and threats of resignations in protest from important members of the campaign. Again, too, is trying to woo less extreme voters than warned, on national television, against moving toward the center, by an important supporter. U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms. delegates who are 'true believers' in the faith of conservatism (1964, 1980) or liberalism (1972). These positions have been laid out in the ex-White House committees on platforms drafted at the nominating conventions. 3. Party schism. The candidacy of John B. Anderson is testimony to the power of extreme candidates to generate divisions within their own political parties. In 1964, moderate Republicans stayed away from the Goldwater campaign in droves. In 1972, McGovern's forces at the Democratic convention denied seats to the contingent of delegates led by the powerful mayor of Chicago, Richard J. Daley. In the fall, Democrats for Richard Nixon helped attract a hugh number of party defectors. This year, the Republican co-chairman, Mary Crisp, resigned in protest over Reagan's views on women's rights and went to work for Anderson. Although current polls show the majority of Anderson's support coming from disaffected Democrats, he will increasingly cut into Reagan's support by Election Day. 5. The challenger as the issue. Perhaps the most frustrating feature of the general-election campaign for the extreme challengers has been the tendency for their proposals and personalities to be the central focus of the debate in the fall. In 1964, discussion virtually ignored Lyndon B. Johnson. The voters worried about Goldwater's animosity toward New Deal programs and his hawkishness. In 1972, Nixon hardly campaigned at all—public comment and concern focused on proposals McGovern made, such as that for a minimum welfare payment of $100 per person. He has already begun to focus attention on himself by coming out strongly against the Equal Rights Amendment and in favor of a plan to cut federal taxes and spending by 30 percent. The outlook for November is clouded because President Carter has been an unpopular president. He is, however, familiar and comparatively "safe" to the voters. In 1984, the race was never in doubt. In 1972, though, many polls and pundits found Nixon vulnerable—until it became clear that his opponent would come from the left margin of the Democratic Party. But when he won, he seemed to have the year had the GOP put electability ahead of ideology. But having chosen the latter, I believe they are in for a dispiriting repetition of the extremism syndrome. William M. Lunch is assistant professor in the government department at the University of San Francisco. Letters to the Editor To the editor: Parking Services surplus fleeces students For many years, many in the University community have thought Parking Services policies were unfair and a general rip-off. Several have voiced complaints about fines and the cost of parking at their facility which is from $20 for residence hall motorcycles to $75 for the universal permit. A little research and some inquiries made to highly reluctant administrators yielded the following data, which is well worth the attention of KU students and staff: because "it cost more to make the stickers." But hundreds of thousands of dollars more? Jane Nyberg Manhattan junior Dave Kersley Ottawa sophomore The state of Kansas does not fund Parking Services, so they have to "generate their own revenue." And they seem to be doing an excellent job of it. Projected income for the Parking Services is slated at $90,000 for this fiscal year—most of that money, indeed, more than 90 percent of it, coming from private funds. Amazing is the fact that the Kansas Legislature has decreed that only $206,882 can be spent this year to improve parking lots around campus. Furthermore, it is interesting to note that Parking Services had a whopping surplus of $355,400 from fiscal year 1980, making their projected budget come to a phenomenal $1,045,400 for this year! Also, it should be pointed out that last year's projected budget ended up to be more than $20,000 less than the actual cash that was taken in. Parking Services will spend a total of $257,094 for personnel, up to $206,868 for capital improvements and up to $88,399 for "miscellaneous" supplies and expenses. That leaves a total surplus of $498,312, nearly half of the total budget! To be sure, those nice men riding around all day in those cute little blue Parking Services go carts are doing a nice job of "generating revenue." It's too bad that the revenue they generate comes out of the hides of students, faculty and staff. Furthermore, the increase figure out why some parking lots increased from $35,400 last year to $55,400 last over from last year—enough to more than pay for all the parking lot repairs and construction the Legislature will allow in fiscal 1982. One KU administrator, the director of business affairs, said that the increase in permit prices might be Vandalism I have two questions concerning the article "CIA Accusers Spray-Paint Silly Pictures" (Bill Menezes, Sept. 15). First, what is last week's news doing in this week's University Daily Kansas? I was beginning to think I had only imagined the writing on the walls. Secondly, why are the fourth-half second-page spread, so why not give Bill Menezes' article equal attention? I consider this 'handwork' a serious matter that must be stopped now. To the editor: I can honestly say that in the past four years, the only other markings I've seen on the walls or sidewalls have been washable purple paint, pencil or harmless chalk. I was outraged to see that someone is expanding his graffiti techniques from bathroom stalls to KU halls. Now I know why tuition keeps rising every semester—we're financing the cleanup for a Crayola dropout. Perhaps we should have a "hands check" to see who has spray paint under his fingernails. How will we prosecute? Hang the vandal(s) by his (their) thirst, no doubt. I agree with Menezes. Let's get the vandals off campus. So, how about a follow-up story on what is done to wipe the writing from the walls and to keep it off. Judy Seller Lake Forest, Ill., special student. To the editor: At the height of the controversy regarding the removal of the art library from Watson Library Library hours V N Elizabeth C. Banks into the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art, some of us who opposed the move expressed our aprehension that the transferral of the books into what would become, for all intents and purposes, a departmental library, would result in a restriction of access to the collection for the public; we would not be assured, however, that the new library would have the same hours as the old. So, while art librarian Paul Bobo's present short schedule (8 to noon, 1 to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday) is understandable as he settles into his new quarters, we can only wait with concern for an explanation of what he means by "longer" storage. We are grateful to Kansan, Sept. 8). It is probably naive to expect that campaign promises of a previous administration will be honored. Elizabeth C. Banks associate professor of classics To the editor: Gay legal aid I wish that Kathleen Conkey would have checked her facts with our office before writing her letter (University Daily Kanzen, Sept. 12) regarding an attempt by some congressmen to restrict federal Legal Services Corporation funding. These restrictions, presently before the U.S. Senate for action, would prevent Legal Services Corporation grantees from providing legal assistance in promoting, defending or protecting homosexuality. The Douglas County Legal Aid Society is not a Legal Services Corporation grantee and is not bound by Legal Services Corporation funding rules. It is the operating arm of the School of Law's legal aid clinical program and is funded by city and county revenue sharing, the United Funds and private donations. It is the policy of the Douglas County Legal Aid Society to assist residents of Douglas County who cannot afford or find a local attorney. We do not close our doors to qualified clients. director of Douglas County Legal Aid Society Inc. 1 --- University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Page 5 From page 1 have writing 11. 122 seen to ennounce are the legal ag or not not in lawing in fund City Fund of the deb of the ad or ob Videotape matters, he aaid, and is done primarily at football games and rock concerts. Mustae said OU used a 35mm camera and one one had complained about the use of the camera KU is the only Big Eight school that videotapes events and that has a committee of faculty, administrators and police to monitor the use of the taping or filming. The police chiefs of OU, MU and CU determine whether an event should be filmed. TOWLE SAID THAT at CU there was an attempt about every four years to protest the use of videotaping at the university, but when the program was explained, the opposition subsided. Anick said, "We're not trying to be clandestine within the city," trying to play 1984. It's stricty a judgmental truth. Although Kansas State University does not do any filming or videotaping, L. Charles Beckom, "We would like to have the equipment to videotape but we don't have the money," he said. "We have two cameras." K-State police department, said the department would like to be filmed films events on campus. He said K-State has had isolated cases where taoping have been of value. "The biggest asset in the use of the equipment," Beckom said, "is when unrest does occur it provides law enforcement officials with the ability to identify the perpetrator of the incident. "It's hard to single out somebody from 35,000 to 50,000 people in the stands." "Once people in the crowd are aware of it (the filming), they are less apt to want to do it (violence) and spoil the event for everyone else." However, not all the universities that do not have videotaping want to use it. CAPT. ROBERT EDMUNDS, University of New York police department, said that in the 1970s his group was not a member. He said that he didn't think the university had any need to videotape events and that the police department "played things pretty much low-key." last five years it hadn't done any videotaping or filming. Plain plain-clothed policemen who know the students in a crowd is more effective for NU than those in the street. "We do better by knowing them (the students) by name and having contacts in the crowd, perhaps with their families," he said. Edmunds said he thought peer pressure and identification of students had eliminated the problem. Everett Eaton, chief of police at Oklahoma State University, said OSU did not do any videotaping and did not think there was a need to film events. his commitment to civil rights by supporting present legislation that would strengthen the law. "His record as president is as good or better than any president in American history. The black and Hispanic communities will agree with that," Mondale said. He said it was not used as a deterent for unrest at the university and there was no university "If our opponent would like to gain some support in an area where he is weak because of his inadequate record," Mondale said, "he could stand up and support these reforms. He could supporters in the Congress who are doing everything they can to clock it and ask them to help us." Mondale MONDALE CALI.ED upon Reagan to prove If Reagan would do this, Mondale said "at behead someone doing something and we would commend him." There is a clear contrast between Carter's and Reagan's civil rights positions, Mondale said, "and I think the American people understand that." At Iowa State University, Steve Drake, a student and trustee, said there was no policy toVIDEO. she "We never thought it was beneficial," he said. Alcatel also filmed a film was used primarily to recreate a scene. "If one officer goes into the crowd and we have to recreate a scene, it's the best way to recreate it." At CU, videotapes are seldom used for court proceedings and if they don't have an use in further criminal action. Adult center counsels non-traditional students The videotapes used at KU will be erased and reused because it is too expensive to destroy From page 1 Videotaping will be done at KU football games and Denney has said that anyone interested in it can do so by calling 476-219-8035. By MIKE ROBINSON Staff Reporter The University of Kansas operates a service center that offers additional traditional college services to adults over all the states. The center, the Adult Life Resource Center, is a branch of the Division of Continuing Education. It sponsors workshops, offers free career counseling and disseminates career information to adults who do not fit the standard student mold, Dan Jones, ALCR counselor, said. VIANIAN McCOY, ALRC director, estimated the number reached approximately 5,000 people. The career counseling center operates much like University counseling for students, Jones said, except that it is geared toward people "outside the educational mainstream." Those students, who make up 16th and Oread streets, may come in for individual counseling as often as they wish, free of charge. Jones said the center conducted professional and public workshops and seminars for people who were re-entering the job market or entering it for the first time. Workshops for displaced homemakers are free for individuals who meet the criteria for the workshop. Displaced homemakers are those who are forced by circumstances to enter the job market for the first time or to re-enter it after a long absence. Jones said. to $35 and deals with problems faced by individuals every day. They do not offer college The workshops vary in cost and length. Professional workshops give continuing education college credit upon completion and may cost as much as $70 a person. Public workshops such as "Couple Communication" and "Overcoming Shorthair" cost up In addition, ALRC does in-house workshops in which the center is hired as a consultant by a private firm. ALRC also maintains a career information resource library at the center that has information from schools and organizations all over the country. Jones said. Information about workshops can be obtained by calling the center at 864-4794. THE CENTER DEALS only in career counseling, and its services are staffed by certified therapists. Jones is also the director of a toll-free information hotline called FIRST line. The name is an acronym meaning For Information and Referral Service Toll-free. McCoy said that although ALRC received part of its funding from the state, the center provided 57 percent of its own funding through workshop fees and the sale of manuals on workshops. Anyone in the state can call the FIRST line number, 1-400-532-6772 between noon and 5 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and get information not only about where to receive training for a job field, but also on the prospects for employment, possible salary and other information. Studer. SAVE UP TO 75% Student Room-Size REMNANTS Over 1000 Choices bud JENNING'S CARPETS AND SONS SAVE OUT TO 75% 29th & Iowa • Use Your "People Book" CARPETS Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CAR RENTAL ■ EURALL PASSES ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 843-1211 EXILE Guaranteed Used LPs $2.75 We Carry A large Selection of Rock, T-Shirts, Posters, and Buttons. Also Smoking Accessories. We Buy and Sell LPs 15 West 9th 842-3059 EXILE VIN Meisner Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. 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THE HUDDLE Saturday Specials Pina Colada ...$1.00 ...$1.00 Strawberry Daiquiri ...$1.00 Margarita ... $1.00 cuddle at Mon.-Thurs. - drinks 50c off THE HIDDLE NEW MEMBERS ALWAYS WELCOME! Fri. - drinks ½ price, plus free nachos! HAPPY HOUR - 4-7 p.m. 2408 IOWA (formerly Mother's) Pregame HAPPY HOUR: 11:00 am Bring Your Parents to GAMMONS! $1.00 drinks (screw drivers & bloody mary's included) $ .50 draws $1.00 wine BROWN BAG IT to the game Gammons' Super Sandwiches (Your choice of Roast Beef, Turkey or Ham & an apple) Only $3.00 Only $3.00 Avoid the traffic & parking hassles— come to the game with us! GAMMONS' EXPRESS: Round trip only $1.00! Postgame HAPPY HOUR (tl 7:30 pm) Hot Hors d'oeuvres! $1.00 cover—$1.00 drinks $1.00 wine — $ .50 draws 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS GAMMONS Entertainment Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 THE BEATLES RING C. A. L. TOP: He's called Ranking Roger—no doubt not the name his mother gave him—and he can sing and dance up a reggae wave storm as a lead singer of the English Beat. LEFT? "His his band number." ABOVE? If nothing else, the Beat certainly has the oldest member of any pop band today. They call him Saxo. His age is unknown, but most estimate he's in his 50s. A Jamaican by birth, he's a cobbler by trade. "He's," said bassist David Steel, "an amazing saxophon player." Ska seeks foothold in uninitiated U.S. In England, there is no seating at most shows the English Beat and the other so-called ska band. By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Writer Simply, most everyone dances. Indeed, it's hard to keep yourself from dancing to the upbeat rhythms. The Beat, for instance, fuses English new wave, Jamaican reggae and basic pop. The reaction is lively, quick, fun and energetic. That's why last Friday night seemed so strange. The Beat, whose debut album soared to number one on the English charts a few weeks back, were into their third song and the small Uptown Theatre dance floor was still deserted. it's the fourth date of the band's first U.S. tour—they're currently opening for the Pretenders—and the crowd was typical. One couple finally moved onto the stage and followed. And before long a dozen or so couples were bounding around in front of the stage. BUT STILL, all the crowd sat comfortably at tables, drinking beer or sipping mixed drinks. It was the same scene two nights earlier in Chicago. Beat members said. "I's almost frightening." Beat guitarist David Wakeling said after the band's set, as the bass from the opening of the Pretenders show run winding up on its way in, used to having anyone sitting down at our girls. Added lead singer Ranking Roger. "This is no mess to me. We're used to having 2,000 people." America's reaction to the Beat, the band members admitted, has taken a little getting used to. Like two weeks ago, during their first concert in 1985, they presented the Pretenders at the Music Hall in Cleveland. "The security people wouldn't even let 'em," said Beat keyboardist Dave Blockhead through a thick Birchham accent. "They've always got to stay aware of safety, or fire codes. I think it's analling. One nanced the entire show. Not to the Beat. Not to the Pretenders. "American audiences—it's like they're watching television. They just sit there, arms folded. Occasionally, they'll turn to their neighbor, or nod. I feel sorry for them." A COPY OF the Oct. 2 Rolling Stone—Robert Redford on the cover—sat on an empty chair in the Beat's fourth floor dressing room. The magazine was opened to the Top 100 album "I don't think you'll find us on there," Brennan said to a member of the band's crew who bestowed it on her. He was right. The band's first album, "I Just Can't Stop It," has sold only 2,000 copies in this country, according to Sire Records. In fact, it's hard to even find the album here. Here they're unknown. in england, meanwhile, the album has sold nearly 150,000 copies and continues to sit high in the charts. Last month, the Best was featured on The New York Express, England's largest music weekly. "You know, one of the members of our road crew said we ought to put a sign up on stage during our gigs." Blockhead said. "All the time we're coming up and asking him, Who are these guys?" But the Beat (officially the English Beat in the U.S. because of a band of the same name in California) is only one of a half-dozen or so bands that have been given the ska label. In fact, they're late-comers to the ska revival that first hit 18 months ago. THE SPECIALS, Madness, Selecter, UB40, the Members, likewise struggled to reach the country. Madness "One Step Beyond" has sold five times as well in England as it has in the United States. Similarly, the debat by the Specials and Selecter's "Too Much Pressure" have been three times as successful elsewhere. UB40 and the Members are virtually unknown here. "The half of it is America's reluctance to have anything to do with reggae." Wakeling said, in between bites of a post-concert snack. "Bob Marley is hugely everywhere else." The differences don't end there, though. In fact, the latest Top 30 album charts from England and the United States show only four albums in common. "Europe, England and Japan always seem to be contemporary with each other musically," Wakeling said. "But in America, they can be up to four years behind and be very comfortable with the new wave of music, but the new wave was going to last. As far as I'm concerned, new wave started six years ago." "Plus the whole attitude is more complacent here. They have enough money to sit back and say ' entertain me.' it isn't that way in England. Everyone has cars here, for instance. But I'm 24 and I've never driven a car. There just isn't the raw edge here." But a second wave of ska is coming. Both the Specials and Madness are expected to release their second album within a month, Madness with "Absolutely" and the Specials with "Nightshade." The Selector's next album is due in January. The Beat will be in North America when the wave hits. They'll tour with the Pretenders until Sept. 28, before joining Talking Heads for several shows. Then they'll play solo dates on the radio in Canada. Whether the second wave will even make a ripple here is anyone's guess though. Dave Blockhead, for one, is skeptical. "I don't think ska or reggae will ever catch on here," he said. "I don't know why, I can't explain it, but that's just how I feel." Spare Time TODAY MUSIC: Limousine, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Myth, 8.45 p.m. at the Pladium Art Museum, G Lewis West Archival Goodwin, sculpture, and Bhaki Zikl, weaving, at the Lawrence Arts Center Colette Bangert, painting, and Vernon Brejcha, sculpture, at Kellas/TEF gallery "From Drawing to Sculpture: The Creative Process, and "The Americana Collection," at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art MOVIES: Rich Kids, 3:30 and 9:30 p.m. at the Pedora, 7 a.m. at the Union 2001: A Space Odyssey, midnight at the 2001: A Space Odyssey, midnight at the Union SATURDAY MUSIC: Riverrock, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Open House M.H. 8:45 p.m. at the Platium Spencer, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Jim Stringer, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Center THEATRE: "The Sword and the Stone," presented by the Seem to Be-Players, 1:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center MOVIES: Same listing as Friday SUNDAY MOVIES: The Ruling Class, 7:30 p.m. at the union TUESDAY MUSIC: Linda Maxey, marimba, Visiting Artists Series, 8 p.m. at Swarthout Reception Hall MOVIES: Lawrence of Arabia, 7:30 p.m. at the Union MONDAY WEDNESDAY MUSIC: Lynch and McBee, 9 p.m. at the Law- rence Opera House Ruby Star, 9 p.m. at g.C. Loyd's West MOVIES: Women in Love, 7.30 p.m. at the Union THURSDAY THEATRE: "The Silver Whistle," presented by the Lawrence Community Theatre, 8 p.m. at 100 E. 7th Street. MOVIES: Sambiznaga, 7:30 p.m. at the Union Artisans resurrect Renaissance By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Two pages bowed low in deference and offered their cold drinks to quench their royal thirst. A small girl in a flowing dress edged closer to the couple, then paused. The sound of a madrigal hung in the air. *The King Henry VIII* she asked. the sound of a mad bagel ring in the air. "Are you King Henry VIII?" she asked. "If you say so, that's who I am," he said. "Are you King Henry III, who site asked If you say so, that's who I am," he said. At the four-year annual Kansas City Renaissance is what it seems to be and everything is like. "My responsibilities as king are to be benevolent, to make people feel comfortable and to be regular. We also play a king at last weekend." Also plays a king at a Kansas City dinner theater two nights a week. Actually, the wooded glen was on the Agricultural Hall of Fame grounds, near Bonner Springs. The dammel was a Kansas City sixth-grader and was a former teacher of dialects from Tennessee. Woolam was among 250 players who were hired to perform at the festival last week and for the next five weekends. There also were four assistant coaches, minstrels, comedians and would-be comedians. WOOLAM SAID he was afraid of being tweacost. "I think my days of kinging will soon be over," he said in his Tennessee draw. However, until the festival ends, Oct. 19, he had to cancel his wedding. He adjusted his wife and shipped back in June. On one outdoor stage, a man juggled and joked his way through a 16th century vauldeau act. "Someone tell me when you were born and I tell you something about yourself," he said. "Fifty-four," he said, "you're a big mouth who tries to stand out in cuids." AROUND THE CORNER, corner tellers and read palms and an acting troupe dragged volunteers from the audience to perform in plays, including "A Christmas Carol" and a After the show, the young actors recited a hat and passed a hat through the randomly thinned audience. AT THE OTHER end of the six-acre grounds, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Fulcher cat in a patch of shade and also tried to rest. The Fulchers had left their Fort Scott school at 6:30 a.m. so their daughter Alana would be on time for her first performance with a festival dance troupe. Until the festival ends, the family will make about four trips to the Kansas City area every week. Someday, Alana wants to be a dancer on Broadway, Mrs. Fulcher explained. Mr. Pulcher lay down on a hay bale with one foot trailing in the dust. He said he wouldn't complain about the trips. "I'm not supposed to use bad language," he said. "No, really, I don't mind the driving—what else is there besides your kids?" After Alana had danced, a few spectators gathered to watch the dapped birds of prey in the falconer's ring while others wandered toward the booth boots. In other booths, about 100 craftsmans from 11 states sold their wares. Pottery, hand-woven shawls, garlands of flowers, paintings and milleageggs were all ready for the taking—for a prick. ALONG THE straw-covered walkway, dishes from several different countries were sold, including baklava from Greece, Scotch whiskey and cured meats, quiche and sarmagnets called pizza-on-a-stick. "Ye Olde Master Charge and Visa accepted," a wooden sign read. At the Renaissance festival, prices were decidedly higher than those of the 16th century. Hand-painted Ukrainian eggs cost from $5 to $10 and square egg cost from $7 to $12. The garlandin and the roses are aged about $8. THE FESTIVAL iS a benefit, however, for the Kansas City Art Institute, and profits from garland sales go to Children's Mercy Hospital, Parks and Co. the firm that promotes the festival. As he spoke, two knights were engaged in a mortal-mortal-combat in an arena 15 feet away. "Dow, they look just like Luke Skywalker and Dov, they murmured a woman in the audience. The knights in question were members of the Society for Creative Anachronism, a group founded in 1927. IN OCTOBER, when the festival ends, the knights will sheath their swords, the artisans will dismantle their boots and the acting troupes will move on to the next fair. Parks said the haystrew grounds would be raked and returned to order. The Renaissance Festival will run for the next five weekends. Ticket prices are: advance, $25; regular admission, $40; children (5-12) $1.50; and adult gate admission ($5.75. Children under five are admitted free.) [Image of a warrior wearing a helmet with a plume.] ROBERT POOLER/Pearson stuff A beilegued knight takes a breather before the next grueling walk in the Renaissance Festival. --- University Daily Kansan, September 19. 1980 Page 7 when theurs untilads fors onthe secondanyone's catch on explain /Kansan staff oust at the THE WORK OF HIS MEMORIES Halfway between studying and daydreaming, Vanessa Verkade, Plymouth, Mass., sophomore, spends some spare time between classes relaxing on a bench in front of Watson Library. Travel budgets for men's non-revenue sports are failing to keep up with skyrocketing travel costs, but the basketball, continue to fly high. Travel cut for some sports By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter Although non-revenue sports took a travel allowance cut, football and basketball allowances showed increases of 44 and 48 percent respectively, according to KU Athletic Corporation budgets. The cuts in non-revenue travel funding were not necessarily made to take from non-revenue sports and add to revenue sports, said Susan Wachter, athletic business manager. But, she said, because revenues from football and basketball help pay for other sports, they are given highest priority. Last year, a sharp increase in air forces forced the football and basketball programs to exceed their travel demands. But that this year's funding increases would be enough to keep the teams from exceeding their budgets. "We looked at what money was we had and we budgeted it the best way we could." "Wash, I don't mind," she said. THE FOOTBALL TEAM was budgeted $173,100 for travel last year but spent $130,207. Basketball spend percent more than the $44,000 budgeted. According to Walter Houk of Maupitour Travel Service, 900 Massachusetts teachers threw the football team, have gone up 15 to 20 percent in the last year. The basketball team takes regularly scheduled flights, which have increased Some of the increase for football was caused by an expanded road schedule this year, said Wachter. The 1980-81 season had no games games. Last year the team played five. No cuts have been planned in either the quality of player accommodations or the number of people traveling to awa games this year. Wachter said. For last week's Oregon football game, 60 players, the non-conference limit, made the trip. For Big Eight迎战 games, the limit is 55 players. ONLY FOOTBALL AND basketball travel are arranged through the team center and after. For non-revenue sports, the coaches make the travel arrangements. "It's up to the coaches as long as they stay within their budgets," she said. Largely because of the increase in travel costs for revenue sports, the other men's sports financed by KUAC face reduced travel budget this year. To compensate, the track team will send fewer athletes to some out-of-town meets, said Roger Bowen, assistant track coach. The team's travel budget fell from $21,818 in 1979-80 to $15,185 for 1980-81. The tennis team saw its travel budget drop from $1,500 to $3,600. Tennis Coach Randy McGrath said, "We're really conscious of the budget cut. We'll try to play at home as much as possible during the fall season." Baseball coach Floyd Temple he said did not anticipate cutting his schedule. He would rather try to utilize other areas of his budget for travel, he said. BY CUTTING BACK in the fall, the team should be able to travel more in the spring. McGrath said. The Big conference tennis season is in the spring. The baseball travel budget dropped from $7,750 to $4,450. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" "It's unfortunate that the budget cuts had to be made," Temple said. Not long ago a policeman said to the writer, "You better keep your eye on these kids, some of them will kill you." We quoted from a letter from a lady who wrote, "I know we have a problem with our children, and also have some of the meanest that ever lived, all about..." Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Often in recent times we have heard of wholesale killings with the explanation:"I don't know why I did it!" The following might throw some light on the matter: Dante, in *Inferno*, had a spell that allowed him to down there whom he knew to be alive on earth. The "Shade" explained to him that sometimes when a man got extra low down and vile and mean his soul is carried down to earth by someone else, his possession of his body and animates it on earth until its time has run its course — a demon takes its place in a body that walks, and sleeps and drinks, and puts on its wizard's mask, killing, raping, and promoting the devil's business. From the following news items it appears these folks knew what they were talking about. A recent paper told of some young people in a car shooting others in another car. On one morning we read of a teenager killing another one with a knife! And about the day before we were treated with a story of a boy going to a closet to get a tool to do some work for his father, but instead of getting an idea about what he was reported that he said he did not know why he did it! Did you ever hear one ask the question: "Why don't God kill the devil?" Reckon someone sometimes God answers questions like this? How much harm does he not to help? To resist the devil and Give no way to My Word, Have I not given you plenty of commands in My Word, pointing out circumstances and details, and the pervious examples? What happens if you don't have the devil 'abide with you always, even unto the end'! The writer recalls reading when a boy about a farmer shooting a boy he found up in his cherry tree. I suppose the reason I remember it so well is on account of how it frightened me — maybe not having enough scruples to keep me from doing the same thing if I was sure of getting by with it! In those days one no blemished the farmer, and no one sympathized with the boy to the extent of excusing or being punished. But you never again can hear God Almighty speaking in His Word about as follows: "Strike crime hard, that others may hear, and fear, and no more such evil!" True Christianity in warfare. When The Sword is drawn, The Sword of the Spirit, and used somebody is going to get the Sword of the Spirit. But if you get wounded the Lord will come with "Healing in His Wings!" Sometimes the Sword of the Spirit puts a "material steel sword" in the hands of some to keep Isaac from being hurt, because that there should be disorder and confusion here below! P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 Bass Bass royal college shop 837 Mass. Mon-Sat 10-6 Bent 843-4255 Take Advantage of Mr. Stoak's Student Special It's not your basic beef patty on a sesame seed bun. TROTTED STEAK 10% off lunch and dinner (for regular priced items only) Present current student ID to waitress. offer expires 9/30/80 We serve only USDA choice beef naturally aged with no chemicals. Or try our quality seafood. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas Mr. Steak 841-3454 You can't cut quality when your reputation is at steak. Gabriel's $1.99All The Pizza You Can Eat Football Buffet $2.99 All The Pizza You Can Eat plus a hearty bowl of soup, a salad from the Garden of Eatin' and a sixteen ounce soft drink. Every Home Football Game 11:00 am until kickoff 2449 Iowa in the Holiday Plaza Carry-out and Delivery 842-5824 GOOD LUCK JAYHAWKS! Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Education bill advances to Senate By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter The U.S. House of Representatives swallowed its pride, tightened its belt and passed a conference committee report yesterday that would reauthorize most higher education programs through the 1985-86 academic year. The Senate will vote on it tomorrow. The report is a modified version of a similar report that was approved by the House two weeks ago, sent to the Senate and defeated by two votes, then tabled. The House was criticized for fiscal irresponsibility by members of the Senate, including Sen. Nancy Pelosi,man, who voted against his first report. The original House version of the bill cost $2 billion more for the first year than the Senate had proposed, and $13 billion more for the life of the bill. It was up to the House to compromise and the bill, Kassbeau said at the time. THE CONFERENCE COMMITTEE. a combination of House and Senate members, discussed the report and worked out another compromise. The House agreed to slice $500 million from the cost of the bill, approved by a voice vote last night, and sent it to the Senate for final approval. According to Kassebaum, the final approval will come tomorrow. "This version is more responsible than the original conference report and a document of favor of it." Kassebaum said last night from her office in Washington, D.C. "I still believe the Senate version was a solid piece of legislation, but as I understand it, the costs in the new report are reduced somewhat." Kassaebu said she was optimistic about the chances of the report gaining approval in the Senate, despite the fact that the Senate had previously higher than the Senate version. "We probably will pass it," Kassebaum said. "It's an election year and all the representatives are running for office this year. It is hard to be responsible when you are running for re-election." chance to study the new conference report, Kassaebaum said the House had made a concession regarding the raising of student loan interest rates. Although she said she had not had a AMONG THE 10 MAJOR provisions of the original report was the creation of a new government-backed education loan program for parents and the raising of loan limits and interest rates on student loans. Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., voted in favor of the original report, and was expected to support the new version of the report, aides said yesterday. Also passed by the House yesterday was an appropriations request from the Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Education. The request, in turn, was made for Hesault year 1981, originally included a cut in the Student Financial Assistance program. The program is operating this year on a $3.4 billion budget. The White House request would have cut that to $3.1 billion. The House amended that request in the appropriations committee to $3.3 billion. REP. LARRY WINN, R-Kan., of the 3rd District voted in favor of the appropriation, according to Winn aides. Campus reaction to the appropriation was mixed. Evans said he had been in contact with Dole's office in Washington, and was concerned about passage of the bill that would raise the Immigration Act and the student loan program. "It really bothers me that they would cut the program like that because I know that it is liable to keep someone from being able to go to school," said Jeff Evans, campus director of the Associated Students of Kansas. It is still unclear the kind of effect at $100 million cut will have on individual students. Neither Kasebauem nor Evans was sure, and Jeff Weinberg, a professor at the University of Kansas, was unfamiliar with the specifics of the legislation. "We would have to study the legislation before we could react to it," Weinberg said. The Senate will vote on the ap- proposal next week, Kasbaheim sai- sme. BOBBY BELL'S BAR·B·QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING $2.49...GET A FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAR-B-QUE BEEF AND GRATED SLAW PILED HIGH ON A GOLDEN SERVER WITH FRENCH FRIES! 2214 YALE ST. DEKALO UNIVERSITY STATE UNIVERSITY VALUABLE COUPON ZERCHER PHOTO Jayhawk Souvenirs Featuring: - KU Mugs & Glasses Eagle - KU Stickers - KU Pencils - KU Digital Clocks with date & time - with date & time - KU Cards REMEMBER—Saturday is Parents' Day; so, bring them to Zercher after the game. HILLCREST ZERCHER DOWNTOWN 919 IOWA PHOTO 1107 MASS. THIS WEEKEND FRIDAY Limousine FRIDAY Limousine Cheap Pitchers And Drinks 8-9 SATURDAY $ 2.50 General Adm. $2.00 Club Members RIVERROCK WED. SEPT. 24th - APE-MAN PARTY Starring THE LYNCH & McBEE BAND No Cover & Drink And Beer Specials. Cheap Pitchers And Drinks 8-9 $2.50 General Adm. $2.00 Club Members $5.50 Advanced Tickets Available at Kofr A Better Daya, And The 7th Club Shop JOHN HARTFORD with ALLEN WEISS COMING EVENTS 27 ALCHEMY 28 ULTRAVOX 30 ALLEN GINSBERG THE THIRD BAND THE TWELFTH BAND 2 ELVIN BISHOP 3&4 THE SECRETS September October November 2 SPLIT ENZ 16 CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN I SLEEP WITH THE BEST Sale on Bookcase headboard Waterbed only! $399.00 Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House CARRITT HOUSE Ongoing sale on sheets & bedspreads starting at $179.95 Complete waterbeds WESTERN WORLD WATERBEDS 8th & Kavold Lawrence, Rc. MIND (816) 252-8318 (913) 383-1432 Women's Health FROM 2 to 9 P.M. WORKSHOPS Do you use the full potential of your mind? Of course not! Psychologists agree that even Albert Einstein and Thomas Edison used no more than 10% of their minds a potential. You should use at least 90% of their mind that is seldom used. Mind Potential Workshops teach you the latest techniques to communicate with your subconscious mind for immediate benefit. MASTERCARD AND VISA ARE WELCOME. - LEARN FASTER * REMEMBER MORE * REDUCE STRESS * * OVERCOME SHYNESS * CONTROL HABITS * * REMOVE PHORIAS * In a single exciting day you will learn a simple 30 second method to achieve total mindbody relaxation. You will also learn to use creative visualization and related techniques to improve your performance in almost every aspect of your life. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Individual instruction will be available for anyone requiring special help. LAWRENCE RAMADA1NN 2222 WEST 6th ENROLL AT THE DOOR FROM 1 to 2 P.M. DINNER BREAK 5-6 P.M. REGULAR TUITION $36.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT $24.00 MIND POTENTIAL WORKSHOPS, DIVISION TSP CORP. O. Box 424, INDEPENDENCE, M6 04501 SNA FILMS Presents BEFORE "STAR WARS" THERE WAS... AND THERE WILL ALWAYS BE STANLEY KUBRICK'S 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY KEIER JULIER+ GARY LOCKWOOD+ STANLEY KUBRICK + ARTHUR C CLARKE+ STANLEY KUBRICK - IN SUPER PAMUSONIX + METHOLOGRIC MGM FILMS CORPORATED o Friday and Saturday, Sept. 19-20 $2.00 12:00 Midnight Woodruff Auditorium—No Refreshments Allowed Fatsos find big bucks faster than thin people Thin is in, but fat is where it's at, according to a study done by KU assistant professor of business, Bob Winterstein. The boss at the business business gets the father paycheck. McLean and his co-author, Marilyn Moon, assistant professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, found that "large size in mature men may generate a non-verbal signal of power, strength, or capability Japanese diplomat to speak Monday The Japanese ambassador to the United States, Yoshio Okawara, will lecture on U.S.-Japanese relations at 8 noon in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is the first in KU's 1980-81 University Lecture Series. Okawara was a diplomat to the United Kingdom, Australia and the Philippines before being named to his current post in April 1980. He graduated from Tokyo University Law School in 1942. which commands respect from coworkers and empowers." save this Ad EACH YEAR OF education adds about 13 cents to average hourly earnings, but obese businessmen may be receiving up to 33 cents more per hour just because of their size, according to McLean and Moon. Their study of 2,356 men between the ages of 51 and 65 was recently published in the American Journal of Public Health. McLean and Moon used data from a 1973 National Longitudinal Survey and weight measures based on insurance data to calculate weighted weights for men of varying heights. McLean and Moon found there was no decrease in wages due to obesity. Instant Ca$h Their results contradict a 1974 study by Robert Half Personnel Agencies that found overweight executives are more likely to excess weight during their careers. "We really don't want to give the impression that we want people to gain weight. The wage gains are small and vastly outweighed by the risks of obesity." Highest paid prices for gold items marked 10K-14K-18K-22K Class rings, wedding bands, old jewelry, etc. (no plated items) Paying up to $150 for very lg. class rings save this Ad Holiday Inn - 59 Hiway 1 pm to 7 pm GOLD BUYERS this Sunday only Check at Desk for Room this Sunday only STEP BACK INTO OUR 19TH CENTURY SALOON - SPECIAL DRINK PRICES! FREE BUS TO AND FROM EVERY KU HOME FOOTBALL GAME •BUSES LEAVE AT 1:00p.m. •BAR OPENS AT 10:00a.m. SGT PRESTONS OF THE NORTH BAR & RESTAURANT 815 NEW HAMPSHIRE MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE Thurs. Sept. 25 THE HIDING PLACE The story of a family's love for the Jews in their darkest hour. 7 two Union Gayhawk Room Sat. Sept. 27 Fri. Sept. 26 7 den Union Youthhool Room the CROSS and the SWITCHBLade They thought they were tough until the stranger faced them with a book. THE BLADE JULY 1976 The Public Library of Columbia University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois A story of Jesus sun and old by Johnny Cash THE GOSPEL ROAD A WORSHIP SHOW FROM THE PUBLIC LIBRARY 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room Mon. Sept. 29 THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 1972 MARK TWAIN 7 pm Union Jenkauk Room University Dally Kansan, September 19, 1980 Page 9 'Devil' preaches love, not insults By PAM HOWARD Staff Reporter After creeping into casual student conversation a few days ago, religion remains a topic of frequent discussion at KU. The arrival of evangelist Cindy Lasseter on Monday helped revive the student interest that left with evangelist Jed Smock two weeks A man who gave several names, including Lester Baker Who? appeared before Lasseter's crowd yesterday afternoon in a devil suit. He complained that she was trying to teach by using hate. He wanted to show that there was another way to get a point across. Who?, who said he was a minister's son, said Lasseter did not talk about relating to fellow men. Who? said that Wednesday Lasseter had insulted a woman and some of his friends who had long hair. Christianity should be taught by showing love, not by throwing insults, he said. Who? who, claimed to have a good knowledge of the Bible, said that Lasseter manipulated the scripts. He said he feared that others would believe him knowedgeable about the Bible's details might be converted by fear. Who? complained that Lasseter could not even agree with the other Christians in the crowd. "Christians should at least respect other Christians," Who? said. The Rev. Jack Eberner, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, Inc., at KU, was one of the listeners yesterday afternoon. Theremer said Lasseter, who counted herself among the saved and the others as damned, did not teach traditional Christian thought. He said Christian faith taught that there was both good and bad in people. Bremer said there was no doubt that she believed in what she did. "Cindy has been a catalyst for people coming to grip with what they believe," said the Rev. Peter Casperian, chaplain from Canterbury House, the KU Episcopal organization. Casperian said that she tended to emphasize the bad news and did not mention the good news of love and forgiveness. The Rev. Bob Duvall, KU Maranatha Christian Ministry, said he was very pleased with what Lasseter did. He said the negative reactions that she drew from the crowd only showed that there was truth in what she said. Duvall said people did not like to change and so they ridiculed her and tried to discredit what she said. Doug Harwood, Lawrence junior, said that Lasseter was trying to get the Christian message across but that communication broke down in her room. He called himself a born again Christian, said he agreed with what she said. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS *Part Store* 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 SPENCER'S MEN'S WEAR BIG & TALL Halliday Square 2917 S. Telegraph Ave. Topeka, Kansas 913-267-3104 Charcake Cutter 95th & Antich Overland Park, Ks 913-849-0707 Bucky's Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb. T Hamburger at regular price Get One Free One coupon per customer Bucky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 Bucky's Buy One Bucky's 1/4 lb. Hamburger at regular price Get One Free One coupon per customer Bucky's 1120 W. 9th Street MEN-WOMEN Get up to $2,000 for college. 100 Many Army Reserve units are offering a program called *Educational Opportunities*, in which they help pay for your education. If you're eligible, you can receive money for tuition and other educational expenses. You can also receive money for your education if you can concentrate more on teaching an education and less on getting an education. And as a Receiver, you learn a skill and start a career. With the local unit just 16 hour a month plus two skill with your local unit just 16 hour a month plus two interrupter your studies. And the pay will help with your other expenses. We've made sure about this Educational Assistance program we have about this Educational Assistance. One job description: find out more about this Educational Assistance Program Call Army Reserve Opportunities (913) 232-1877 Collect Meet Today's Army Reserve Lindley houses fossil museum Kamb said that the museum had existed officially for 20 years and that he had worked there since he was graduated 18 years ago. In the depths of Room 8, Lindley Hall, members of the Museum of Invertebrate Paleontology staff are classifying fossils. years ago so the third floor could be used for classrooms. "These aren't the most pleasant surroundings," he said. "I would much prefer to look out the window and see the sky." Mr. Houska dustblying across the parking lot. "I don't think I had any intentions or temptations," he said. "I was just deadly hungry to get a job." "I think most people aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't aware we "i think people most aren't awareness He said radiators hadn't been installed because the steam pipes were on the ceiling, but the museum now had radiators. He told me that heat radiators could be put on the ceiling. Kamb said he had always wanted to do museum work, and did not mind working in the basement, although it had good and bad points. He did not expect the job to last this long when he took it, Kamb said. Day after day, the small museum staff of two full-time curators and several students classifies and records collections of materials of ancient invertebrate fossils "It's a long, tedious process, but it's not a waste of time. I am able to use the material," Kambis said. "We don't have very many in- terruptions to our work here, as we did in the previous months." Kamb also has learned to live with brown recuse spiders and leaky pipes. BRING YOUR PARENTS A poster on one wall shows a morose chimpanzee with a caption that says, "If you look like this, you must be a curatorial assistant." "On the whole, it's not too bad. We've been there without heat. It got a little chilly." the species of a particular geographic resort. HE SAID ONE advantage of the basement was that it was away from the main traffic. In Lindley, the basement filled for the third floor of Lindley to the basement five "The sewer pipes occasionally will pring a leak, which causes some un- knowledge." PEOPLE USE THE museum's records, he said, if they want to examine members of a particular species or if they want to examine all TO LAWRENCE'S ONLY FAMILY STYLE SERVING RESTAURANT Country Inn Pork Chops (2 chops) Country Inn Cottage ALL DINNERS INCLUDE ALL YOU CAN EAT OF THE FOLLOWING: Homemade Mashed Potatoes, Chicken Gravy, Homemade Biscuit, Homespun Butter, Homemade Preserves, Bean Salad, Cole Sugar, Vegetable of the Day, Cheese and Potato Pie, Bacon, Chocolate Cream, Choice of Dessert; Homemade Cherry or Peach Pie, Hot Fudge Sundae, Sherbet. "A TRULY UNIQUE ATMOSPHERE & EXPERIENCE" Country Inn Chicken Dinners (4 pieces) Country Inn Chicken Fried Salad Bill of Fare 6. 50 Children 7-12 Adults Despite spiders, leaks, isolation and dust, the staff classifies roughly 70,000 to 100,000 specimens of brachiopods, invertebrates, and other invertebrates every year. $ ^\S 2.50 $ (Chicken & Chop) Lantern $ 1.50 $ (Chicken) Children Under 7 They learn to adjust to life in 8 Lindley. Having A Party, Kegger, or Picnic, Let Us Do The Cooking Having A Party, Kegger, or Picnic, Let Us Do The Cooking COUNTRY Inn 1350 N. 3rd 843-1431 I-70 KANSAS RIVER 6TH STREET Reservations Accepted And Lawrence Book Accepted KU1 HOURS MON.-THURS. 4-9 p.m. FRI.-SAT. 4-10 p.m. SUNDAY 11-8 p.m. PULCHABLE ATMOSPHERE. FOR PARENTS. DATES. OR JUST A BUNCH N 431 ntions bed nee KU11 HOURS MON. THURS. 4-9 p.m. FRI. SAT. 4-10 p.m. SUNDAY 11-8 p.m. JUST A BUNCH You've worked hard all week. So treat yourself to our Friday Flower Brunch, a brilight weekend, bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. --- TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now Carnations $4.50 Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass. 841-0600 Open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat 842-7030 RAMADA INN All You Can Eat Sunday Brunch 11:00AM-2:00PM -Salad Bar -Danish Pastry -Bacon and Sausage -Scrambled eggs -American Fries -London Broil -Fried Chicken -Deep Fried Fish -And much more 2222 W 6th -Salad Bar But only $3.95 with this coupon $3.00 with this coupon Good until October 5,1980 This coupon worth $1.00 off any adult portion "GONE WITH THE WIND" SUA FREE on Parents' Day Sat. Sept.20, 7:00pm Hoch Page 10 University Dally Kansan, September 19, 1980 Blind diner sues owner of eatery A Lawrence restaurant owner who refused to serve a blind woman because her guide dog accompanied her into his apartment, 30 in Douglas County District Court. Ed Roste, owner of the Atecx **I** Restaurant, 807 Vermont St., was charged with violating Kansas “'white cane law', which states that refusing to serve a blind person with a guide dog in a restaurant is an unclassified misdemeanor punishable by 30 days in ail. a 500 fine or both. Ann Byington, 32, Topeka, filed a complaint with Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, after restaurant employees told her that dogs were not allowed in the building and improved her table when she sat down. Rose said the dog was dirty and contended that he has the right to refuse service to any person with a dog in his restaurant. Byington said she produced an ID card that stated she was blind and had a trained guide dog. SNA FILMS Friday, Sept. 19 Rich Kids "Do you think it's easy sneaking in early enough so that my daughter won't know? It takes perceptive film, which convincingly tells the story to be asked. This story of middle-class directed with a sharp eye by Robert M. Wilson (who produced), with Jeremy Warnell Fedora (1978) Billy Wilder's latest film is a descendant of his Sunset Boulevard. Dawn-and-outdoor shots take place on the stage a comeback by luring the elusive, mysterious Fedora—obviously from The Game House From Thomas Tryon's "Crowded Heads," this is a complex, sinister film. With Martha Keller, Hildegene Knopf, and Jerry Larson, it closes Monday (114 min). Color: 7.00. (1968) 2001: A Space Odyssey in the last twelve years, man landed on the moon, Skylab fell, and Star Wars came out but Stanley Kubrick has only gained stature. The special effects are brilliant, but here for once they are secondary to the speculations on man's existence that make this a unique film experience. After again, (198) Color, 12:00 Midnight. Saturday, Sept. 20 Rich Kids 7:00 Fedora 3:30, 9:30 2001: A Space Odyssey 12:00 Midnight. Monday, Sept. 22 Lawrence of Arabia David Lean's epic for all of Freddie Young's Oscar-winning pains, dissolves and zooms, focuses on one man: T.E. Browne, the genius of Geraldianus, a man who translated the Iliad and fought alongside the Arabs. Peier O'Toole is brilliant as Lawrence and is known for his love of music. Hawkins, Omar Sharlil, Anthony Quayle, Claud Rains, Anthony Quinn and many more. Winner of seven Oscars including The Picture of 1982 (.622 min) Color: 7-30. Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Woodford Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50; Midnight films are $2.00; Tickets available at the SUA office, 4th level, information 844-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Senate rivals debate record By DAN TORCHIA Staff Writer State Sen. Arnold Berman, D-Lawrence, in a noontime debate at Green Hall yesterday, said his influence on various senate committees was the reason he sould be-elected. His Republican opponent, Jane Eldredge, disagreed, saying that Berman did not adequately represent Lawrence and that very little legislation introduced by him had been passed by the Legislature. The moon forum, sponsored by the Student Bar Association, was a chance for the crowd of about 70 people to view the contrasting styles and statements of the candidates. The candidates' presentations were as different as their remarks. Berman spoke in thundering tones and often took several minutes to describe the events. Edridge were more quiet and usually answered in a few sentences. THREE PANELISTS asked Berman and Eldredge questions after they made their opening remarks. Speaking first, Berman described "If we know how we want to represent the district, that is, with vigoriness and effectiveness, then the first resource is power," he said. "The power I have in the Senate is the power I have in the committee assignments." the way he thought the Legislature worked. He said the belief that any kind of power was bad was nonsense. As party caucus chairman, Berman is the third-ranking Democrat in the Kansas Senate. He is also a member of several committees, including Ways and Means, Natural Resources and Energy. Of the 20 bills he has sponsored, she said, only one has been enacted into law, showing a 5 percent rate of effectiveness in sponsored bills. Eldredge disagreed with Berman's statements, saying that his lack of effectiveness was apparent in the number of bills sponsored and co-sponsored by him that had been passed by the Senate. Berman co-sponsored 31 bills, she said, and five were enacted, showing a 16 percent rate of effectiveness. SHE ALSO SAID Berman had broken several promises made during his 1976 campaign, including the establishment of matching letters and newsletters to constituents. "I haven't read any newspapers or been invited to any meetings," Eldridge said. "A person can't represent people when he does not spend time in the community. I cannot be a part of this community." Berman said one of the ac-complishments he was proud of was the Legislature's ability to reduce failures without reducing state services. One of the disappointments of his senate term, he said, was the failure of the Legislature to address the problem of rising health costs. "My colleagues have refused to address the question, 'Are we going to rely on the federal government for funding... or are we going to take problem ourselves,'" he said. "I will continue to introduce legislation." ONE OF THE few things Berman and Eldred agreed on was the self-help amendment to the Landlord Tenant Act. Both support the amendment, which will help tenants need repairs, which landlords refuse to make. "I feel it is an appropriate addition," Eldridge said. "It will help people who live in marginal housing the most." U THE KANSAS UNION A Special Welcome to KU Parents! Join Us For A Day Planned Just For You! THE KANSAS UNION Early Arrivals: Parents and Students You're Invited to meet, informally, with KU Faculty and Staff at the University Reception. Coffee and Rolls will be served 10:00-11:30 A.M. Main Union Lobby—Level 4 G. For Your Dining Pleasure, We now offer 2 Locations: Main Union Level 3 Level 3 The Dine 8:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Old Fashioned Sandwiches The Cafeteria 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Complete Meal Level 2 Level 2 The Hawk's Nest 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, Shakes and Frozen Yogurt. The Prairie Room 11:00-1:00 p.m. Table Service—at your leisure All New, Conveniently Located by Allen Field House. Free Parking and shuttle bus available* (35°), before and after the game. Level 2 The Pantry 10:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m. Snacks, Sandwiches, Desserts The Dell Shoppe 11:00 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Deli-Style Sandwiches, beverages including beer. plus Sunday Brunch Buffet 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Main Union, Prairie Room Level 2 Features entrees, salad bar, fresh baked pastries and desserts, plus juices and coffee—a very enjoyable meal. *Shuttle Bus Schedule: Continuous Service from Field House Parking Lot 10:30 a.m.-game time. Returns 4:00-5:15 p.m.* Main Union MUSEUM OF RUSSIA New Satellite Union Main Union Pharmacy practice problems and the effectiveness of over-the-counter drugs are two topics that will be discussed at the 24th University of Kansas fall pharmacy Continuing Education seminar series next week. Pharmacy subject of seminar The first of the six seminars will be Sunday at the Marcus Center for Continuing Education at Wichita State University. Other seminars will be Monday at the Student Union at Barton County Community College, Great Bend; Tuesday at the Saint Catherine Hospital, Garden City; Wednesday at the Ramada Inn, Hays; Thursday at the Salina Hilton Inn; and next Friday in the Kansas Union. Registration for the five-hour seminars, which are sponsored by the KU School of Pharmacy, the Division of Continuing Education and the Kansas Pharmacists Association, will begin at 10 a.m. of the seminar at the scheduel location. Pharmacists have an important role in matching medicine with patients' symptoms, said Jere Maitchett, director of KU pharmacy Continuing Education. Case studies focusing on product composition and pain treatment will be discussed at the seminars, in addition to a discussion of the effectiveness of food drugs and abuse of the food and Drug Administration is now reviewing. The seminars also will help Kansas pharmacists meet the 10-hour continuing education requirement necessary for license renewal. South Africa debate planned A debate on whether the Kansas University Endowment Association has funds in funding of South Africa is in the governor's opinion of the Student Senate's rights committee. At the committee meeting last night in the Kansas Union, Jim Borelli, committee co-chairman, said he was in process to appoint speakers for a forum on divestiture. of the South African consulate and Dennis Brutus, Northwestern University professor and former South African political prisoner, to debate. The issue would be debated only from an economic standpoint, Borelli said, because most ADU students agreed with the proposal. Borelli said he hoped to get a member The debate is planned for Oct. 30, Borelli said, so that current student senators can pass a resolution on the issue before their terms expire. Adjournments for the committee will be made at the committee's next meeting on Oct. 1. In other action, a sub-committee was established to prepare a recommendation on the University banner and attempt to Acting Chancellor Del Shankel. That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4th a page KINKO'S And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. No brag. just fact. 904 Vermont 843-8019 8-8 Mon-Thur 10-5 Sat 8-6 Fri 12-5 Sun Liberal Religion is Dead! Sunday-Sept.28 U.U. General Assembly James Woelfel & Hildred Cyr Sunday-Sept. 21 "Cultureshock" Cindy Bodle Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Lawrence 10:00 am on Sundays South off Highway 59, Pleasant Valley Road For further information call 842-3339 No Say We! HAIR BENDERS CAROLINE FREEMAN We'll give you that new look you want Easy care styles for men & women Open Tues. Wed, Fri 9-5 Thurs. 10-6 Sat 9-2 842/9641 FREE BEER FIESTA! SEP. 19 CELEBRACION DE LA "INDEPENDENCIA" DE CENTRO MEXI HAIR BENDERS 24th & Iowa 8:00 PM - 1:00 AM SATELITE UNION PARTY ROOM TICKETS AT SUA AND SPANISH DEPARTMENT 3062 WESCOE $ 2.50 IN ADVANCE $ 3.50 AT THE DOOR Sun Stud being Speecl Michel yester SPONSORED BY LATIN AMERICA SOLIDARITY CH SOLIDARITY By VA Staff R som proble have said. mayh combi Abor proble hearin Hawor assist It is staff a neighb FEW language speeec Som are go or foo call th "Fo of a r you h said. don't langu Pladium Why Play At The Pladium? ★ Your Parents Get Their First Draw Free ★ Your Parents Play The Game Room **Free** ★ Music From The 50's Through The 80's (4-6 PM Only) This Week Featuring MYTH Friday And Saturday Night 901 Mississippi 841-4600 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Page 11 Clinic aids inarticulate, deaf By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Students who have trouble hearing or be heard may find help at KU's Speech and Hearing Clinic, Lorraine the clinic's director, said yesterday. About 40 clients, age 2 to 60, with problems in speech, language and bearing are treated at the clinic, 209 students of student assistance, 121 Strong. It is open to KU students, faculty and staff and to residents of Lawrence and Brooklyn. Some clients treated for speech problems stutter, articulate poorly or have very loud or soft voices. Michel said. Those with language problems may have trouble with vocabulary or in combining words to form sentences. "For example, if you look at a picture of a rabbit and say, that's a wabbit, you have a speech problem." Michel said. "If you look at the picture and don't have any words for it, you have a language problem." Few COLLEGE students have problems with speech, but speech is more common. Some students find that their voices are gravelly or very soft after concerts or football games, Michel said. Others call the clinic for help if they think their speech could inhibit their careers or if they simnlv cannot be understood. Before new clients are assigned to group or individual therapy, their articulation, speech, language and hearing are evaluated. After evaluation, the clinic fits one or weekly sessions around the clients' site, subsequently Treatment can last the rest of the semester, the rest of the year or until the problem is solved. Michel said. The first step is to determine the name and the number of their dependents. THE MAXIMUM student fee of $7 per session is only half the maximum fee "It was our choice to lower our fee for students, because we want to be accessible to them," she said. "No one is turned away because of a lack of The clinic is funded by the department of speech and drama and is not supported by student fees, she said. Speech pathology and audiology graduate and undergraduates, who are supervised by certified speech-language pathologists and audiologists, staff the clinic. Students who have hearing problems, can be evaluated at the clinic, also can be evaluated at the clinic. At the clinic, students can have their hearing tested by out hearing aids or earphones. "We've had students who call in and say, 'I know exactly what my problem is.'" Help for students with impaired hearing is also available at the office of state health officials. For those students, making a telephone call or taking class notes can be difficult, said Lorna Zimmer, director of student assistance. EVEN STUDENTS who can read lips have trouble understanding when they sit in the back seats of classrooms or if they are combined with new vocabulary, Michel said. In those cases, student assistance can ask professors to speak loudly and clearly or to reserve space near the desk for hearing problems. Zimmer said. This year, to stay in contact with deaf students, the office installed a telekeyboard. Cisco's special telephone system sends its printouts of telephone conversations. "The C-phone gives students with impaired hearing access to either student assistance or to the Information Desk." "A day," she said. "It's really a life-alone." This semester, there are three KU students who are deaf. There are schools for the deaf in Kansas, she said, but federal law requires that all public schools be made accessible to the handicapped. ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm FRI. & SAT. AT MIDNITE. MUST BE 18 OR OLDER All Students Enrolled In Courses offered By The College Of Liberal Arts&Sciences This Fall: UN-CUT YOU'LL DO MORE THAN CHEER FOR THIS DALLAS CHEELEADER! According to solidarity group literature, Latin American countries have had many successes in their struggles for national dignity and self-empowerment. THE BEST HOURS IN THE WORLD EVER SENNED X Debbie Deas ALLAS Should be advised that the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 timetable are the correct drop dates. DO NOT USE the drop dates listed in the fall 1980 addendum. For example, the solidarity group sent money to Nicaragua over a year ago when revolutionary groups in that country were fighting to overthrow former dictator Anastasio Somoza, she said. Neubeau said the group had done mostly educational work in the past, such as presenting slide shows, films and lectures about Latin America. Two films on El Salvador are scheduled for later this month. Latin American Solidarity is a group of KU students and Lawrence residents committed to educating people about the economic, political and social relationships in Latin American countries, Nugebaus said. Today, however, the forces of progressive change in the area have been hampered "by scarce resources, the hysteria of labeling and the insurgence inspired and the systematic imposition of military governments wed to a regime of violence that threatens all peace and progress," the material said. THE GROUP also has worked to mobilize support for Latin American peoples fighting against repressive governments, she said. Tuesday, Sept. 23, 1980 sponsors Local dance marks solidarity fete Student Union-Forum Room Foreign investors control much of the agriculture and industry in Latin American countries, Neugebauer said, and other companies do not own or control the benefits of the people. THE KU ACCOUNTING CLUB INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES "We serve a unique and very important function," she said. "We are the only organized Latin student group on campus." presented by Arthur Young & Co. 7:00 p.m. UNIVERSITY LECTURE SERIES PRESENTS Since 1821, however, the changing economic and political systems in many countries have prevented the establishment of stable democracies and "independence" as the United States knows it, she said. By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter 【名古屋市】 代表選挙前 [写真] THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Independence Day is celebrated Sept. 15 in most Central American countries, according to Rhonda Neugebauer, Lawrence graduate student and spokesman for Latin American Solidarity. Countries in Central America are celebrating a birthday this week, and the party will reach all the way to Lawrence. THAT PARTICULAR date is The countries of Central America are Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama, but Mexico, Brazil and Chile also celebrate their independence this week. The rights of national autonomy and self-determination are basic to the Latin American idea of independence, Neugebauer said. 8:00 P.M. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1980 FORUM ROOM KANSAS UNION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AMBASSADOR OF JAPAN TO THE UNITED STATES Staff Reporter disputable, however, because news of the liberation from Spain did not reach every country on the same day, she said. Latin American Solidarity, an affiliate of KU-Y, will observe Central American Independence Day by sponsoring a dance tonight in the Party Room of the Satellite Union. CO-SPONSORED BY THE CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES YOSHIO OKAWARA The dance, which will last from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m., is part of a performance of the ballet *Bending the end of Spanish conquest and colonization in Central America* in 1821. Your money in a Save Account Sn is like a NOW Account . . . NOW Smart Money in Lawrence, the smart money goes to the University. . . US University State Bank 9th and Iowa 26th and Iowa Member FDIC 23rd & Iowa Southwest Plaza 841-0187 SPOR SDESK GREEK FOOD Pizza coupon 23rd & Iowa OPEN $1.00 PITCHERS Good Every Football Weekend. OPEN Wateen monday Night Football on Our Giant 6 Ft. TV Screen & Drink All the Beer You Can for only $3.25! Monday nights 8-12P 11AM with purchase of pizza, gyros, or shish-kob! only $3.25! Monday nights, 8-12PM Maranatha Christian Center Bible Studies Tues. 7:00 pm Fri. 7:00 pm Jayhawk Room K11 1144 Rhode Island St. corner 12th & R.I. FALL FOR RECORD SAVINGS! THE BLUES BROTHERS Original Soundtrack Recording INCLUDES GUMME, SOME LOVIN' PETER GUNN MINNE THE MOOCHER SOUNDTRACK "THE BLUES BROTHERS" 一 THE ROLLING STONES "EMOTIONAL RESCUE" INCLUDES: DANCE (Part 1) SUMMER ROMANCE ALL ABOUT YOU! ROLLING STONES "EMOTIONAL RESCUE" GENESIS "DUKE" INCLUDES BEHIND THE LINES MISUNDERSTANDING TURN IT ON AGAIN GENESIS "DUKE" 599 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG.LIST 8.98 "Buy It Once. Enjoy It A Lifetime. Recorded Music Is Your Best Entertainment Value." Give the gift of music. STORE HOURS: 9-10 Daily 107 East Street 10-7 Sunday 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Good Through 9/21. MAKING A SUCCESSFUL LIFE Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Rapists' minds little understood by criminologists By ROB McNEELY Staff Reporter Three rapes have been reported in Lawrence in the last 18 days, the most recent one involving a KU student in her Jawahara Towers apartment. Rape is one of the most prevalent violent crimes in the United States, yet it is one of the least understood. Even if understood is the mind of the rapist. The first important element in understanding a rapist is to realize that rape is not a crime of passion or lust, according to Mary Stabb, co-director of the L.A. School for Rapists and Bape. Support Service, and Bape. Victim Psychiatric journals. Instead, rape is a crime of sexual deviance in which sex is used as the weapon, much as a gun is used by a robber. RAPE EXPERTS AGREE that all raps fall into three categories: power rape, anger rape and sadistic or anger-excitation rape. Power rape is the most common. It is premeditated, with a sexual relationship as the end and rape as the means. Stabb said a power rapist felt out of Stabb and immediately desperately wanted to take control of the situation. The power rapist has difficulty establishing personal relationships, according to psychological reports supplied by Stabb. He views rape not as a punishment, but as a means of establishing a personal relationship with a woman. A power rapist often fantasizes about have a sexual relationship with a Precautions against rape — - Always walk in pairs or in groups at night, never alone. - These precautions include; - Avoid poorly lit streets and sidewalks - **Keep a whistle or siren within easy grasp to attract attention in case of attack.** - Speak tersely or not at all to strangers - Carry keys in a fist to that they poke woman, and he fantasizes that the woman will be so overcome by his sexual prowess that she will enjoy the experience and ask him for more. out from between the fingers and can be used as a weapon. *Walk quickly and confidently, and always act as if you are headed for a seat.* POWER RAPISTS have been known to ask their victims for a date or ask them whether the experience was enjoyable. They also have been known - Keep doors of houses and apartments locked, even if you are at home. - Learn self-defense techniques and always be alert to the possibility of an attack. to ask victims questions about the ability to perform as a sexual partner The power rapist is looking for acceptance from his victim and expects to When confronted by a power rapist, a potential victim stands a better chance of talking him out of the rape than she does with other rapists. Stabb said assertiveness and a display of self-confidence was helpful in The next most frequent kind of rape is anger rage. Stabb said anger rage nearly always was committed on impulse. The rapist is angry about something in his life. He might have been fired from his job or have had a bitter dispute with his wife or a friend. The angry rapist views rape as a means of venting his anger rather than a sexually gratifying act. He often brutally beats his victim. Unlike the power rapist, the anger rapist derives little or no sexual pleasure from the rape. He often feels remorse after the rape, and tries to rationalize it by saying he was drunk or under the influence of other drugs. STABB SAID THE best device to use when confronted by an ange rapist was to remain calm and to nationally try to be a leader. A violent response to an anger rapist can be to be more violent and severely injure the victim. Stabb stressed, however, that each rape was different and must be handled so. She said that there was no pat formula for deterring a rapist and that the best advice for women is to follow their own instincts. The third category of rapists is he acclatic or anger-succinct rapist. It may be called a violent rapist. Stabb said little was known about what triggered the sadistic rapist. It is known that he derives a certain pleasure from hurting and punishing his victim, rather than from the sexual act itself. The known precautionary measures are the best prevention from a sadistic rapist. WALKING tall LADIES Boutique tall LADIES Boutique Junior & Misses SHOES 9 thru 12 All Widths Gage Shopping Center Huntoon & Gage Topson Ks. Z250 793-846-0210 Footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 Presenting (across from Greenbriar's Deli) ARE YOU ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF UNDERGRADS NATIONWIDE WHO WILL LEAVE COLLEGE THIS YEAR? The Untraditional Tradition President; Mike Dankwerth Vice-President; Randy Sands Secretary: Kim Parker Treasurer: Karen Matthews Today's Army may be able to help. Everyday, men and women are earning college credits part-time while being soldiers full-time. And the Army is paying up to 75% of their tuition for approved courses. Join the people who've joined the Army. An Equal Opportunity Employer Striving To Enhance K.U. Traditions Freshman Class Officers (913) 232-1877 Collect Also, many are contributing to a savings plan that will provide financial assistance for college following their first enlistment. Sound like the answer to your problems? Call Army Opportunities at We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts THAILAND CHRONICLE OF THE WORLD 2013 EA1LE 15. West 9th Home of the Aztec Calendar Aztec Inn Before or After the Game, Enjoy a Meal at the Aztec Inn. 842-3059 842-9455 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun. Closed Monday Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts." Edward and Naomi Roste invite you to stop in today. 807 Vermont PRE-FOOTBALL LUNCHEON Before the KU-Pittsburgh Game (Parents Day) Saturday, September 2011 a.m. to Klckoff St. Lawrence Center 1631 Crescent Road COME EAT, DRINK & BE MERRY A The newest look in America's oldest boots. FRYE Frye boots have been benchcrafted since 1863, which makes them America's oldest boots. Yet Frye's Classic, Western, and Casual styles look anything but old. In fact, boots like this are the very latest look in fashion. Probably because Frye boots wear their heritage so well. Available in Men's and Women's styles Arensberg's = Shoes O 819 Mass 843-3470 Village Inn PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT Village Inn Good Luck Hawks! Beat Pitt.! PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT Village Inn 821 Iowa See you after the game. Tired Of Waiting In Line At KU's Bars? Smedley Productions Want YOU to Drink-N-Drown After The Game At Entertainer Saturday, Sept. 20 from 8:00 pm to 12:30 pm Dancing Eagle 8th & Vermont ALL YOU CAN DRINK Guys & Gals— $3.00 donation V Bring Your Parents Only $1.00 By B Asso And—dance to the best DJ music in town! 841-8830 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Page 13 Wilson stars in KC victory By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor KANAS CITY, Mo.—There was a clear sky at Royals Stadium last night but the stars didn't come out for the California Angels. Three of them have been roasted on Friday, which is where they have been most of the season. The absence of those stars, Don Baylor, Dan Ford, and Brian Dawning, is one of the reasons why the Royals were able to coast to the Western Division title that they clinched Wednesday. Downing has played in only 20 games this season, Baylor 90 and Ford 60. The three sat out again last night, as did Rod Carew until the ninth, when he pinch hit. The Royals strode to a 5-2 victory behind Renie Martin, 9-9, who picked up his first victory since June 24. THE STAR OF the show, for the Royals was Willie Wilson. The fleet-footed left field stole his ball and then shot it with a glove. second iming. Wilson broke Ron LeFlore's American League record of 27 consecutive steals. Wilson has not been caught in his last 28 attempts. "I was happy to do it," said Wilson. "Last year I wanted it more, than this year but I was glad to The Royals had hade hits off four Angel pitchers and George Brett added two points and four plate appearances in his quest to become the American League's top hitter as well as a 36-hitter. Brett had two singles, walked and helped center to raise his batting average to .388. CALIFORNIA STARTED things in the first inning when Carney Landisford walked, stole second and scored on Jason Thompson's single to take a 1-0 lead. But the Royals stormed back in the bottom of the second when nine men came to the plate. Amos Olsen led off with a walk and Clint Hurdle drove out and forced the way to LaCoe's grounder to first after Jaime Quirk Wilson then singled to score Lullinks and prmply stole second on a pitch out to U.L. Washington. Practically before the crowd of 175, Wilson took off for third and made it easily. Martin, pitching because Rich Gale has a sore shoulder, said he hoped his performance would earn him a spot on the starting rotation for the playoffs. ripped a single up the middle. Rance Mullinicks to drive a meridian home and Quirk alpist past catcher Gavin Stuart. "I don't want to be a guy that just runs." Wilson said. "I want to go when the pitches are right and the count is in my favor. I just want to steal bases when the team needs them. Some guys go out and run to set records. I don't want to do that." "*MAYBE IF IT GOes to four, if it takes that long to kick the New York Yankees, I tails, I could get a start if I throw good between now and then." The shoulder is better and he might be able to pitch. AMERICAN LEAGUE Scorecard Major-league Baseball W L Pct. GB New York 93 53 .537 Baltimore 89 69 .537 Rodney 77 66 .538 Milwaukee 79 69 .538 Cleveland 74 71 .510 Detroit 74 72 .510 Toronto 72 94 .495 New York 8, Toronto 7, 13 innings, completion of suspended game x-cunched division title Yesterday's Games 1 toronto 2 new york 1 reguar game Milwaukee 0, Minnesota 1, 5th game Milwaukee 0, Minnesota 0, 2nd game Boston 0, Cleveland 1 NATIONAL LEAGUE | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | *Kansas City* | 91 | 68 | 50.1 | | | Oakland | 74 | 74 | 100.0 | 17% | | Texas | 71 | 75 | 488 | 19% | | Minnesota | 65 | 82 | 443 | 16% | | Chicago | 63 | 83 | 452 | 16% | | California | 59 | 86 | 407 | 31 | | Seattle | 53 | 86 | 363 | 37 | Boston 6 Cleveland 3 Baltimore 7 Detroit 3 Texas 10, Oakland 6 Chicago 5. Seattle 4 W W L Pro. GB Aontreal 19 7 56 Philadelphia 79 68 453 1% Philadelphia 79 68 453 1% St. Louis 68 80 452 15 St. Louis 68 80 452 15 New York 68 80 452 15 Chicago 68 80 452 15 Los Angeles W L Pet. GB Houston 84 63 658 1 Houston 83 63 588 1 Atlanta 77 88 237 1 San Francisco 77 88 237 1 San Francisco 69 84 473 1 Washington 64 83 473 10 Yesterday's Game Houston 10, Cincinnati 2 Atlanta 2, San Francisco 1 Los Angeles 7. San Diego 3 Yesterday's Games The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS CLASSIFIED RATES one twelve three four five six seven eight nine ten 18 words of word $2.30 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 $3.45 $3.65 $3.85 Each additional word $4.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS to run Monday Thursday p 5 m. Tuesday Friday p 8 m. Wednesday Monday p 12 m. Thursday Tuesday p 14 m. Friday Wednesday p 16 m. --- The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be blended in person or by mailw the Kawaian business office 841398 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT NOW FORMING The Kelley Hunt Fan 20-19 Love Kelley and the King 643-655 9-19 Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible Study, every Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Porsons A & B Union. The Salt Block. 10-28 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. tt What's the Deal? Lawrence's firebreathing 8 piece horn band. Watch out! You'll be amazed. 9-19 Looking for something new on Sunday? TRY THE CLUB LOUSING? Meet us at Clubs 129 Open from 2 p.m. 'til 3 a.m. Membership available: "Partying is our business." 9-30 Outdoor Rollerskating 1021 Mass. Tues- Thurs, 6:30 p.m.-12:00 p.m. 13th and IREad, Friday, 6:30 p.m-12:00 p.m. Sat, S and Sun, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Deposit-PIED. JD Blue Grass Jam every Wednesday night on the patio. Come listen to some of the best in the area or come play. Greens Tavern. 810 W. 23rd. 9-19 This week I'm bringin' it all back home. I don't mind. I am excited. A return engagement of solidly played visually exciting rock & roll on only cable 6:40 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 27 at 10:00 a.m. 9-19 FOR RENT 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renoting now. 1½ You'll like our luxurious Southern Parkway & courtyard on your property. For rent, nix apt. for men, next to campus. May work on part of rent of **res** Call 845-4185. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bedrooms, study, dining kitchen, dining rm. No pets. No nets. No pets. For more information call 842-4545 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 3 bdm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across from swimming pool and tennis courts. $400, man. 841-0553. tf 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tf Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing Near campus 2 Barm. admit, Comfortable for kids. 10:35 a.m.-12:45 p.m. 84-5121, 84-5170 after 6 p.m. 9-22 These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ garage with automatic opening, kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, coverings, all this and much for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4458.5 a.m.-5 p.m. New Roof Rentals + 6 apartments NW Ave 117.50 + 4 utilities Cadu Dig 841-2877 9-24 Villa Capri Apartments. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts. available. Central air, wall to wall carpet, quiet location, 2½ blocks south of the hotel. 945-973-8053 for 5.30 € an week on weekends. Perfect for 4 student Closet to bus route. Perfect for 8 student Closet to bus route. diplex, central air conditioning, all appliance schedules. 1. d&brm. for non-smoking and non-drinking. 2. d&brm. For information about Margarita 841-8376. 9. 9-19 KIMC duplexes—nowly refurbished 2 500 square feet, $197,000; new beautiful housing! Call 613-938-103. 10-3 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. 3 bedroom apt. with comfortable, comfortable, reasonably priced. Call 845-676-1090. For fall or spring, Nairnth Hall offers you a variety of programs, including that of an apartment. Good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room, laundry services, kitchen and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you are looking for, you can call Nairnth HALL, 1800 Nairnth Drive, 843-8529. It is Beautiful older home in heart of Lawrence, family / family 4, kitchen, dining rm, living rm library, utility rm, and 2 full room units. Free equipment for new formation call 842-1455 p.m. - 9:30 For rent to studenta 1 barm. ap.,itur. barm. ap.,itur + $125 + utilities at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 barm. basement with lots of windows at 1423 or $175 + electricity at 8175-7130 or $175 + electricity at 8175-7130 Apt. for, for rent Quiet Student, I. Inform. Arms, Furniture on city block 601 KU bin data. $75 per week. Maps & Directions available by calling (877) 254-3560. 2 bdmr, apt. fumished, $235 water paid, 10 a.m., bus route, 12:00 p.m., 614-8430 Office space at Area 3, $25 Mass. $59 mf, Ft. Office space at Area 1, $32 Mass. $69 mf, remodeling. All are conference rooms. Remodeling. All are conference rooms. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialties. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 841-909-5200. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 841-909-5200. WATERBED MATTRESSES 136-81, 3-year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 718. Mass 845. HALF PRICE New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic bedding. Furniture. 139 New York St. 84th. Washington Square. Musical Instruments. 1939 Gibson L-4 Miniature guitar with case with 6425, 1939 Nissin Upholstery Pince AIFWA AD 12600 Cassette Sleeve—almost new Adapter for the iPod. Demagnetize #4. Blank Maxell sleeve. All sleeves in box with $5 sct cord $8. Bench sleeve $9. Leather jacket brown, narrow lapels. $5. Leather jacket brown, narrow lapels. Westendmaxes, 2 bdrm. Home on top Westendmaxes Condo, 2 bdram. Central central air, microwave, raincoat, cdip, wallpapers, private curtain, curtain pool, wallpapers priv., private patio. $44,600 | $18.79 | Reza or 841-1833 | 841-1833 Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale! Makes sense to use them*1. An study makes it more difficult to prepare for the exam preparation. "New Analysis of West- ern Civilization Notes" Calls Bookset and Gread Books Calls Bookset. 1976 Ford Torino TB,FB,Alq. Quad, Steer Good Condition. Call Mike or Gary at 815-230-7400. Like new large plush blue dorm carpet. condition. Must see. Call 9760. Harley-175 -SS Excellent condition. 220 nm new. New Battery. 40-50 mpg. $500 rpm. New car钥匙. Etched. You can be Harley! 841-469-700. 848-354-324 Ask for Denal Doran. D-92 Iron toys, but gum, pennants, fine china toys, and gum balls. Quantity $1 Each Market, bay 10 and 30. Quantity $5 per box. Market, bays 9-19 For sale row now=1797 Rally Sport, fully new. No trades. Like new cond. 843-6431 or 844-6231. Sale Price: $150,000. Vintage Clothing costume bliss and pieces, lace pieces and collars, famingo trays and trousers (Third Row) Quantrill's Fear Market. 811 New Hampshire Mall, San. and Sun. 10-5 $9 D. L.D. SLC. church runmage into this Fri. and Sat, 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 1600 University Hall; toys, appliances, plains, enks, books, furnishings, furnishings, micelleous, 9-13 Steel B 16 O w turntable. Like new with B. 38" drum and auxiliary controls, range handler and noise reduction system with built-in amplifier. 15 Toyota, Corolla 1600, 4 cylinder. 75 Tayo, 841-8495, Jayhawk Apt. #303 *B*. D 1971 Pontiac Lemans, red with black vinyl roof. Good condition. Very dependable. $1300. Call 749-1227 after 6. 9-23 MUST SELL. 73 Mazda wagon. Good shape. Atr cond. FM-A stereo. $1,100. 843-958-2600. 1972 MG Midget, reconditioned, like new. 30 mpg, city, fun to drive. Call George 864- 5807. 9-22 Bookcase $28. record cabinet $31. also I chests etc. M. J. Stouthwaite $63-8892. 9-24 1978 LT Camaro, fully equipped, low mileage, new condition. Call Todd at 841-1238. 5 bdmr., 2 baths, $42.500. 604 Church, Eudora. Qualifies for VA or FHA loan. 542- 3162. 9-22 PUBLIC SALE FURNITURE: mca, coffee, chairs, chess, chests, big-sized headboard, twin chairs, chess, chests, big-sized headboard, twin chairs, chess, chests, big-sized headboard, antiques AND COLLECTABLES; china, typewriters, railroad pictures, 40 yr. old UK chair, natural geographics, AMERICAN chairs, Natural Geographics, AMERICAN signed bed, beaded bed and more, MISCELLANEOUS houseswares, small appliances, framed pictures, men's and women's clothing, signed bed, beaded bed and more, MISCELLANEOUS TO MENTION 8:00-4:00 Sat, and Sun. Prices reduced 10% every hour after midnight. Shines reduced 10% every hour after midnight. OBS TO MEMORIAM 9:00 a.m. 40 Sat and Sun, Sept. 20, 21  21.520 Aranburg, Rain or pice. Prices reduced 10% every hour after noon SUN. No early calls please. 9-19 1975 Flat 128—Good condition, high gas mileage, $1600 or best offer. 843-5256. Must sell. 9-23 COMIC BOOKs, old playbags, Lifes, Looks, Movie books, Baseball cards, military items, and paperbacks. Booth #104 Quantillia's Flea Market. 811 N.M. Open Sat, and Sun. 09/10 1972 Plymouth Valiant. Good condition. Must sell. Call Lorraine 841-2870. 9-23 FOUND Bishop Mingse class ring. Found on September 11, 1974. Identify and identify with claim 11. 8744. after 5 p.m. Black wire irem rim glasses, west side of Pot- tery Carl Kupl. 4022 E. Learned Hall, 10-14. Kcir key with miniature thong and thumb attached to the end of a murmel and Military Science near the base. The key is inserted into the base. Found young female dart at 27h and Iowa Golden in London. Found in a claim call 814-456-00. 9-22 A darm key on a silver key ring, found at lady's lot on Sept. 14. Call 6-22 861-1667-112 Color slides of polar bear, brown bears, Color slides of polar bear, brown bears, to Lost and Found at Hoch 9-22 Prescription, pinkish lens at 1309 Ohio on Sunday. 843-8219. 9-23 Found one ladies watch with yellow band. Witness on 9-17 and 9-23. Call 864-308-8. Watch 864-308-8. Lone key on key ring in 111 Flint. Call 640-4338 or ask for Elaine. 9-23 Needed immediately-School and personal care attendants to assist a young female graduate student in a disability. Live in Dana Va. 4623, 841-297, 843-1011. 9-23 4623, 841-297, 843-1011. COUNSELOR The University of Kansas, which seeks an individual to provide academic, career and personal counseling to disadvantaged students, will work experience required. Salary range from $19,000 to $19,500 per day, September 19, 1980. Interested applicants should contact the Educational Services, Military Science Alliance or Kansas 60403. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. 9-19 HELP WANTED Male, gray and white kitten. 23rd and Natal. Saturday Call 844-8585. Judy and Karp. Part-time all night stockers wanted to work weekly from 9 am to 4 pm. Study at ⋄6 on weeks. Study at ⋄9 on weeks. Student help needed. Part-time for fall and spring. Must be able to work a full morning shift. Requires General labor and skilled trades assistant. Contact Hazel, Housing Dept. Maintenance team to discuss possible assistance as possible with your class schedule. An opportunity/affirmative action 9 piloyer. tenber 19, 1880. Interested applicants may submit resume to the superior effective Educational Services, Military S- chool, Lawrence, Kansas 66453. Lawrences, Kansas 66453. The University of Maryland's equal opportunity action emploiers 9-19 SPENCER MUSEUM OF ART MEMBERSHIP ASSISTANT. Develop special skills and promote training in committee activities. Half-time. Bachelor's in organizational ability, typing skills, familiarity with computer technology and names of 3 references to Ann Wiklund K6. 60454. An equal opportunity/affirmative employment application. Gender, color, age, disability, veterinary status, national origin, age. PROJECT COORDINATOR: The University Services is seeking an individual to coordinate, counsel, recruitment, evaluation and staff training for new students. Work experience required. Salary $10,000-$14,000 per year. Need R.N. to supervise quadriplegic's care, and train attendants. $10/hour. Time of work negotiable. 843-4423. 9-23 Parts counter person, part-time 20-30 hrs. 19-10; Parties counter person, part-time 20-30 hrs. 19-10; Parties taken at NAPA, 23rd and Haskell 9-19 Director; Junior year in Costa Rica. Feb. 1-Aug. 1, 1891. Proficiency in Spanish. Termine in Costa Rica, with optional area to field. Application deadline Sept. 19 Contact Anita Herrfeld, Office of Staff Mald for soorcity 4 hours per day, 5 days per week. $0.49, Call 837-3705, 9-19 LOST LOST: Maroon backpack. Left in 327 Strong. 4:00 Thursday. Reward. Call John, 841-8234 after 5. Reward for return of black wallet lost near 23rd and Naisthm. 749-2043. 9-22 Black and silver puppy. White paws and dark fur. Eyes are dark with a white paw. No. 168. Reward $425 or $599. Puppy or kitten. Reward for return of my passport last 8-23 14-07-15 at New York, NY. I receive high School Call: 849-0128. 14-07-16 at Chicago, IL. I receive high School Call: 849-0128. Brown crab skin wallet lost in front of Boston Library. Reward if found. T-9-25 MISCELLANEOUS Lost my wallet by the Union. Need contents 217 or #318 Blake. Thank you. 9-23 17 or #318 Blake. Thank you. There are 12 pilfers of Budweiser and there are 6 pilfers of Budweiser. Monday- 9-8 to Tuesday-9-9 Monday-9-9 to Tuesday-9-9 NOTICE DRINK AND DROWN every night night at LOUISE'S WEST, THIRD and MICHIGAN (hickey McDonalds on 6th). $4-$guys. $3-$girls—All the cold Coors you can drink. tf THE CLUB HOUSE TGIF TONIGHT 3 for 1 Highballs 508 Locust 842-8429 7-8 p.m. NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MEMBERSHIP card get you $1.00 highbills all night long. Only at your place, THE LOISE WHERE "Piercing is" part of you. PERSONAL LOUISÉ'S Open at 10 a.m. Sun. for game warm-up. 100 Jobsters 1009 Mass Free rainbows. B10 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. 10. LOUSES WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday from 6-8. Enjoy 60 cochons, 36 draws and 15 $1 pitches. 7th and Mich. "Partying is our business." **tf** PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISI'S Friday Afternoon Special $1.25 pitchers 656 schoolers 1000 Meals FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth counseling. Counseling. Neonatal care appl. call us 850-623-4910, 440. W109 St. Overland Park, Kanada. tf HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. EVERY 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 highballs (15 on Thursday), the Big Banggummen and the atmospheric twirl. Or skip them, at cf. 9420 "Partine is our business." LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are provided, and there is no cover charge. Only at Club Lounge. 508 Locust. 842-9429. 9-30 SUPER TOGIF at THE CLUB LUOUSE 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY. willing to explore the opportunities awaiting willing to explore the opportunities awaiting eastern based company, our part-time information call 312-795-7800; 616-425- 7200; Werdunl. In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for less calm Louise DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. In the house louis highballs you can gamble on highballs and drive and dive a club! THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 Locust, Memberships available. "Partying is our business." **TGIF AT LOUSES ARR** with 15 $21-game 69 schools and 60 drawings. Every Friday from 2 U1. 6 Be there—Aloha! !f Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASIA Singing Telegrams, a 8-hour take a break after classes at LOUISE'S afternoon晚会 ever day until 8 Singing memes for all occident. Dellv- ling information for convenience ASTA Singi- ng Telegram. 841-619-6000 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Piepersport and 1974 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong keys and excellent tapping equipment. 9-26 PSYCHIC SELF - AWARNESS CLASS: Learn about the aura, chakras, spirit guides, self-helping Starts very soon. Con $10 per week for 10 weeks. For 10 weeks. E-book 814-9678 Free rainbows, 810 W. 23rd. Greens Tavern. 9-19 Attention: For those who have Fox or other imitation shirts and would like the real thing, I have authenticot Alilog alligator patches for sale. Reasonably价销. Call 864-1874 GUITARIST is needed with acoustic and electric experience in a broad range of music for or young ambassadors. Law enforcement dancer. For auditions. Tom 749-0891 or 843-5721. Beginning band is looking for BASSIST with Jeff at 249-0474 or 843-5636. 9-23 LUKE SKYWALKER you left your toys at HAWK'S CROSSING. New state of the art warehouse with a nice north north of campus. HAPPY HOUR 4-6 daily with $1.25 pitchers. 9-23 WOMEN: 18-60. Scientists, attractive, good mentors. Must have a Masters in ScienTor, Scientist, artist, designer, inventor, engineer or computer science. Must be passionate and/or male for Tantrik relationship. etc. Write M. W. P. O. Box 3212, L.A. 90030. WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS: SILVER DOLLAR CITY! September 26-28 $58.00 SAN TIMEL Come see the annual National Fall Crafts Festival at Silver Dollar City and attend the famous Shepherd of play on this weekend outaway! Reservations deadline: Wednesday Sept. 24 For more information drop by the SUA office or call 864-3477. ALOHA KENT. Remember your clippers night. I wear my grass jacket spring. 9-10 $25 Women's Self Defense. 12 hours of instruction in various self-defense techniques, $406 Wescoe; Thursday and Thursdays, 7-8:30 p.m., Gunga Club. 25 women sponsored by Gunga Club. $25 for organized groupings and about $9.50 per hour. 9-23 Nettie was the bonus of all past, present, and future friends and enemies. Have you heard the thought I was the Packard Geor. Or the Ronald MacDonald of ATTENTION: Established braem band is attention required. Serious inquiries only. Call 800-326-1744. SUNDAY DINNER EXTRACT VAGANZA! We weeks Chafes Doug, Stacy, and Andrew are andrew and doug in the HEAVY CROSSING from 4 to 9 p.m. the HEAVY CROSSING from 4 to 9 p.m. sub sandwiches not from 9-9 p.m. It's Friday and TOIF is wild at THE HARBOR LITES. All pitchers only $1.50 from the Harbor Lite. The Harbor Lite "T-"S shirt or hat and receive a Harbor Lite "T"-Shirt or hat and receive a Harbor Lite "T"-Shirt or hat. BOURSE EXPRESS leaves at 1 p.m. on game days for Memorial Stadium. It is a trip THE HARBOR LITE 101 Massachusetts. First-class dive. 9-19 After the game and before —Remember the hockey team that had good and good cold beer. A K.U.K. corner since 1922. Ask any Parent at Parent's Day— K.U.K. Remember Rock Chalk Jayahawk K.U.K. Remember K.S.W—Happy Anniversary yesterday Happy Birthday today. Love, LM. Joy! CIBROFACRYOL - Investigate the natural history of Cibrofacryol in Johnston. Most MiceClinical Cline (8th and 9th ed.) have a Cibrofacryol mutation. Reward for information to return - learn about the first trim and key steps from Wescoe night of attack, and when weeekend, weekends, during day, weekends. 9-25 NuCoH: Ninth Birthday Party, Tuesday. 9-25 NuCoH: Ninth Birthday Party, Tuesday. SERVICES OFFERED Instant color passport photos. Immigration, I. D., portraiture, renume, portfolios, slides color & B/W. Tom 841-7284. 9-30 T.A.N. Ltd. offering $10 discount to K.U. T.A.N. Ltd. offering $10 discount to K.U. in Lawnーズ, Guaranteed no burning, and no dangerous ultraviolet rays. Call for amendment. Monday thru Saturday 8:30AM. THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage specialty:"Tune-ups" and "Total Overhauls" 641-721-8718. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2½¢ EACH HOUSE OF USHER 2½¢ EACH Tutoring service for all lower level math courses up to Calc. 115. Call Curt at 841-4016. For the finest complete service on most im- portants--STRAIGHT ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Datsun. Fiat, Honda. Toyota. 843-244-9410. Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. tf LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes through Nov. 3 at UMass Lowell's summit start Monday evening, Sept 29. DOWNLOAD THE HELP FILE I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf TYPING Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, book cover writing. Req.: BS in English, spelling corrected. 843-904. Mrs. Wright. TU. Experiented K.U. typist. IBM Correcting keyboard typing. Req.: Bach degree in Sandy, evening and weekend. 784-815. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectic. Call Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 12-8 Typist, Editor, IBM Pica/Elite, Quality Designer, editing/layout. Conan James, 2015, editing/layout. Conan James, 2015. OPP 862-2001 FOR YOUR TIME COMPARE ENCORE COPY CORPS 314 & 862 - Holiday Park 842 3001 . Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with customers. Instruments, tarm paper etc., Betty, 842-689-6071 Experienced typet -thesis, dissertations, reports. Instruments for selecting selector Barium, after 5 p.m., 842-2310 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate. IBM plee, elite. 842-2075 events to 11:00 and weekends. PROPOSSIAL TYPING Call Myrtl 841-8600 Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-3230. WANTED GOLD, SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling earl We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-7414 542-2688. 10-6 Buying gold. Paying $80-$110 for men's gifts in the United States. 21st W. 220, Watha Plaza, Hotel 64-928-9500. 21st E. 123, Watha Plaza, Hotel 64-928-9500. Roommate at the Jayhawker Towers as allied. All utilities paid Call 9-19 30:55. Anytime Roommate to share, 2 bdm. duplex. $137.50 per mo. + 1% utilities. Pursued except your bedroom. Call 841-1821. 9-19 we people need to sub-learn spacious Mails apt. with fireplace, balcony, 113 baths, on bus route and other comforts. Surprise! at 842-3780. Call Dave or D-919 at 842-3780. Female roommate to share 2 bdmr, apt 21/ blocks from campus. Call Donna 841-765- 3058. Roommate wanted for mobile home. 890 + 1/2 gas & electric. Furnished. Call John 748- 3449 after 5. 9-23 GUTTAR: Somebody has got to want to sell that guitar they don't play any more. Call Scott 864-2841. 9-19 Babytitty-Have own transportation. Can come to home or have a apt. Call 749-1415 afternoons - evening. 9-24 Manual Pixel Typewriter in good Manual Pica Typewriter in good condition. Call 842-5230. 9-24 Drummer for working rock band. No punk, no disco, just straight-on rock 'n' roll. Call 841-2678. Keep trying. Roommate for 2 bdm. apt—Jayhawk W-9. $120 + utilities. Caf. Bret. 748-3586. West. Page 14 University Daily Kansan, September 19, 1980 Joe Bartos '80 Pitt devours KU, 24-7 Hype, successful past make Panthers national contender By GENE MYERS Sports Editor Sports Editor Pitt has a national reputation. That reputation has been earned on the field with bone-crushing defense and heady offense. That reputation has also made him a leading public relations and steady press releases The same machinery that mass produces victories and bowl games also mass produces All-Americans. The efficiency of the Pittsburgh machine, and machines like Southern Cal, and Alabama, is what holds back Kansas' long All-America candidate, flanker David Verster. Verser, a senior, plays for a team that has won seven games in three seasons. All Americans don't come from losers. They come from winners like seventh-ranked Pitt. PITT, WHICH CLAIMS a half dozen All-America candidates, plays 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Memorial Stadium. The 1-4 high publicized Panthers play the 0-4 under jayhawks. The Panthers are a press favorite because of the on-the-field talents and off-the-field promotions. "We don't do any active campaigning for our players with the media. Plut's assistant sports manager is asking them to quit." But Pitt did circulate a flier last year announcing a nickname for All-America defensive tackle. "WE SENT OUT a flyer calling Hugh Green "The Incredible Hugh' hoping that he would earn a major award." Joyce Aschenbrenner, the current packet of clippings on each player to make certain that anyone can find out accurate information on any player. Despite the off-the-field politicking, Pitt is a terror on the field. The Panthers have Green, who is incredible even though he is not big and green. The pro scouts have called him the best defensive player in the country with no one a close second. "We don't campaign, unless you call that cammaiming." "Hugh Green is one of the finest players I've ever seen," KU head coach D冯福ambuck said. "He's probably the best defensive player in the country. "He's trying to have the best season he've ever had, not riding on it, or we want to be an All-American." KU STARTING quarterback Frank Seurer said, "they say he's too mean and too good to be playing college football. I know enough about Green to keep away from him." The Jahawks hope to offset Green with a potent passing attack. The key man is All-Big Eight selection Verser, who scored Kansas' last-minute touchdown in last week's 7-7 tie All schools keep clippings but for most an extensive publicity carnam would be futile. "Whether or not an athlete becomes an All-American depends largely on the success of the team," Don Baker, KU's former sports information director, said when the preseason All-America teams come out. "You don't see too many American comes from teams with losing records. "I think David Verser is one of the top two or three wide receivers in the country, but if KU doesn't have a winning season he may not get any recognition." 'IT'S KIND OF hard when all the good teams on the Sunday highlights show getting all Verser doesn't expect the recognition. the publicity," he said. "Having KU shown on there would probably help me." "He can make you look like the greatest quarterback in the country," said Seurer, who threw Vroner's touchdown pass with 15 seconds left. He played college for pass receivers, I'd have chosen KU." Verser caught five passes for 49 yards last week. But Fambrough says he wants him to get the pass. Russ Bastin, a third-year sophomore, will be Kansas' other receiver. He moved ahead of senior Lester Mickens, who caught four passes and Jeff Schleicher is expected to start at light end. ON THE DEFENSE, KU will start the same lineup as in the inpper. KU's defense, which was the Big Eight's worst last season, surrendering 25 points a game, was the big surprise. Safety Dave Harris blocked a punt and was named the conference player-of-the-week. Stan Gardner Greg Smith, Jeff Fox and Stan Gardner played every down and stopped the Oregon run. "I've never been prouder of a team than I was following our Oregon game." Barbaugh said. JAYHAWKS NOTES: The two starting quarterbacks in Pitt's 24- victory over KU last year are no longer quarterbacks. KU's Kevin Clinton is no longer on the team. He plays baseball instead. Pitt'sStarting quarterback a year ago, Rick Tortano, is still a starter, but plays free safety. Clint, who many said would be his next All-American, opened his KU campus last Saturday against Barton County Community College. He hit a home run and a double. Seurer learns his way on campus and the field Punter Bucky Scribner punted seven times last week for a 46.0 average. If he had punted eight times, his average would have put him third in the nation. The leader has a 46.4 average By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer The tall, blond freshman is learning his way around the KU campus. A personnel administration major, he is anxious to do well in school and to become involved in student activities. He is on the ballot for freshman class vice president. And tomorrow, along with thousands of other KU freshmen, he will be in Memorial Hall as the Jayhaws' home opponent against Pittsburgh. But, unlike his classmates, he will be the starting quarterback for the University of Kansas. "I if had chosen a college just to play football, 'Seurer (pronounced SIGH-er) said." FRANK SEURER CAME to KU because it had everything he was looking for in a school. And he may be everything KU is looking for in a quarterback. Not a bad arrangement. Seurer began his KU career by leading the Jayhawks to a surprising 7-7 last Saturday with the Oregon Ducks. He did it with a 64-yard, seven-seam drive in the first 1:33 of the game. Seurer replaced Smith, a junior from Emporia, early in the second quarter after Smith was stunned by a Duck defender. Seurer played most of the game and completed 12 of 21 passes. "On my first series, I wasn't really nervous," he said. "I was prepared and knew what was going on. I did get shaky in that last series of downs." Seurer may have been shaky, but he handled the leadership role like an old pro. He took "WE KNEW HE WOULD play a bit, but not that much," John Hadl, offensive coordinator, said. "I'm getting to know him better all the time. He's very mature and has a lot of talent. command in the huddle for the final, game-tying drive. The coaching staff was most surprised with his poise under pressure. Seurer, a Huntington Beach, Calif, native, said that the team helped him become a leader. "He's mentally tough, which is important, and he takes coaching very well." "I am a little surprised at how well they accept he as assistant I feel comfortable here. No one might ask." "I don't feel like a freshman with the team. I played five games, played five freshmen, sephornmates, juniors. WOW!" SEURER BECAME a member of KU's team because of Hadl, who Seurer says taught him to throw a football at a clinic. Hadl, KU All-America halfback in 1960 and quarterback in 1961, was a quarterback with the San Diego Chargers then. Seuer was 8 years old. "I didn't remember Frank Seurer," Hadi said. But when I started recruiting him and he told me not to, they ended up together. "I go for it for every time," Seuer said of his playing style. "I don't hold back. "But I'm a conservative player. I don't try for the whole ball of wax at once. It takes a long slow." HE EXPECTS KU'S rebuilding process to be a struggle, too. "In the next three or four years, we'll be back out." We can't get away out. We are definitely to be touch this year. Part of that is because of an 18-year-old California freshman. PATRICK MCDONALD & JEFF ROSS Frank Seurer and Kerwin Bell, the California kids, have earned the starting nod for tomorrow's home opener against the Pitt Panthers. Bell aims to ring in game with Pitt By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer Sports Writer On the field he is recognized by his low-to-the-ground running style. Off the field, it is by his stocky build and Downing afro. He is destined to be recognized as one of the best running backs in the nation. Kerwin Bell, the grand prize in an intense recruiting battle among the best players, began making a name for himself the day he signed a KILO letter-of-intention. As he builds on the Bell name, which includes his father, Henry, a former running back with the Denver Broncos, Bell plans to rebuild KU football. With a 7-25-1 record over the past three years, KU's name has been spelled d-4-s-a-t-e-r. "I KNOW SOMETHING is going to happen here," he said. "I think I can help this program. In two or three years, we'll be on top of the Big One." Bell has impressive pre credentials to support his claim. Voted the player-of-the-year in Southern California by the Los Angeles area writers and broadcasters, Bell ranked among the nation's top three running backs in 1979. At Edison High School, he teamed with Frank Seurat to win the state title game 55-0, the most lopsided score in the history of state title games. "I really don't set a goal." Bell said. "I go out here and play relaxed." He got fired-up. We been playing football so long that things just come to me. WHAT MOTIVATES the Californiakid who hopes to be responsible for a growing resurgence in Kansas football? "I just go out there and expect good things to happen," he said. "I don't have the means or winning the Heisman or anything like that. I just get my job done." Because of last week's performance, 69 yards on 20 carries to lead all KU rushers, Bell will start this week. However, Bell goes up against the seventh-ranked team in the country, the Pittsburgh Panthers, and a tenacious defense led by "All-World" Hugh Green. "I'll tell you one thing, this team is really up for this game," he said. "We've seen them on film and they are a good team, but not an outstuffed one." Pitt Panthers hope to solve their offensive puzzle against Kansas By MIKE DICHIARA Pitt News Assistant Sports Editor PITTSBURGH-Perhaps the most pressing question on the Pittsburgh campus today is whether students will be able to Although Pitt defeated Boston College last Saturday 14-6, the game was generally disappointing to Panther partisans. After all, this is a game where the New York Sports Illustrated and the New York Times The presession hype gave Pitt's fans and students visions of sugar cane. Bear Bryant's Flights to New Orleans from Pittsburgh were booked solid for New Year's by hopeful football fans. The opening game must have caused half of them to tear up their airline tickets. Pitt has a strong sense of football tradition, and a No.1 ranking is taken very seriously. Ever since 1976, when Pitt won its last national title, the Panthers have been on the onrow for another; After a tough 17-7 loss at North Carolina, the second game of the year, the Panthers began to jell under a freshman quarterback named Dan Marino. Only a starter for four regular season games, Marino passed for 1,860 yards, fourth in the league. He led his team's season on a tear, winning 10 straight and finishing with a sixth-place ranking in the final poll. lackluster offense was still a problem and although the team possessed a super defense, not much chance was given to Pitt for finishing in the top 20. The 1979 season began with a lot of hope but a realization that this was not to be the year. The WITH 16 OF THE 23 starters returning for the 1980 season, high hopes began building for an extra special season. Marino had gained valuable experience the year before to carry him into the 1980 campaign. Fulback Randy McMillan was the answer to Pitt's needs for the bruising, punishing-type runner. The offensive line was as big as any team in the nation. With the offense showing vast improvement, the pressure on the defense was less. Led by Kyrenius and Michael Hines, Panther defense seemed to be the most awesome in college football. Green, at 6-foot-2, 222 pounds. The doorway to the Panther lockerom at Pitt Stadium has a sign above it that reads "Beware . . . through these doors walk the dogs." The coyotes cats in the nation . . . the Pitt Panthers." run the 40-yard dash in 4.5 seconds. And the rest of Green's linemates are even bigger. Middle guard Jerry Buryhill 6-foot-3 and- 25 pounds. Right tackle Bill Neiln 6-foot-2, 255. Left tackle Mike Mulligan 7-foot-1. Yet despite all the attention, hype and tagging, the meenest cats in the nation looked too much like a wolf. Kansan Predictions | | Armold | Bertels | Lewis | Myers | Seeley | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pittsburgh at Kansas | Pittsburgh 27-17 | Pittsburgh 28-7 | Pittsburgh 24-10 | Pittsburgh 8-7 | Kansas 17-16 | | Illinois at Missouri | Missouri 37-10 | Missouri 21-10 | Missouri 31-10 | Missouri 21-20 | Illinois 18-17 | | Colorado at LSU | LSU 42-3 | LSU 30-7 | LSU 37-7 | LSU 45-0 | LSU 44-6 | | Iowa at Nebraska | Nebraska 37-17 | Nebraska 28-7 | Nebraska 35-14 | Nebraska 28-21 | Nebraska 42-12 | | San Jose State at Iowa State | Iowa State 20-6 | Iowa State 14-10 | Iowa State 21-3 | Iowa State 25-10 | Iowa State who cares? | | South Dakota at Kansas State | Kansas State 21-10 | Kansas State 21-7 | Kansas State 41-14 | South Dakota 10-9 | Kansas State 30-15 | | Oklahoma State at Arkansas | Arkansas 35-7 | Arkansas 24-14 | Arkansas 35-7 | Arkansas 38-10 | Arkansas 33-17 | | Stanford at Boston College | Stanford 24-14 | Stanford 27-7 | Stanford 31-21 | Stanford 27-10 | Boston College 24-21 | | UCLA at Purdue | UCLA 23-21 | Purdue 24-21 | Purdue 23-17 | Purdue 20-17 | Purdue 15-13 | | Michigan at Notre Dame | Notre Dame 21-20 | Notre Dame 28-14 | Notre Dame 17-13 | Notre Dame 17-16 | Notre Dame 12-10 | | Season Totals | 8-1-1 | 8-1-1 | 8-1-1 | 7-2-1 | 9-0-1 | The predictors are Patti Arnold, Kansan associate sports editor; Kevin Bertels, sports writer; David Lewis, editorial editor; Gene Meyer, sports editor; and Matt Seeley, sports writer. Scouting Report QUARTERBACK-Backfresh quarterback Frank Stuer will start his first collegiate football game against Pituit. Suffer completed 12 of 21 passes for 100 yards and one touchdown in KU 7-4 vs. Alabama. We look. Smith, last week's starter, will back in Stuer. FULLBACK - Harry Stryker, offensive captain, will start for the Rangers as he is backed up by another senior. Karry Lempzey gained his third start. TALBACK - Freedman Kerven Bell, who rushed for 99 yards on 20 carries against Oregon, starts up. Belk will扑球 RECEIVERS. All America candidate David Versier will open at the flanker position. David versiert caught passing 900 yards last season then him All-Big Eight honors. Jonner Versier at left beats Russia Bastin at end and Jeff Schleicher at left beats Russia Bastin at end. OFFENSIVE LINE- KU will start four seniors at the five front aids. At right touch is Bob Whitten, who has started every game since he was a freshman. At right touch is at the right guard. At center is Bob Fisk, who waited for the defense to be ready. At left tackle is jason David Lawrence will be the starting left guard. **TECHNICAL BACKS - Seniors comprise the defensive second line.** Defensive players must be defensive and defend captain Fawn Winkle willtest at the strong safety or "hawk." The cornerbacks will be Dave Harris, last week's Eight digit player-of-the-week, and Devin Brown, the eight digit player-of-one. LINEBACKERS-Kansas will start two juniors at the linebackers position, but then start a new season at linebackers last season, and Tobias Chubb, who is now in the linebackers position. DEFENSIVE FRONT—San Garland the top tackler among linemen last season, will助 the KU defensive line at nonsuccess. Jeff Fox is coming off knee surgery last season, and he will produce Gary Coleman round out the front four of the JAWSHADOW. TAILBACK-Tearl Arribail Hawkins, an excellent outside and center back. Tearl finished last year. Starting back day Roster "Roster" FULLBACK - Randy McMillan, dubbed "The Big Mac Attack," was Pit's leading rusher with 68 yards last season and at jumblock. McMillan rushed for 64 yards on 22 carries in the game, his longest postgame last week. Senior Wearie DiDartto back wi mckmillan. GUARTHBACK-*Soporbanne* Dari Martino will start for the team in the first half, and he will play for the team when he was replaced Further quarterback RT Riccaon in the seventh game of the season and led Pit 5 to five consecutive victories. He also led the team in 108 yards, completing 132 after 42 minutes and 19 out of 30 shots. FRONTLINE - Spearheading the Pitoff offerline will be *five* times as many of these machines by a number to be the top offensive linemen in the east. Alongside of May will be sophomores Jinho Conrad and Paul Dunn at left and turtle and 4 & 6locks, 290 pound Emi Wilde, 180 pounds and 140 pounds. RECYEMS - Freshman Wright Collins, who comes from the same Pennsylvania high school that produced former PIT great Tony Doyle, gained the starting chars at fanker for the Fandango Show and the Tampa Bay Light and sound Willie Moore will be the startling son. DEFENSIVE BACKS- Pitt., as does Kansas, will start four seniors in the defensive secondary. Carl William will start at strong safety and force quarterback Rick Trochan will open defense. The cornerbacks will be Lynn Thomas and Kerry White. LINEBACKERS—Lasted as one of the strongest members on the Panther guan, Steve Fedell will open the game at strongside linebacker. Joining Fedell will be Sal Sumert at weakside and will try to bring rebound into an injurynder action in the spring. DEFENSIVE FRONT—When you talk about the Pitt defense you are talking about two-time All-American defender Hugh McCormick, considered by many to be the incumbent in the lineup. He's also said "former Arkansas coach Frank Broyles. John Green on the back end of the team" an expressive group boy. And he tackled Greg Murray on right kick Rick Jackson and Nill at right tackle. SE 22 98 Rust Bastin LE 99 Hugh Green TE 22 98 Jeff Schiecher LT 65 Greg Meinerman LG 43 David Lawrence WR 77 Bill Nelli LG 43 David Lawrence WR 77 Bill Nelli RG 49 Fred Osborn WLB 104 Jacob Johnson RT 79 Bob Whitten SLB 7 Steve Fordel RT 79 Bob Whitten SS 7 Williamson GT 79 Bob Vetter LC 12 QB 10 Frank Seurer LC 23 Terry White QB 18 Kevin Bell RC 28 Bik Thomas QB 4 Kevin Bell JB 36 | LE | NM | Gale Cowan | SE | TW | Willie Collier | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | LT | 86 | Jeff Fox | SE | 74 | Jimcovert Bowers | | NT | 90 | Dan Smith | LG | 61 | Paul Dumbo | | RT | 127 | Dan Smith | GC | 61 | Emu Enlowes | | RT | 73 | Hiton Dawson | FI | 73 | Mark May | | LB | 18 | Kyle McBaren | FI | 73 | Mark May | | LB | 18 | Kyle McBaren | FI | 73 | Mark May | | LCB | 13 | Driller Miller | FL | 32 | Drillenn Collins | | LCB | 13 | Driller Miller | FL | 32 | Drillenn Collins | | FS | 13 | Trevor Wetall | IT | 13 |丹Marino Marine | | PS | 13 | Trevor Wetall | IT | 13 |丹Marino Marine | | RCB | 43 | Dave Harris | HB | 12 |Rocky McMillan | | 1 Monday, September 22,1980 Vol. 91, No. 21 USPS 650-640 The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas att defense end Hugh defensive He's al-* s. Joining coded group ry Boyar- ble. Reagon, Anderson spar over issues, not Carter BALTIMORE (UPI)-Republican Ronald Reagan and independent John Anderson met in the first debate of the 1980 presidential campaign last week, where time attacking each other than President Carter Reagan and Anderson clashed sharply on military spending, taxes, inflation, abortion, energy, urban programs and the role of religion in politics during the hour-long debate, televised by CBS, NBC and public broadcasting systems to an estimated 50 million people. The only point the two agreed on was opposing reinstalment of a peace-time draft. Both Anderson and Reagan criticized Carter's record and his failure to join them in the debate. The president spent the evening in the White House after returning from a weekend at Camp David. ANDERSON AND Reagan lost little time putting distance between their positions. Six panelists asked each candidate one question. The most emotional exchange came in response to the last question, which partly addressed the topic of abortion. Anderson criticized Reagan's support of a constitutional amendment banning abortion and said the matter "was a personal decision the woman must make." Reagan responded that no one asked the unborn fetus what it thought about the abortion. Much of the time, Anderson took the offensive, challenging Reagan's facts and figures. Anderson, in one double-edged salve, said that Reagan's increased military budget would be infiltration and that his record of fiscal acclimatization as governor of California was exaggerated. Reagan responded his lips pulled tight in anger, "Some people look up figures and some people make up figures and John has just made up some very interesting figures." REAGAN RENEWED his call for a 30 percent tax cut, when he said, would help balance the budget. Anderson called Carter and Reagan's plans for tax cuts "irresponsible." "These two candidates are begging for your votes with tax cuts," he said. "Well, I'm going to wait and see that the inflation rate is going down and see that the business tax cuts I favor being phased in." The two also disagreed on federal aid for the nation's troubled cities. Reagan said that although government could help, the private sector would be able to take over government tax incentives to rebuild the cities. Anderson called for massive government aid, which drew a sharp response from Reagan, who said, "The tax money John talks about will come from pocket pockets of the people in those urban areas." Although John Anderson may be running a distant third in the latest presidential poll, at least one of the seven judges scoring last night's debate was Voters' choice chose Anderson as the vice-president. Donn Parson, director of forensics at the University of Kansas, was one of seven university debate coaches asked by the Associated Press to judge last night's contest between Anderson and Republican Ronald Reagan. He scored the debate fairly evenly in several areas, but Parson said Anderson did a better job of responding to the questions asked and answered. The judges used a ballot similar to that used by the American Forensic Association in student competition. The participants are awarded one vote per participant, and the judge used to evaluate the debates. The categories are: Landfill checked for pollution *Analysis—does the speaker identify clear and relevant issues in the question being addressed?* ing does the speaker offer sound See FORENSICS page 5 By RAY FORMANEK Staff Reporter The site, which is on the floodplain of the Kansas River a few miles upstream from Lawrence, is in violation of guidelines adopted last year by the Environmental Protection Agency that forbid locating landfills on floodplains. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment expects dumping to cease at the Douglas County landfill site Jan 1. However, monitoring efforts are being made to the next department to a department office. "The testing will still be going on long after my retirement," he said. Chuck Linn, chief of solid waste management for the health and environment department, said Friday that test wells at the site would be monitored for at least 20-25 years. A PROPOSED LANDFILL site at a quarry in Jefferson County has met stiff opposition from residents who live near the site. Nine residents filed a suit Sept. 3 in Jefferson County District Court to try to halt efforts to put the landfill there. Linn said ground water sensors in the test wells at the present landfill site would be checked and the site would be inspected to ensure drainage. "This is a second generation program that will involve inspection of the old site to make sure it is operational." "It's a bad site," Linn said. "It wet and inoperable, and much of the time trucks can't get it." He said most of the sites he had inspected so far looked good. However, the Douglas County site had problems because of standing water that made it difficult for the operators to follow regulations that require trash at the site to be covered by a layer of dirt. Lynn said his office had set a goal of inspecting 60 sites this year to determine if they were in violation of EPA guidelines and whether the sites could continue operating. TWO KU PROFESSORS have been monitoring the landfill with the help of graduate students who have written their theses on the evolution of a landfill site. Ernest Angino, professor of geology, said a set of test cells had been put in the ground about 10 years ago when the landfill opened. Test cells are used to take ground water samples in the area to see if there has been contamination of the water table, he said. In addition to the cells, there are four test wells, two upstream and two downstream of the cell. So far, the tests for inorganic compounds such as lead, zinc and copper strongly suggest that pollution from the landfill has not reached the wells, he said. Water from the upstream well is compared with samples from the downstream well to see if there is a significant difference. ANGINO SAID FUNDING for his sampling had run out, and he did not plan to take any more samples. Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering, said his samples, which he will begin taking soon, look at the gross characteristics and movement of the material of the landfill. Another KU professor said that he would continue taking samples at irregular intervals. McKinney agreed with Angina that the testing indicates little chance of contamination. THE SUIT CONTENDS that Jefferson County Commissioners acted outside their authority when they issued the permit for the site in 1975, according to Jerry Harper, Lawrence attorney representing the nine Jefferson County residents. The threat of contamination is not the issue for Jefferson County residents who filed the suit, however. "We just don't want it here," Carl Amereine, Perry resident and one of those who filled the suit. "We've already got enough to contend with up here with the quarry. The planning commission turned down a request in July 1975 for a permit that would have allowed a landfill to be located at the site. However, in September 1975, the county commission issued a conditional-use permit that would allow a landfill at the site. "Why should we let Douglas County come up here to dump their trash in Jefferson County?" Harper said Jefferson County zoning regulations gave full authority to the county's landowners. KEN COMBS/Kansan staff THE RIDGE OF THE TROOP More than 138 trail riders and 15 wagons took part in the Kidney Foundation's *Ride for Life*, near Lake Perry Saturday and Sunday. Below, blackmilk Anley Smith of Linwood replaces shoes on one of the horses that finished the 40-mile ride. The ride, organized by the Topkea chapter of AIR FORCE EQUIPMENT Horsemen ride for charity By PAM HOWARD and BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporters KEN COMBS/Kansan staff About 200 riders who gathered with their horses and 15 wagons in a field east of Lake Perry Saturday looked as if they had just stepped out of a western movie. The intent of the riders was to recapture the past, but to make the future bright for people suffering from kidney disease. The riders participated in the Ride for Life, a 40-mile, two-day trail ride, the main purpose of which was to raise funds for kidney research. The ride was sponsored by the Topeka chapter of the Kidney Foundation of Kansas and western Missouri. THE IDEA OF THE Ride for Life originated in Springfield, Mo. five years ago and was adopted by the Kansas and western Missouri chapter a year later. Last year, the ride raised more than $10,000 for the foundation. Marcita Pittman, area director for the Topeka chapter, said this year that the foundation hoped to exceed $12,000 in pledges. "What really makes these things go," Pittman are the riders who actually go out and get the plice. She said that unlike many walk-a-thons, the Ride for Life usually collects only 98 percent of her walks made. Pittman attributed the high percentage of natural nature of the ride and the expenses it entails. "For a lot of these people, coming here cost the hundreds of dollars in gas and horse care," Pittman said. "Two years ago, a man from Michigan who came to the ride he averaged $500 per mile, and the 900-mile trip because of his horse trailer." PITTMAN SAID THAT the ride was made much easier by the National Guard, which supplied portable toilets, water and generators. The stationation in the rear of Rittenhouse supplied porcelain totes, water and generators. In preparation for the ride, Pittman said, the foundation mailed letters to past riders and anyone who might be interested. Karl Fink, Holton, and Herb Port, Hoyt, carefully mapped the trail. They used their knowledge of horses and riding to choose the best gravel roads and a lunch stoe. The Topeka chapter gave trophies for the oldest and youngest backhorse rider, the oldest and youngest wagon rider, the two best trailhands, the rider with the most sponsors, the rider who raised the most money in pledges and the rider who traveled the farthest. RICHARD "SLICK" FRASER of Lawrence, who flashed a straw hat covered with buttons from previous rides, rode with his wife, Shirley. He was survived by three of his uncles and four grandchildren. One of Fraser's daughters, Michelle, 16, was honorary chairman of the 77 ride. She had been at the University of Kansas Medical Center recovering from a kidney transplant then. This year's honory chairman, Vicky Moran, also underwent kidney transplant surgery. Moran successfully received a kidney from her on February, three days after her 36th birthday. Regents delay banner policy decision By CINDICUBRIE Staff Reporter The Kansas Board of Regents decided Friday the best action on its banner policy was no "nasty" The Legislative, By-Laws and Policy Committee referred action on the policy to the Council of Presidents, the chief administrators of Kansas universities, which will discuss the writing of the policy next month and submit its recommendation to the committee and then to the Board. Richard Cole, chairman of the KU Blue Ribbon Committee on the Freedom of Speech, which recommended the changes in the policy, was not dispointed by the delay. "If the Blue Ribbon committee could spend three to four months (examining the policy) then the Board of Regents can reasonably spend one month reviewing the policy. It's reasonable that the Regents would want a recommendation from the Council of妨害 THE COUNCIL OF Presidents chairman, John Visser, president of Emporia State University, said the group had not had enough time to conduct the study. Mr. Blue Ribbon committee at its meeting Thursday. The committee recommended last April that the Regents change the wording of the policy to say that "freedom of political expression on the campus should be protected subject only to the rights of the university to maintain order, assure security and promote freedom," and the continuity of the educational process." The portion of the current policy that has caused controversy states "political advertisements shall not be permitted in enclosed areas of the campus devoted primarily to information or enclosed areas during non-political events." That policy had been tested at KU by 12 protesters who were arrested at Commencement last May after they displayed a banner that read "Declaration of First Amendment rights at the University." CHARGES AGAINST the protesters were dropped by City Prosecutor Colt Knutson after a similar display at KU's Convocation last month. Cole said that one way to “get things going” on the policy would be for EU to present a proposal to the Council. "It would be useful if the University of Kansas, See REGENTS page 5 Poland must reform or regress, economists say By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Faced with a $20 billion debt and lingering strikes, the Polish government has two alternatives, either reform and decentralize its economic system or return to a completely centralized system, according to a KU assistant. The Polish National Bank of Polish and American economists last week. Poland is the only East European country that had negative growth last year, said John Garland, an acting assistant professor of business. Garland delivered a report on the Polish economy to 10 economists from the Polish Ministry of Foreign Trade and 15 American businessman, government officials and professors at a seminar at the University of "Everyone agrees that something must be done, but they can't agree on what," he said. The country can either reform and continue its growth or move forward and live off the goodness of the Soviet Union." Garland, who has researched East European economics for about five years, outlined the present economic crises in Poland in a report to the European Commission Committee. That report was released last month. POLAND RELIESS HEAVILY on Soviet trade, like other nations in the communist bloc; Garland said, and the country accumulated a $20 billion surplus years while trying to modernize its technology. As a result, 96 percent of the revenue from Poland's exports is used to pay off its debt. "That leaves only 5 percent to import wheat as a grain and advanced technology," he said. Poland's central planners are now faced with a dilemma. Garland said. Poland must increase exports, such as coal or cured火, to cover its debts, but to provide incentives for workers and keep consumers employed. Poland must produce more for the domestic economy. At last week's conference, Garland said, U.S. economists recommended that Poland deci- "There comes a time when people wonder what happened to that better life that was promised to them," Garland said. "This is what happened in Poland." tralize its economic system and join the International Monetary Fund, a non-political system created to help countries with economic problems. IN POLAND, ONLY sweeping reforms, such as achieving a balance between supply and demand and allowing prices to reflect the costs of production, will be effective, Garland said. In the past, however, the Polish government was reluctant to make such changes. "It is perceived to be a political trade-off," Garcia said. "I see think, they will lose piece of the ground." By making small, ineffective policy changes, we have lost our most creditable with the Polish people, he said. GARLAND, WHO HAS visited Poland three See POLAND page 5 Weather THE FURY DOG It should be partly cloudy today with temperatures ranging in the mid-70s, according to the National Weather Service, which has a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. The extended forecast calls for much co-operation and a chance of thundershowers Wednesday. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 22.1980 News Briefs From United Press International Man charged in Olathe home bomb OLATHE—The former husband of one of the victims of an Olathe house bombing has been charged with murder in the case, police said yesterday. The blast Saturday was caused by "an explosive device detonated inside the residence," police L. Robert Patterson said in a statement released Wednesday. A 27-year-old man was arrested late Saturday and charged with six counts of murder. He identified him as Danny E. Crump, Olivia the pregnant husband of one victim. Police said the suspect was once married to either Diane Crump or Susan Post, both victims of the bombing. Crump was scheduled to be arraigned today in Johnson County District Court, police said. They would not comment on a possible motive for the A witness told police that someone had left a cardboard box on the hood of a car parked in the house's driveway before the explosion occurred. Police said the driver was not in control of the car. Five people were dead when authorities arrived at the scene. A sixth person died later at a hospital. Killed in the bastion were Robert Post, 51; his wife, Norma Janee, 47; a son, James, 10; and a daughter, Diane Crump, age about 20. Police tenthly identified the other victims as another son, Richard Post, 21, and another daughter, Susan Post, about 20. Turkish prime minister picks cabinet The official announcement by the state-run Turkish Radio was heralded by the news that a new harsh marital law would ban higher prices on钻石 such as gazelle diamonds. ANKARA, Turkey—Turkey's new prime minister, retired naval commander Balent Ulius, formed a 27-member cabinet yesterday of former army officers, liberal technocrats and respected politicians to guide the country back to democracy. The radio said Ulius's cabinet was formally approved by the junta, which is known as the National Security Council and is headed by Gen. Kenan Evanr. The new cabinet is the 43rd since the republic was founded in 1923 and now consists of the Minister Suleiman Demaili, whom the junta cased from power nine days ago. Ulmus, 57, will hold his first cabinet meeting today, before he and his ministers pay their respects at the tomb of modern Turkey's founder, Kemal Atas. The cabinet includes seven trained army officers who will hold the key ministries of interior, education, religion, youth and sports, health, customs The junta assigned these ministries to retired officers because they were plagued either by divisions between right-and-left wing extremists, or in the absence of a leader. East German officials, strikers clash BERLIN—East German authorities and striking railworkers from Berlin's western sector clashed in an angry confrontation yesterday, halting work at the train station. The strikers are demanding better pay and working conditions from the East German authorities who run Berlin's rail and urban transportation system. Officials from the non-communist western sector agreed to meet today with the East Germans. Military trains for the three Western powers administering the western sector, Britain, France and the United States, and international passenger trains originating beyond German borders or destined for East Berlin were built to transport approximately 100 on the 110-mile rail corridor through East Germany, authorities said. But only East German passengers on Berlin-bound West German trains were allowed to continue their journey. The incident began early yesterday when strikers called a signal box at the Bevin Zoo station and blocked some rail exits by knocking out signals. Witnesses said ax-wielding East German rail police tried but failed to storm the box and withdrew after police from the western sector arrived on There were no reports of injuries and East German authorities then suspended the rail traffic. Maine votes on nuclear power plants AUGUSTA, Maine—Voters faced a last-minute media bite yesterday on a referendum to ban nuclear power plants in Maine, the first election in the country since 1974. Television and radio stations across the state blared advertisements urging citizens to vote “yes” or “no” tomorrow on the roused ban. Maine Women for a Nuclear-Free Future said the "very survival of the human race is in question." management of the Bath Iron Works shipyard said the "economic vitality and stability" of the plant, by the proposed shutdown of the Maine Yankee nuclear plant in Wisconsin. Gov. Joseph E. Brennan, who reaffirmed his opposition to the nuclear ban later, scheduled a news conference today to make last-minute pitch to voters. In a written statement Saturday, Brennan said that closing the plant "adds inhibit economic development" and "imposes a serious financial burden." "But it would be wrong to decide that a vote to keep Maine Yankee open would necessarily be a vote of confidence in nuclear power," he said. Two statewide polls published last week indicated the proposed nuclear ban would fail by a large margin. Catholic Mass broadcast in Poland The broadcast was in keeping with one of the demands won by Polish strikers earlier this month. "God save Poland," sang the congregation in Warsaw's Holy Cross Church, worshippers had tears in their eyes, and most of the nation sang with them. WARSAW. Poland—In another historic first for a communist country, Poland's state-run radio broadcast Mass movement from a Catholic church It also illustrated the strength of the Polish Catholic Church, which counts more than 90 percent of Poles among its members and has firmly protected its interests since the visit of Pope John Paul II to this, his homeland, last year. Lance blasts Washington "powercrats" WASHINGTON—Former budget director Bert Lancel said yesterday that he would "name manne," his battle against the "powercruisers" who he said had been wrongly labeled as terrorists. Apart from the rapidly spreading formation of free trade unions—also unprecedented in a communist country—the broadcast of Mass by the state-run radio was the most dramatic illustration of the scope of concessions wrested from the government by the strikers almost three weeks ago. Questioned on NBC's "Meet the Press," Lance said he had visited the president's brother in an Americas, Ga., hospital in February 1979 at Lance lashed out at his old enemies as he prepared to testify today before the Senate panel investigating Billy Carter's ties to Libya under an unusual "I went to Americus to the hospital to see Billy and talk to him about his health problem," he said. And to "tell him as best I could that he wasn't in any condition whatsoever to think about taking a trip or going outside the country at that time—that he had to deal with his health problems first." The Senate subcommittee has agreed to Lance's request that his testimony behind closed doors will be in writing, which will be released to the public immediately. Iran, Iraq battle closer to full-scale war BERRUT, Lebanon—As heavy battles involving tanks, artillery and missiles pushed Iran and neighboring Iraq closer to an all-out war yesterday, the Palestine Liberation Organization announced that what was thought to be an offer to mediate. By United Press International An Iraqi military spokesman in Baghdad said that Iraqi forces destroyed five Iranian gunboats at the Iranian port of Khorramshahr and that fighting was taking place along the 100-meter waterway to the mouth of the Gulf. Tehran Radio said the fighting had spread to the banks of the disputed Shatt Al-Arab waterway, Iraq's only outlet to the Persian Gulf. At least one Iranian gunboat was destroyed and a commercial ship was badly damaged in fighting along the way from Khorramashahr to the Gulf. The Kuwait News Agency, quoting an Iranian military spokesman, said Tehran admitted it had suffered airstrikes on the land and sea battles with the Iraqis. IRAN'S LEADING military commanders met for six hours with President Abulassan Bani-Sadr and Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Rajai to discuss the border conflict, Tehran Radio said. A message from PLO Chairman Yaser Aarafat was delivered yesterday to Iraq President Saddam Hussein in Baghdad. Contents of the message were told that he was thought to be an offer by the PLO to mediate between the two oil owers. Bani-Sadr ordered mobilization of 1,000 troops because of the situation on the frontier. Arafat and the PLO have maintained two both Baghdad and Tehran through-out. began in 1979 shortly after Aytatollah Ruhollah Kahmoneh's forces over- It was not disclosed immediately whether Iran's giant oil refinery at Abadan was affected by the fighting, which involved artillery, tanks, missiles and other "heavy machinery," the Iranian report said. In its own official comminique, Iraq said it had gained "gallil control" of Shatt Al-Arab and told other nations they must abide by Iraqi rules in pass-through the water-way, "no matter where he was heading," the Iraqi News Agency said. The agency said the Iraqi flag must be raised as ships enter the waterway. Official thinks warhead already gone that killed one airman and injured 21 others. DAMASCUS, Ark.—One of a group of angry state and local officials who demanded yesterday that the Air Force explain what was being done with a missile's missile's nuclear warhead said he suspected it already had been moved. - PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES Tatom was among a group of angry state and local officials who went to the site to demand that the Air Force tell them what was happening. Sam Tatum, director of the Arkansas Department of Public Safety, said a change in the behavior of Air Force personnel indicated to him that military experts moved the warhead from the site. The nine-megaton warhead, with 750 times the power of the atomic bomb, was dropped on Japan in 1949, was thrown out of a Titan missile silo Friday morning in an explosion + Rush Services Available on Black and White Bedding + Printing - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) - Rash B + W Enlargements - Black and White Prints from adidas in 2 days 1. 16x28" X + W Prints from color or Black and White film * Charges Available To K.J. 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The group, which includes KU students and a KU law professor, labored yesterdays of a firm that makes 12-foot beams and then hoist it into position. THE CLIMBING TOWER is the latest addition to the park, which is being constructed by residents of the Oread neighborhood. Since May, the workers have cleared and graded the lot, put in gravelled walks and a square play area, built a sand box and assembled park benches. The Oread Neighborhood Association is supervising work on the park, according to Nan Harper, director of the ONA's anti-crime program. Harper, 1209 Tennessee, said the ONA had received $2,000 in Community Development funds and $400 in funds to finance the park's construction. The Kansas University Endowment Association owns the corner lot and is leasing it to the ONA for about $10 a month, she said. Harper said the park project was a joint effort of KU students and other students from other schools. which includes the area east of the KU campus to Massachusetts Street between Ninth and 19th streets. "Our neighborhood is 45 percent students, and half of all the people involved in every project are students," she said. KNOWLES SMITH, Topeka senior, and Buck Renofeld, Westport, Conn., senior; were two of the students who attended an evening to assemble the climbing tower. "Buck borrowed some tools from some of the people working on this, and they asked us to help out," Smith said. "I look really good. I'm impressed." Another weekend warrior was George C. Coggins, professor of law. Coggins, 1147 Ohio, said his children would use to use the park when it was finished. "We had more people out here last weekend doing the actual leveling and landscaping," he said. "I expect it will be one of our work parties to get this into shape." The lot at the corner of 13th and Louisiana used to be the site of the Faculty Women's Club, according to Dave Broyles, 1108 Ohio. THE CLUB DISBANED about 10 years ago and gave the property, which included a house, to the Endowment Association, he said. "The Endowment Association had no use for the structure and tore it down," Broyles said. "It's been a vacant lot ever since." Broyles said he was pleased with the new residents, were working together to build a new house. "We've been seeing a lot more of this kind of cooperation all around the country," he said. "People are saying the government isn't responsible for everything and are digging in them." He really happy to see this happening." A public dedication for the park will be Oct. 26. The ONA is sponsoring a name-the-park contest, and entry is welcome to be available in the group's October newsletter. Christoffersen finalist at CSU Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday that he would go to Colorado State to interview for the job of president. Christoffersen is one of six finalists for the position at Colorado State in Fort Collins. He was chosen from 290 nominees. He said he would go to Colorado State Oct. 13 and 14 to interview for the job because he wanted to learn more about the university and the job. ALTHOUGH HE WAS pleased to be nominated, Christoffersen said, he was "quite happy doing what I'm doing at KI." Christoffersen said he was notified about the nomination earlier this fall and had sent a resume to Colorado State. He said he did not know who nominated him. Other candidates for the post are Steven Sample, executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of Nebraska; Bruce Poulton, chancellor of the university system of New Hampshire; Garry Hays, chancellor of the Minnesota State University system; George Christensen, vice president for academics, affairs at Iowa State University; and Ernest Briskey, dean of agriculture at Oregon State University. The position should be filled by early according to the Colorado State Law. Colorado State is 66 miles north of Denver and has an enrollment of more than 13,000 students. Singing Telegrams ASTA "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 AFTERNOON SPECIAL Buy one donut or roll, and get one free with your KUID. Good from 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Monday Friday. Flowers by Alexanders TONIGHT On Campus Yoshi Okawara, the JAPANESE AMBASSADOR to the United States, will speak at 8 tonight in the Forum Room in the Kansas Union. His speech is titled "U.S.-Japanese Relations." It is free and open to the public. UNIVERSITY LECTURE SERIES JAPANESE MUSIC CONCERT A concert of JAPANESE MUSIC will be performed at 11:30 a.m. in 330 Murphy Hall. THE KU MODEL UNITED NATIONS wrote in a letter to the international Room in the Union A MARIMBA CONCERT featuring a Mariimba Mixy with begin at 8 p.m. in Swainton. THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION FILM SERIES will feature "Death in the Morning." The film is about gold's role in history, and "Miri," a "Star Trek" episode, at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall. 3to CAROL LEE DONUT SHOP 1730 W. 26th St. AWRENCE KANSAS 68404 TOMORROW KU THEATRE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE will feature "A Toby Show," at 1 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. There will be an ART FILM titled "Beyond Cultism: Masters of Modern Sculpture" at 1 p.m. in the Helen Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST 3 p.m. in, 209 322 and 829 Harvest Hill Choir practice for the BLACK Bachelor of Music from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in $28 Murphy Hall. The TAU SIGMA DANCE CLASS will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson. The KU ACCOUNTING CLUB will sponsor a presentation titled "Interview Techniques" at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room in the Union. A PUBLIC BIRTH FORUM, sponsored by the Lawrence Association of Parents and Professionals for Safe Alternatives in Childbirth, will be at 7 p.m. at the Lawrence Public Library. The Kansan welcomes items for inclusion in On Campus. Organizations should submit written information on scheduled activities that are free to the campus editor at least two days before the events. $\Psi X /$ Psych Club *Films * Field Trips * Graduate School *Guest Speakers * B.A. Job Info* This Week's Speaker Will Talk On Graduate School Admission in Clinical Psychology Funded by Student ActivityFee ViN Sept. 23 4:30 p.m. Rm. 4 Fraser Meisner Milstead Liquor footlights Featureting one of the largest selections of wire in town. We have something to sut every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842.4499 Holiday Plaza Imaginative Cards & Gifts 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 THE KU ACCOUNTING CLUB sponsors INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES presented by Arthur Young & Co. 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23, 1980 Student Union-Forum Room BOBBY BELL'S BAR-B-QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING $2.49...GET A FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAR OR BLACK BEER AND GRATED SLAY FILED HIGH ON A GOLDEN BAR SERVED WITH FRENCH FRIES! Expires 9/30/80. 2214 YALE ST. BEIREGUEN, LINCOLN ST. VALUABLE COUPON 842-6121 Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 [phone] [email] Greenpoint, FL Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS * TODAY! 900 MASS KANSA S UNION 843-1211 INTRAMURAL TENNIS (doubles) 美国 V4.2 (across from Greenbriar's Dell) REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN The deadline for entering intramural tennis is Wednesday, Sept. 24 at 5:00 p.m.in 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services 864-3546 2323 Ridge Court 841-5999 Sarah and Julie at ... MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL 23rd & Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS GAMMONS Carol Blubaugh Berniece Garber Lynn Carlson Don't Forget FREE Shampoo and Blow Dry with every hair cut. Good until Oct. 15, 1980 with this coupon, or see our ad in the Lawrence Book. Reflections Ridge Ct Paid for by the Untraditional Tradition Pres.一Mike Dankwerth Vice Pres.一Randy Sands Sec.一Kim Parker Treas.一Karen Matthews VOTE Wednesday and Thursday THE UNTRADITIONAL TRADITION Freshman Class Officers "Striving to Enhance K.U. Traditions" RICK'S BIKE SHOP 400 BIKES in stock ph.841-66 1033 VERMONT the GRAMOPHONE shop 842.1811 ASK FOR STATION #5 NOW! YAMAHA CR-240 AM/FM RECEIVER * 20 watt per channel * 0.02% THD * price good thru 8-30-80 We're making things jump with special prices throughout our店—Top quality stereo components at low, low price. INCREDIBLY PRICED AT $235 - - - - - KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 9103421422 25TH & IOWA HOLIDAY PLAZA 9103421422 BORDER BANDIDO buy one BARBEQUE SANDWICH at the regular price, get the second FREE with this coupon 1528 W. 23rd. 842-8861 offer good through Wednesday, Sept.24 TEXICO Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Opinion KU grins and beers it A plan is being drafted to sell beer over University of Kansas football games. If approved, the plan could tap the keg to some much needed revenue for KU's intercollegiate sports. Actually, beer has been consumed throughout the years at Memorial Stadium despite the University's ban on beer at football games. Fans traditionally sneak their afternoon brews through the stadium gates, and there's been virtually nothing the University can do about it. The University will only gain from selling beer, especially given the sad state of the athletic budget. The availability of beer also probably would curb the amount of hard liquor constantly finding its way into the stadium. A study on beer sales at the University of Colorado at Boulder showed that incidents involving drunkenness were fewer after the University started selling beer in the stadium. With that in mind, instituting beer sales would have few, if any, feasibility problems. The Kansas Union already sells beer, and no Kansas Board of Regents policy prohibits the University from selling beer on campus grounds. KU athletic officials have indicated their interest in the plan, and Acting Chancellor Del Shankel intends to discuss the matter soon. At Colorado, beer costs $1 a shot. While beer sales couldn't save KU's athletic budget, they certainly wouldn't worsen its aliments. Even the University could drink to that. Lawrence bicycle enthusiasts fight police, hills and potholes I prefaced my answer with a series of athletic bikes, each designed for bike, coupled with carefully orchestrated groups. "If I don't keep moving, my muscles will tighten up and I won't be able to finish the trip," said dramatically. That line was borrowed from a race whom I had overheard earlier that "I have four bruises on my leg, my nose looks like a burnt tomato and I haven't had a hot shower in four days," I added modestly, pausing to muster up more malaise. "But I asked you why you were on a 430-mile SUSAN SCHOENMAKER P bicycle ride across Iowa," she repeated, ignoring the physiological details. I looked ahead to the sun-baked highway, which looped over unbroken hills into the distance. Scattered across those hills were more than 3,000 bikers with similar sets of brushes and sunburns. At that moment, however, pain rather than停驻使我attention. "I think I am here because of the hills." I said. You know, I haven’t had to walk one uvet. “I haven’t That was three years before I met Mt. Oread. At least our Lawrence forerunners were fair. They didn't mince words when it came to mountains. Despite all geographic rumors to the contrary, the University of Kansas is not flat. Anyone who thinks bicycling is bourgeois hasn't lived in Lawrence or Lawrence in lawrence have two options - up or down. But never fear, KU and Lawrence City Hall aren't going to let the landscape have the last word. For the biker who makes it down Mt. Oread with brakes and bravado intact, Lawrence City Hall has kindly supplied the sand to slin on right before you reach the stop sign. Should you choose to run the stop sign, Murphy's Law, operating in conjunction with City Hall, will see to it that a Lawrence policeman is there to needle a ticket. When it comes to bicycles, Lawrence isn't justice — is it double ionardy. Take, for example, Jayhawk Boulevard. Even the most diligent dogger is often faced with the unique choice of running into a pedestrian on the street or a pedestrian on the grass. Bikers, operating on the theory that there are fewer pedestrians per square inch, generally head for the streets. Cars, trucks and buses are not taken into consideration unless they become life-threatening, in which case the sidewalk suddenly becomes significant. Inevitably, this is coaching and cussing from pugnacious petrestians safely removed from the dog's life. Even the most agile biker, who admittedly has the evolutionary edge, can't always rely on reflexes. Grace is hardy when dealing with such tasks. She knows where and that grates that run the sane way as bicycle tires. Bicycle paths have always held great appeal for the less blessed among bikers. But bicycles, unlikely candidates for a campus beautification project, have had to bite the budgetary bullet. There are no bicycle paths on campus or in Lawrence, unless painted lines on streets are emblazoned to mark the areas of moribundists either fall to notice the painted lines or are color blind. Bicycles have managed to establish a maverick sort of monopoly over traffic patterns on campus simply because they outnumber the vehicles and out-size the pedestrians. But in town, might determine the laws of mobility. Bikers, outflaunted by Darwin's fittest, are selfconfessed users of bicycle helmets, shin guards and bicycle gloves. Bicyclists take solace in the knowledge that soon they may be at the top of the transportation hierarchy. At the last calorie count, bicycles averaged 1,500 miles per gallon. They're even prepared to abandon tamer traffic for the scramble system on Kansas' highways. Kansas countryside offers the bicyclist a healthy blend of open air, free-flying birds (accompanied by free-falling objects), fast-moving dogs and free-for-all traffic. There is the thrill of not knowing whether a semi, a station wagon and a bicycle can all fit on that one lane bridge ahead, or whether the dog sees really well. Needs really has a culinary interest in your foot. Eight years later, some 100,000 bicycles pedled out of New York and back, much to the distress of the more earth-bound citizens. They subsequently passed laws against bicycles, forbidding them to frighten horses and denying them access to Central Park. The law was passed in police, who secreted themselves near sidewalks to intercept and arrest unlawful bikers. Whether it is canines or capitalists, antibicycle attitudes have been on the books for years. In 1890, one New Yorker wrote, "City streets became dueling grounds between horsedrawn vehicles, pedestrians and cycles, all fighting for the right of way." That even makes bicycling in Lawrence look blase. Of course, Lawrence is betting that good bicycle behavior depends not on front line enforcement but flat tires. Flat tires and the Lawrence Law of Geographics—what does down must do up. PED CROSSING Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affirmed by the editor, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. STUDENT SENATE GAS Joe Santos '80 KANSAN Our student body president and vice president take a short trip. Efforts too late to save Student Senate Proven once again that nothing from nothings leaves nothing, the KU Student Senate took a momentous step last week by halving the number of senates it will contain after the next Senate election. After you's stopped yawning, to stop to consider the importance of this step, or rather the lack thereof. The plan, which apportionions Nunemaker as one school instead of several districts, was introduced by Student Body Vice President Matt Davies in an attempt to solve the Senate's problem of luring quorum to Senate meetings. A Senate quorum requires 108 members to be present; of 58 members, 23 were Wednesday to approve the measure that will doom some of their compatriots' seats. big deal, right? That evidently is the attitude of the student body when it comes to Senate matters. And it is clearly the attitude of the Senate concerning Senate matters. A look at some of the Senate's antics of the past week bears this out. The petition to shrink the Senate was debated Sept. 9, but no decision could be made because the Senate underwent another of its many "trial" shrinkages that night and could not raise a quorum. The next day, Davis, suitably, and not surprisingly, perturbed at the turn of events, and not surprisingly, angry letter to senators that barred them for the show of anathy. The letter is really something. First, Davis voiced his understanding for the lack of respect that senators may have for him and Student Affairs. Second, he was a blank spot of respect that drives some senators apathetic. exaggeration to try to induce senators to attend Senate meetings. The letter then resorted to groveling, invoking the influence of the Almighty and a good deal of No dice, however, and looking at the reasons Davis gave for having "some respect for the idea of student governance," as he put it, it is not hard to understand why the letter was ineffective. Davis' claimed that the dissolution of the Senate and its operations would take with it "the BILL MENEZES bus system, the student health policy, the activity fee, Legal Services, the state student lobby and dozens of other programs." Not to mention civilization as we know it. But in truth, these programs are not so intensely complicated that only the Student Senate can operate them. The Senate can barely operate itself. The notion that these programs could not be operated by any organization other than Student Senate, or that they cannot sustain suitable student representation, is ludicrous. Equally laugable is Davis' contention in the letter that the Senate's dissolution would mean a "university at which students have no input into academic policies, into freedom of speech debates, into the selection of faculty and administrators and thereby into the most basic decision-making processes that take place on this campus." Assuming there was massive student participation in these arenas now, and that would be quite an assumption, Davis would have senators believe that students could not independently perform the same functions without a student sample that what is known in common language emerges. Student representation in faculty and administration selection, for example, probably would be better if the students were not drawn from a small, relatively homogeneous group like the one comprising Senate. It would not be difficult to enact procedures whereby students could participate in committee meetings when they were available. The system would be much more representative. If apathy prevailed as it does now, then the students again would have shown that they did not want to have a hand in the process anyhow. Then the teacher has been given more of an opportunity to participate. But all this supposition is wasted time, just like the efforts of Davis and others to legitimize the Senate. But it is nice to know that at least somebody cares enough to do what he thinks needs to be done in order to save what he feels is a necessary part of this university, it is obvious that the efforts border on the quixotic. Apathy has been the strongest force in the Senate for years. Unfortunately, despite his admirable efforts to change this, Davis remains blind to the fact that only a miracle of DeMille proportions could change it. At the Sept. 9 meeting that failed to pass the Senate shrinkage petition, Davis said that if Senate did not improve its efficiency, "no one should be allowed to graduate." Student Senate will begin losing its legality. To say Senate "will begin" losing credibility is like saying that Nixon "began" losing credibility when he resigned from office. To worry about a business loss is like saying "I'm happy Hooker worrying about her virginity." In both cases, it's just a bit too late. Letters to the Editor Kansan breeds mud slingers, smart-alecks To the editor: Enclosed is a quote that I would like to share—one I hope you all will read carefully. The comments are quite an accurate description of Kansan behavior: "There has come into the department of some immature or ambitious journalists an overbearing elitism that sets the public's teeth on edge . . . Rude demeanor on the part of a smart-ack reeler courts cheap peer approval at the cost of public patience. What a dumb way for the press to act." (Eugene Patterson, Quill, April 1980). Your own particular brand of elitist, smart- alice journalism has passed from the annoying to the insulting and finally to the preposterous stage. Scarcely a day goes by that you don't sling mud at some branch of the University, be it the Honors Program, the Student Senate, the Chancellor. You labil everyone and everything with equal ease,ushing your dirt to the press without sparing the time to consider such things as a discussion quotation—things that no doubt are considered to be of peripheral importance to your staff. Yet there is one exclusion that is even more conspicuous and more annoying than these others, and that is your total inability to propose solutions to the problems you bring up. We all know how easy it is to cut a program down, but the trick is to build it up and solve the problem. Without that answer, that solution, your editorials have no legitimacy; they merely serve to "set the public's teeth on edge," and they warn the labels of "everbearing" and "elitist." Student body vice president I will grant you, there are a lot of problems on this campus waiting to be joined by a lot of curzes. But unless you are willing to crawl out of your ivory tower and face these problems with the rest of the "mortal" population, don't bother to go in. You don't have no interest in listening to what you have to say. Student Senate To the editor: Come on! Give us a break. I ever wear from the Kansean is criticism. Rarely is there an article or editorial offering solutions to the problems that exist in Student Senate. Nothing will ever get better if the Kansean keeps giving Senate a bad name. Why don't you try helping Senate by encouraging it instead of killing it? There is little alternative to Senate, unless you would prefer to eliminate all forms of student representation on this campus. I ran for office to try to implement internal changes in the Senate, making the organization more efficient and responsive to student issues. We are not finished yet. At least we are trying different proposals to see whether they work. What has the Kansan done? Criticize, mostly. If you, the editors, have solutions to the problems of the Student Senate or to how we can make the student population less apathetic, then why don't you write about them? I am tired of hearing what a lazy job we are doing and that nothing we attempt is working when you offer nothing your-selves. Greg Schnacke Student body president The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 695-640) Published at the University of Kansas午夜 August through May and Tuesday and Thursday exceptions, except on Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 68451. Subscriptions to the University of Kansas are $2 a semester, or $4 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kankana, Flint Hall, the University of Kansas, Carol Beler Business Manager Baker Walker Managing Editor Cynal Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Warren Associate Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Wilcote Spirit Editor Gene Myers Associate Sports Editor Patti Arnold Entertainment Editor Wen Miller Male Models Editor Judi Winkelman, Todd Mes迪 Wire Editors Lois Winkelman, Todd Mes迪 Chief Photographer Ellen Iwamoto, Bob Schaud, Jennifer Poole Staff Photographers Chirl Cook Staff Photographers Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, Scott Hooke, Dave Drau, Drew Torres Amy Holwell, Ted Licklegh, Bill Mennese, Brass Court Fairfield, Susan Schoenmaker, Glauke Gmapreth Edition Cartoonist Joe Bartos Staff Artists John Jinks, Michael Wunsch, John Bartos Staff Writers John Howland, Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Keaton Koehler National Sales Manager Nellie Clausson Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Classified Manager Jane Coch Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Weddorth Staff Artist Judy Seller Skiff Photographer Bev Wolkens Photo Desk Assistant Leanley Penlag Tearsheets Manager Barb Spehr General Manage and News Advisor Rob Ringer Kansas Advisor Chuck Chowina University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Page 5 te From page 1 sident ization ssues. trying work. stly. If problems like the v don't g what we at- your- Regents which proposed the changes, were to prepare a recommendation for discussion," he said. He said he he had not been asked to prepare a recommendation, but that as chairman of the Blue Ribbon committee he could be in a position to do so. Also on the agenda for discussion by the Regents next month is a policy outlining procedures for withholding paychecks from employees with outstanding fines. THE REGENTS WILL discuss the issue at its meeting next month at Fort Hays State University, and Cole said he thought they would decide the issue then. The Kansas Legislature passed a statute last year that granted the Board of Regents the power to design a program for collection of unpaid fees, fines or penalties. Action on the program was delayed until the Regents Budget and Finance Committee could design a program and submit it to the Regents. Until that time, the University will have no way to enforce payment of delinquent fines. In other business, KU was appropriated additional funds for the payment of classified employees in accordance with the new merit pay plan. THE PLAN, WHICH was approved by the Legislature last year, did not appropriate enough money to cover the amount needed for pay raises for classified employees. The Regents and the state budget director's office decided on the appropriations that would be needed so there would not be any deficits in the budgets of the universities. If the proposal is not approved by the Legislature, KU will have to realocate $1,095,000 from other areas of the University budget to pay for classified employees salary increases. There are 1,123 classified employees at the College of Health Sciences, 2,928 employees at the College of Health Sciences, Kan. The Regents also approved plans for a new medical library at the college and examined the proposed library fee for medical students. THE FEES WILL be added to the student fees paid at enrollment and will average $10 a semester. Students enrolled in six hours or fewer will pay less each semester. Graduate students will pay up to $40 a semester and medical students $50 a semester. Summer session students will pay $20 if they are enrolled in three or fewer hours, and are enrolled in fewer than three semester hours. The legislation that approved the new library stipulated that the students who used the library also help to pay for its construction. Wesco Hall campus is being paid for in the same manner. The Regents also approved the purchase of three vehicles; a one-ton truck for the KU facilities operations department, a 1975 pickup for use in the housekeeping department at the Med Center and a 1981 station wagon for the KU police department. times in the past five years, he had seen Polish people wait in line for five hours to buy meat and had talked to people who have waited eight to 10 years to buy a car. "The people are reform-weary," he said. "Every few months, the government makes reforms and then doesn't give them a chance to work." From page 1 Poland However, even if massive reforms are made, the situation in the probability will soon go on. Concessions that Polish workers were granted last month's strikes could contribute to the problem. "People in the West misunderstand what the effects of the strike settlements are," Garland said. "The wage increases that were granted will have a disastrous economic effect and nobody—not even the Poles—knows what the nature of the independent trade unions will be." At the conference, most economists agreed that Poland should reform its economy and form stronger ties with the international economic system. Garland said he did not know how many of the Polish economists' recommendations would be translated into policy by their government. "A POLISH ECONOMIST once told me, 'It's hard to be a Pole," Garland said. "He said that instead of listening to the opposition, the government shoves them off in a corner. It puts them in the same direction where they are not making crucial decisions." Now that Poland has critical problems, the government could be ready to listen to the economists who attended the Pennsylvania conference, Garland said. The Polish economists who recommended reform were demoted, Garland said. In the meantime, Poland's economic problems worsened. "We only hope they're taking the message back," he said. Forensics From page 1 premises for his lines of argument? Does the process of argument seem reasonable and *Evidence—how effective is the speaker in support of research with valid factual evidence and expert testimony?* - Organization—are the speaker's arguments presented in a clear and well-organized grape2. - *Refutation—how well does the speaker handle the arguments of his opponent?* *Presentation—how persuasive is the speaker in communicating his message? Anderson either came out on top or tied Reagan in each of the categories, and Parson scored the debate 25-20 in favor of the Illinois congressman. In his critique of the debate, Parson said Anderson did a much better job answering the question. "On the draft question, Reagan never answered the second part on whether or not he would reinstitute the draft if necessary," Parson said last night. "Also in answering the energy question it was necessary for the respondent to assume that conservation measures were necessary," he added. "One of our goals with what kind of conservation was necessary." Apparently, both candidates used the material but Anderson did a better job of relating the material to others. Parson said. There were times when specific questions were answered with prepared material by the candidates. The debate itself had several weaknesses. Parson's first experience in evaluating presidential debates was in 1960 when he published a critique of the contest between Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy. This is the second time he scored a goal in 1976 when Jimmy Carter debated Gerald Ford. ZERCHER PHOTO Where Cards & Gifts Around Let Us Help Decorate Your Room HILLCREST 919 IOWA Mon-Tri 10:8 Sat 10:6 ZERCHER PHOTO DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Within walking distance JAYHAWK PHARMACY FREE DELIVERY 842-9982 6th & Michigan We fill KU student prescriptions and offer ★ Discount Prices *Individual patient records ★ Free Delivery Look for our coupon in the Lawrence Book What A Deal! $1.49 Meal Hadees French Fries Big Cheese,Regular Fries& Small Soft Drink What A Deal! $1.49Meal A Hardee's Big Cheese is two pure beef burgers charroiled with a whole lot of tangy melted cheese all hot and juicy. Add a regular size order of fries and a cool refreshing small soft drink and you've got a real meal. all for $1.49. But hurry, this offer ends Thursday Good at participating Hardee's only! Hardeez's French Fries Hardee's. Hardee's "Best Eatin' All Around!" 2030 W. 23rd All You Can Eat Pancakes $1.79! Served With 2 Link Sausages 4:00 p.m. to Close Wednesday & Sunday 821 Iowa Lawrence Nobody Does It Better!! --- One Week Delivery On All Silk Screen Shirts Let us print your Fall Sportswear! Hot Press Printing While You Wait! Best Prices In Town! T-Shirts, Football Jerseys, Coaches Shirts, Sweats and Warm-ups— Everything For Your Fall Wear! Located On Campus Discount on Group Purchases! Raq Tag 842-1059 Hours Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30 44 BUY OR SELL 31 New Hampshire SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Patronize Kansan advertisers. SUA FILMS Monday, Sept. 22 Lawrence of Arabia David Lean's epic for all of Freddie Young's Oscar-winning pins, disables and zooms, focusses on one man, T.E. Gibson, a genius, a man who translated the illad and fought alongside the Arabs. Peter O'Toole is brilliant as Lawrence and he is also an admirable Hawkins, Omer Sharl, Anthony Quyle, Claud Rain, Anthony Quilla and many more Winner of seven Oscars including Picture of Figure 1962 (.222) color. 7:30. (1962) Tuesday, Sept. 23 The Ruling Class The heir to the Eardidom of Gurney is Jack Gumper (Peter O'Toole)—who believes himself to be Jesus Christ. Eventually he became a priest and Jack -Jack the Ripper. Peter Medal's sharp satire is a merciless, hilarious comedy leaving no sacred cow untreated. With a magnificent supporting cast led by Julianne Hopkins, he dwells in a neat treat (154 min.) Color: 7.30. (1972) Wednesday, Sept. 24 Women in Love (1970) D. H. Lawrence's novel about two sisters seeking something more, finding seepage through a screen by K Russell. Glendon Jackson and her sister Jennifer Linden are the sisters; Alan Bates, Oliver Reed and Eleanor Bron round out the line cast (129 mm). Color. Thursday, Sept. 25 Sambizanga (1972) Flimed during actual holliday hostilities in 1950, she's now a shortcomings by its immeditation and realism. The story of a black woman searching for her husband, lost in a maze of New York city's cinematic fine film... a revolutionary picture."—New York Times, 1928; color: J. C. Calderon, *Color*; 7:30. Unless otherwise noted all will be furnished by Auditorium Kansas Union Weekday enclosed $1,000. Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Tickets available at the SAU office, Kansas Union 4th level. Information 864-582-3795, smoking or retirements allowed. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Senate panel starts budget hearings The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee will hear requests from 12 student organizations tonight in the morning of for nights of tense discussions. According to the committee's time schedule, each group will be allowed five minutes to present its request, eight minutes to answer questions from the committee and making the presentation is scheduled to begin at 8:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Walnut Room and end at 11 p.m. with a 15-minute informational session, a 15- minute mid-session break and a 15- minute discussion after all requests have been presented. FOLLOWING A SIMILAR schedule, 14 groups are to make presentations on each of the next three nights. Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, will meet with the committee would meet with the following Monday night. Besides packing 55 organization presentations into four nights, the committee also is faced with meeting requests totaling $85, $183. 3 with only $16, $097. 3 available for funding. Mikl Gordon, Finance and Auditing Committee co-chairman, said, "In the past, we have been able to make groups if not happy at least satisfied. This year not everyone is even going to be satisfied." The Iranian Student Association is the first organization on the agenda. A discrepancy on the budget request form, however, showed a total request of $419 but only $372 was itemized, a committee requirement for funding. On the Record Lawrence police arrested a 56-year-old DeSoto man Saturday night and charged him with two counts of indecent exposure and two counts of enticement of a child. The man is being held in Douglas County Jail in lieu of $55,030 bond. According to police, the man enticed two 5-year-old girls playing in Edgewater Park, 1600 Haskell, into his apartment about 10:00 p.m. and sexually accosted them. Neither girl suffered physical injuries, police said. Police said the man gave three girls toys, and then persuaded two of them to go to his car. The girl hid her mother and had her mother that the man had given her the toy, police said. THE CHILD'S MOTHER went to the park and saw the two girls in the park and the man leaving in his car, police said. Aided by a description of the man and the car, police found the man in Deto. Soto. Police said the man had been seen in the park before. IN A ONE-CAR accident about 11:45 Saturday night at Ninth and Tennessee streets, a driver knocked over a traffic light, contributing to an injury accident at the intersection 15 minutes later, Lawrence police said yesterday. Police are still looking for the driver of the car involved in the first accident, and to help remove the pole from the hood of his car before driving away. By ROSE SIMMONS State economy makes gains Staff Reporter The Kansas economy is showing signs of recovering from the dive it took in the first six months of 1980, according to Mokhtee Ahmad, financial economist for the state of Kansas. Total employment in Kansas during July declined by 13,600, or 1.1 percent, from June, Ahmad said, but recent employee recalls by the Cessna in Winnipeg could begin of a reversal in that employment trend. Initial unemployment claims decreased by 4,003, or 4.5 percent, from June to July, according to a report released in August by the Kansas Department of Human Resources. In Lawrence, 1,500 An early indicator of a change in the direction of the Kansas economy was the number of initial claims for unemployment insurance payments, said Bob Glass, researcher for KU's Economic and Business Research. people filed unemployment claims in July, down by 200 from June. However, layoffs at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. in Topeka and the General Motors Corp. plants in Kansas City, Kan., can not depress Kansas employment figures, Glass said. Crop losses caused by the summer drought should not hinder economic recovery. In Kansas, Jarvis at Kansas State University, said Grain prices, which have increased 15 percent since July, should offset the decline in income from the crop losses, he said. Higher grain prices also should stimulate growth in the farm machinery industry, Emerson said. Employment in Lawrence is up, according to the Department of Human Resources report. The increase is mainly due to a recall of laid-off workers by manufacturing plants and schools, the report said. STUDENTS RETURNING to school and leaving the labor market, and recent graduates entering the labor market also are factors. The employment outlook in Lawrence continues to improve as students create more demand in sectors such as the food industry. But escalating interest rates and a dramatic increase in the cost of energy could temporarily choke off economic recovery. Ahmad said. As interest rates go up, consumers are reluctant to purchase durable goods such as automobiles. Without consumer demand for automobiles, the prices will increase and production which in later days to employee laffoffs. "The OPEC nations helped out by not increasing oil prices drastically." Ahmad said. A sharp increase in oil prices would mean that more would be spent on gasoline and heating oil, and less would be spent on other goods to economy, such as housing, clothing and cars, according to Ahmad TACO JOHN'S It's Tacorrific! MONDAY SPECIAL 3 Tacos $1.30 Reg.$1.92 1101 W. 6th 1626 W. 23rd Holiday Flights Are Filling Fast! Olive O'Brien Sun.-Thur. 10:30 a.m.-midnight Fri.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.-2:00 a.m. BOSS Make Your Reservations TODAY! "There is no extra charge when you buy your airline tickets at Maupintour." Maupintour travel service K. U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 EXLE EXLE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th KODACOLOR Film DEVELOPED AND PRINTED 12 EXP. 110-126 20 8 & 24 EXP 126-110-135 $2.50 36 EXP-135MM $4.50 $150 Enclose 25* more per roll for special handling and 1st class return. Expires May 1,198 Enclose this ad with order SKRUDLAND PHOTO Hwvy H North Lake Geneva, Wis., 53147 Hwvy H North TRUTH IN ADVERTISING ATTENTION: THESIS COPIERS BEWARE OF FALSE AND MISLEADING CLAIMS COMPARE FOR YOURSELF Copy Center "E" will make Thesis Copies for you for 66 each, but those copies are, according to their representative, made on a "Shiny-Surfaced" paper. In other words, made on a coated paper copier. Needless to say, "Most People want the real 25% Uncoated Rag Bond which is 7¢ a copy," not 6¢. Copy Center "E" will allow another 10% discount if your order totals over 50 copies. Since it's been brought-up, we invite your comparison of the following (we called and found): COPY CTR "E" HOUSE OF USHER Thesis Copying, cost per copy on White, Uncoated, 25% Rag Bond ... 7¢ ... 5¢ (You don't pay for gathering at House of Usher unless you want it — it adds $1 per copy) Cost to make 5-Copies of a 100-page Thesis on 25% Uncoated Rag Bond, including all quantity discounts ... $31.50 ... $25.00 HOW ABOUT THESIS BINDING? HOW ABOUT THEISIS BINDING? Let's Compare Again... COST $66.00* $30.00 Hard-Bind 4-Copies with a 3-Line Title & Your Name Gold Stamped on Front TIME 10-days 2-3 days *To be fair, the above is Copy Center "E's" *Rush Service* — their regular service would be "Only" $15.00, but would take 4-6 weeks. And while we're at it . . . 200 copies 8½ x 11 White 20# Bond (including all so-called discounts) ... $8.50 ... $5.00 .. 1000 copies each of 2 originals 8½ x 11 20# ... $55.00 ... $42.00 . And We Think You Will Agree, The House of Usher is.. - COMPARE OUR PRICES * - COMPARE OUR PRICES * * COMPARE OUR QUALITY * * COMPARE OUR EXPERIENCE * * COMPARE OUR SERVICE * 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • PHONE (913) 842-3610 HOUSE OF USHER BAT Headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying in Lawrence FASHION HONORS Uppercut Uppercut OUR SUCCESS GOES TO YOUR HEAD 1031 VERMONT IN THE BAY BU DING Taming Tight Curl Call Deanna for an appointment today. 841-4894 THE UNION FOR THE WORLD A MUSIC ALBUM BY JOHN L. HARRIS MUSIC FOUNDATION OF AMERICA THE NIDING PLACE 20TH AVE. S. 54TH ST. NEW YORK, NY 10022 1975 Thurs. Sept. 25 Fri. Sept. 26 The story of a family's love for the Jews in their darkest hour 7 p.m. Union Jayhawk Room the CROSS and the SWITCHBLADE They though they were tough and the stranger tasted them with a book. PA ROBIN 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room Sat. Sept. 27 Mon Sept. 29 AN INSPIRING STORY of a man's journey from poverty to greatness A story of Jesus sung and told by Johnny Cash The GOSPEL ROAD FILM BY JOHNY CASH AUTHOR BRENDAN GRANT 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room THE BIG STORY OF THE 1970S 7 room Union Strayhawk Room Ma S Want lowsl Bible A & Ti tc 14 o do 2 2 ba op w co m F f 12 Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Page 7 Major-league Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 95 | 54 | .638 | - | | Baltimore | 91 | 50 | .611 | - | | Cleveland | 91 | 50 | .594 | 13 | | Boston | 78 | 68 | .538 | 13 | | Detroit | 74 | 72 | .517 | 20 | | Toronto | 74 | 74 | .490 | 20 | | Ontario | 62 | 87 | .416 | 33 | | | W | L | Pct | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 92 | 58 | .613 | 10 | | Oakland | 71 | 78 | .303 | 10 | | Minnesota | 71 | 68 | .473 | 20 | | California | 62 | 62 | .419 | 20 | | Chicago | 62 | 67 | .419 | 29 | | San Francisco | 62 | 67 | .418 | 27 | **FIGURE 11.** TOWERS Detroit 13, Cleveland 1 New York 3, Boston 0 Chicago 7, Miami 2 Minnesota 8, Chicago 4,1 game Minnesota 6, Chicago 4,2 game Seattle 7, Milwaukee 5 Illinois 6, Kansas City 3 California 6, New York 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST LEFT W 81 W 61 Pot 78 Montreal 71 71 Pot 68 Philadelphia 78 67 347 Philadelphia 78 67 352 St. Louis 78 61 352 New York 68 71 423 New York 68 71 424 W W L F Pet GB Houston 84 69 561 344 Los Angeles 84 69 561 344 Albuquerque 77 72 517 418 San Francisco 77 72 517 418 San Diego 77 72 517 418 Yesterday's Games Pittsburgh, 8 New York 4 Philadelphia, 7 Chicago 3 Miami, 6 Miami 4 San Diego, 3 Atlanta 2 Houston, 2 11 games Houston, 5 San Francisco 1 AMERICAN CONFERENCE NFL Football Buffalo W 2 L T Pct. New England 3 0 1 0.987 Miami 2 1 0 .697 Oakland 1 1 0 .323 NY Jets 0 3 0 .000 NATIONAL CONFERENCE W 2 L 1 T Pct. Pittsburgh 2 1 0 0 .687 Houston 1 2 0 0 .667 Cincinnati 1 2 0 0 .333 Cleveland 1 2 0 0 .333 W 3 L 0 T 1 Pct. San Diego 2 0 0 0.687 Oakland 2 1 2 0 .333 Denver 1 2 2 0 .333 Kansas City 1 2 0 0 .333 W 2 L 0 T Pct. Philadelphia 2 W 1 L 0 1.000 Dallas 2 D 1 L 0 1.000 NY Giants 1 1 1 0 .500 Washington 1 1 1 0 .500 Louisville 1 0 0 0 .333 | | W | L | T | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Detroit | 2 | 0 | 1 | .006 | | Tampa Bay | 2 | 1 | 0 | .007 | | Minnesota | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | | Carolina | 2 | 1 | 0 | .333 | | Green Bay | 2 | 1 | 0 | .333 | W 3 L 0 T Pet. San Francisco 1 0 1.000 Los Angeles 1 2 0 .333 Alamogordo 1 2 0 .333 New Orleans 2 0 0 .000 Cleveland 20, Kansas City 17 Minnesota 16, Chicago 14 Cincinnati 30, Pittsburgh 28 Cincinnati 29, Pittsburgh 28 San Francisco 27, NJ Yets 27 Buffalo 25, New Orleans 26 Buffalo 25, New Orleans 26 San Diego 30, Denver 12 Lost Angeles 51, Green Bay 21 Oakland 24, Washington 21 Oakland 24, Washington 21 Today's Games NY Giants at Philadelphia, 8 p.m. TEAM STATISTICS PITT KU First down 47 7 Rushers-yard 51-173 32-4 Yards yards 293 82 Total yards 464 82 Total return 44 10 Passing 14 10 Passing yards 9-30.3 19-47 Fumbles-lost 3-1 1-7 Fumbles lost 1-1 1-7 KU Stats Passing-Pitt, Marino 17-38-240, Hawkins 1-1-43, Kansas, Seurer 5-13-40, Smith 3-8-42 (one interception). Rushing- Pitt, McCall 16-71 (Ireland) 11-67, Jones 8-75, Hittin 10-19, DIBERTian 3-11 1-4; Marion 4-18, Kansas 4-18, Belyson 7-23, Jenkins 4-18, Smith 3-14, Searer 7-32). Punting—Pitt, Ryan 9-30.3. Kansas, Scribner 104.7.7 RECEIVING-Pitt--Pitt, Michigan 4-79; Dembrowski 6-15; Pryor 2-38; McLaren 3-11; Brooks 2-16; Camlin 1-45; Winkens 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; Baskin 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; Baskin 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; Baskin 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; Baskin 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; Baskin 1-25; Hawkins 1-15; Jones 1-32; SCORE BY QUARTERS Pittsburgh 0 10 6 2-18 Kansas 3 0 0 0-3 Kansas -FG KALMeyer 25 1:36 Pitt -FG Trout 22 10:48 Pitt - Pryor 2 pass from Marine (Troet Kick) 6-99 Pitt—Dombrowski 23 pass from Marine (Kick failed) 4:56 Pitt—Safety 12:22 Big 8 Football Big Eight Conference Standing | | W | L | T | Pts OP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Nebraska | 2 | 0 | 10 | 98 | | Missouri | 2 | 0 | 10 | 69 | | Iowa State | 2 | 0 | 0 | 89 | | Utah State | 2 | 0 | 0 | 73 | | Kansas State | 0 | 1 | 0 | 24 | | Kansas | 0 | 1 | 0 | 10 | | Oklahoma State | 0 | 1 | 0 | 59 | | Colorado | 0 | 1 | 0 | 34 | | | W | L | T | Pts OP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | W | 2 | 0 | 10 | 98 | | L | 0 | 1 | 0 | 69 | | R | 0 | 0 | 0 | 73 | | R | 0 | 1 | 0 | 24 | | K | 0 | 1 | 0 | 10 | | K | 0 | 1 | 0 | 59 | | C | 0 | 1 | 0 | 34 | Nebraksa 57, Iowa 10; Mossurau 62, Illinois 11; State 77, San Jose 6; State Kansas 42, South Dakota 3; Pittsburgh 18, Kansas 3; Arkansas 34, Ohio State 40; LAST 23, Colorado 20 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 Stanford at Oklahoma; Louisville at Kansas; Arkansas State at Kansas; Indiana at Colorado; Nebraska at Pam State; Missouri State Idaho State; Iowa State at Oklahoma CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 15 words or fewer .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 .25 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 8 p.m. Tuesday Friday 8 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 8 p.m. Thursday Friday 8 p.m. Friday Wednesday 8 p.m. The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by caller by baskin the Kansan business office at 840-358. ANNOUNCEMENTS KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 HILLEL GENERAL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Tuesday, Sept. 23-7:30 p.m. Kansas Union International Room Come share your ideas with us! Refreshments will be served. For further info call: 864-3948. ... to elect officers and board members and discuss activities for the coming year .. ENTERTAINMENT Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship? Study to learn every Tuesday from 7:30 p.m. Partnership study every Tuesday from 7:30 p.m. Looking for something on Sunday? TRY THE CLUB LOUSE, 206 Central St., Open from 5 p.m. till 3 a.m. Memberships available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUIS'S BAIR. 1009 Mass. iff Outdoor. Hoolderlading 1031 Mana, Cues Friday, 05:30 pm to 12:00 pm. 986-743-2520. Image ID: d2b7246 THE DEAL—8 men playin' to win—coming in October 9-26 FOR RENT Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing 2 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now, 1.1b hatched attached garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our and ours. Southern Parkway Township, 26th and 10ks. 842-880-7280. For rent, nyt apt. for men, to campus. For rent, may work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, large office, opener, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4455.8 a.m.-5 p.m. Furnished studio available immediately, quiet. Milwaukeebrook, 802. $452-$480, 9-23 New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdms, study, dining rm, ding rm. No pets. For more information call 842-4455 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 3 bdm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across square, tennis court and tennis courts $400 monthly. 811-653-053 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace 2 stu. Will take 3 students. 2500 841-743-7343 Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. Broadway, central air conditioning, duplex, central air conditioning, all appliances. Call 843-7530 or 843-2704. Vila Cast Apartment. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bathrooms. quiet location; 2% blocks south wall carpet. quiet location; 2% blocks north wall carpet. quiet location; 2% blocks on or anytime on weekends. KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished Beautiful housing! Call 913-381-287, 10-3 Needed: Roommate to divide 4 bdrm. house Needed: Roommate to divide 117.50 + 4/8 ulm. Call Doug 841-287-377. 2 bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt. 3 bedroom apt with comfortable, comfortablely priced bedroom. Call 518-609-7222. Near campus 2 Bdm.爬, comfort for adults 4-10 yrs. 81-507 8:15 p.m. 84-513 841-507 8:15 p.m. 9-22 For fall or spring, Nailsham Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private room. It is weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, fun schedule of seating with snacks, meals, drinks for home or if an apartment isn't what you want. Nailsham Hall, 1800 Nailsham Drive, 843-859f, tpfn: 843-859f. For rent to students, 1 bdm. apt., fur- rent to students, 1 bdm. apt., $195 + utilities at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdm. bassett with lots of windows at 1423 1473 + electricity at 873-770 or 1425 Apt. for rent. Quiet student, 1bd. furnished. 3rd floor walkup in older home overlooking city on KU bus. $175 per month, all utilities paid, no bus. #824-216-690. 2 bdmr. apt. furnished $235, water paid. 8 bdmr. pvt. furnished $245, water paid. 12 a.p.m. 12 ppm. 841-8402. route 9-24 Office space at Area 1, 932 Mass. 630 sq. ft. reception room and 3 inner rooms. Minor remodeling. Also conference room, furnished 820 sq. ft. Call 853-2104 or 853-0777. $250/month. Uphilips paid 3 large, attractive rooms. Air-conditioned. Convenient location. Room on the ground floor. May 31, 1981. 611 W. Ninth, upstairs. Monday through Friday, p. weekdays. Weekends. 843-818-355. 9-26 FOR SALE Nice 2 bdm. basement aep. furnished 2 blocks from campus = $250/month. 841-296- 7362. New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding. Newborn Furniture. 1200 New York St. 84th Fl. Boston, MA 02107. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them—1). As study material makes sense to use them—2). 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As study material makes sense to use them-748). As study material makes sense to use them-749). As study material makes sense to use them-750). As study material makes sense to use them-751). As study material makes sense to use them-752). As study material makes sense to use them-753). As study material makes sense to use them-754). As study material makes sense to use them-755). As study material makes sense to use them-756). As study material makes sense to use them-757). As study material makes sense to use them-758). As study material makes sense to use them-759). As study material makes sense to use them-760). As study material makes sense to use them-761). As study material makes sense to use them-762). As study material makes sense to use them-763). As study material makes sense to use them-764). As study material makes sense to use them-765). As study material makes sense to use them-766). As study material makes sense to use them-767). 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As study material makes sense to use them-898). As study material makes sense to use them-899). As study material makes sense to use them-890). As study material makes sense to use them-891). As study material makes sense to use them-892). As study material makes sense to use them-893). As study material makes sense to use them-894). As study material makes sense to use them-895). As study material makes sense to use them-896). As study material makes sense to use them-897). As study material makes sense to use them-898). As study material makes sense to use them-899). As study material makes sense to use them-890). As study material makes sense to use them-891). As study material makes sense to use them-892). As study material makes sense to use them-893). As study material makes sense to use them-894). As study material makes sense to use them-895). As study material makes sense to use them-896). As study material makes sense to use them-897). As study material makes sense to use them-898). As study material makes sense to use them-899). As study material makes sense to use them-890). As study material makes sense to use them-891). As study material makes sense to use them-892). As study material makes sense to use them-893 Alternator, starter and generator specialists. AUTO-MOTOR ELECTRIC. 845-906-396, 996 AUTO-MOTOR ELECTRIC. 845-906-396, 996 Musical Instruments; 1939 Gibson L-4 Music Instruments; 1939 Gibson L-4 with case #254; 1912 Wilson Upright Con- temporary; 1912 Wilson Upright Con- temporary good tone $335. Nice solid top student cello with case #254. Very nice, serious inquiring please. Pegs $435-765. Harley-175 SS Excellent condition. 2200 miles new. Mileage: 40-50 mpg. $500 firm. Mothers when you can buy. Harley's 84-104 Mowers. 684-154 Dear For丹尔 Denor. 9-22 WATERBED MATTRESSS, $36.89, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 70, TOMA- KIN, $49.99. MATTRESSTRE, Orthopedic sets from $29. FURNITURE, On-site furniture, on one block west of 6th and low row. FURNITURE, On-site furniture, on one block west of 6th and low row. 1971 Pleasant Lennons, red with black vinty 18300. 740-1277; after 6 9-23 For sale now—1978 Rally Sport, fully new, 843-451 or 842-623. See new co- 联系方式: 843-451 or 842-623. Sleek B & O turntable. Like new with Nintendo cartridge and cartridge dynamic range enhancement and reduction B barely used. $200. $41-0285. 9-24 *15. Toyota Corolla 1600, 4 cylinder, B hardback. $350. MUST SELL, 73 Mazda wagon. Good shape. Air cond, AM-FM stereo. $100, 843-595-83. **FAST SHIPPING** 1872 MG Midget, reconditioned, like new. 8507 city, fun to drive. Call Google 9-22 75 Toyota, Corolla 1000, 4 cylinder, Best offer, 841-648-8589, Jayhawk Tower #A.6038. D D 1978 LT Camara, Fully equipped, low mileage, new condition, C told Tadd at M-181-94 292 Bookcase $28. record cabinet $35. I also want the back of the case to have cheets etc. M. J. Stough 843-892-893. 9-24 1975 Fiat 128- Good condition, high gas mileage, $160 or best offer. 943-252-3600. 9-23 5 bbm, 28m $4,500, 64h Church, Euc- qualifies for VA or FA loan, Euc- 3162. 28m Must well-Quality Opentia loudspeakers Barely used Pine condition. Listen to them. In good condition. 1972 Plymouth Valiant. Good condition. Must sell. Call Lorraine 841-283-0. 9-23 10-speed. Capri Mondo for sale. New Ex- cursion. Call 841-745-104 after 5 and weekends. MOPED; New 1980 Motobecane M-50B Travail over $60 per sairface (sacrifice at) 843-846-3946 9-26 FOUND Found young female at 27th and Iowa Golden in college. Claim call claim 814-456-9000 9-22 A dorm key on a silver ring, found at seven o'clock on last月17号. Call 684-1661. Color slides of polar bears, brown bears, bears of the Antarctic. 9-22 to Lost and Found at Hoch. Lone key on key ring in 11 Flint. Call 444.333 on ask for Flame 9-23 Found calculator. Call Albert 843-9515. 9-23 Lone key on key ring in 111 Flint. CALL Found one lady matches with yellow band. Found two ladies matches with 9-17 number. Call 864-308-988. 9-23 Prescription. pinkish ink at 1309 Ohio on Sunday. 843-8219. 9-23 Male, grey and white kitten. 23rd and Natal, Saturday Call 843-805-6900. Joyce Karen. 9-23 Found a pair of keys near Parrot Athletic Tuesday evening, Tuesday evening, 84-8072 9-424 84-8072 9-424 HELP WANTED Needed Immediately--School and personal care attendants to assist a young female disability or on call set hours. Call Dana Wray 843-123, 841-279, 843-1011. Director of Instrumentation and Electronics for the University of Wisconsin, provision available on or after January 1, 1981. Creative ability required in design of anaerobic equipment, biofilm control, micro- and macro- computer hardware and software designed to characterize and evaluate the D. chrysotrichus, and supervisory ability are required. Salary, experience and qualification. Send resume, experience and qualifications. Send resume, experience and qualifications. Send resume, experience and qualifications. Professor D. J. Defores, Chemistry Department, Kendall Hall, Wisconsin College of Agriculture, two years of experience with Need R.N. to supervise quadripride's care. Need work negotiable. 843-4423. Time: 9-23 worked. LOST LOST. Maroon backpack, backseat 327 Strong. 1st week. Reward. Call John 11:49, after 5. Brown cobra skin wallet lost in front of Walton Library Reward if found Tum 158-23. Last my wallet by the Union. Need contents 1205 Gord Durrant 817 or 318 Blake. Thank you. Black and silver puppy. White paws and black body. Black tag no. 1680. Reward number 485-872 or 485-873 tag no. 1680. Reward number 485-872 or 485-873 tag no. 1680. Reward for return of black wallet lost near 23rd and Maidin. 749-243. 9-22 between University Tertiary Apts. and Lawrence High School. Call 842-0812. 9-23 Lost-Brown Leather Purse between Naism Lost and Park 25, Reward 749-960. 1-623 NOTICE We want to work for you Give us the chance. Vote Enterprise Scott Crenshaw-Vice-president Jill Eisenkramer-President Dennis DuPont—Treasurer Carole Bittman—Secretary NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CLUB LOUSE. On Monday nights your group will be hosting an all night long Only at your place, THE CLUB LOUSE where "Partying is our bus" For Freshman Class Officers PERSONAL DRINK AND DROWSN every Monday night hike the Mountains and enjoy a $1 gift- hind McDonalds on your date you can get. Visit www.drinkanddrowsn.com LOUBE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 6 $1 picnic and 7 $1 lunch. Porting is FREE. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 FOX HILM SURGERY CLINIC—abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment. Birth preparation. Special care. App call 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. (913) 621-300. 4401 W. 91st St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax FREE! Play Ping Pong Tuesday, 9/23 Tuesday, 9/23 --at the Fabulous Duplex. 9-22 the BAPSTEST STUDENT UNION Bible meets Tuesday night at 7, at 1650 9:38. Call 841-7840 for transportation or d-23 HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUSE. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 hibiscus (75 cents) and a gymnastium and the atmosphere of The Club. Built by, 84th, 92nd "Partying is our business." LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights) Drinks include: Cocktails, Ice Tea and there’s no cover charge. Only At the Club Lounge, 508 Locust, 862-942-9 SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB LOISE, 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 on a day. Every Friday PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available willing to explore the opportunities available large eastern based company, our part-time information call: Carly Westwood, st42-425-3010. Information call: Carly Westwood, st42-425-3010. SUN TRAVEL WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS: SILVER DOLLAR CITY September 26-28 $58.00 PRESENTS: SILVER DOLLAR CITY! September 26-28 September 26-2 $58.00 Come see the annual National Fall Crafts Festival at Silver Dollar City and attend the famous Shepherd of Oz play on this weekend outaway! Reservations deadline: Wednesday Sept. 24 For more information drop by the SUA office or call 864-3477. In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more money, she's on CLOSE DAYS TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the hostess will be holding $10 and $5; ladies only $2. Drink and drown at a club! THE CLUB LOUSE, 508 Locust, 842-342-8944. Hostesses available "Partying with ladies." TGIF AT LOUBES BAR with $125 pitch-friend Friday in 6 h. 6 he - Alone!-Ahh! From Friday in 6 h. 6 he - Alone!-Ahh! Looking for the perfect gift idea: got it. ASTI Asking Telegrams, 841-6169 ff Take a break after classes at LOUISE & AFTERNOON. Afternoon specials even day until 6. Green's Ligur has 1976 German Piersporters and 194a Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons. Green's Ice Hockey has ice cold Strong bergs PSYCHIC LIFEHOLDER Solaris PSYCHIC SELF - AWARENESS CLASS Learn about the aura, chakras, skrapes Learn about energy healing for $10 per week, for 10 weeks Eve Leaves Jr. 841-887-6958 Is copying driving your BATTY? DON'T KAIT you! Just use the KINKS out of your keyboard. I can take the KINKS out of your keyboard. D WOMEN 18-60. Scientists, attractive, goo- sies. Build model of the human body. Taulit Scientist, artist, designer, inventor, cook, dancer, actor, matriarch for Pantheri- k relationship. etc. Write W. M. P. Box 3212, Lafayette, IL 60429. Beginning band is looking for BASSIST with instrument inquires with Jaff at 04-0474 or 84-5866. LOUIS' S WEST DRINK AND DROWN Tonight after 6 $4 - girls $3 - gifts Add the cold Cocktails you can drink 718 McMurray LIURA SKWALLOWER noct. of 4F bd. of 10C LIURA SKWALLOWER noct. of 4F bd. of 10C LIURA SKWALLOWER noct. of 4F bd. of 10C campus of campus; JAPAPPY ADR-4 6-8 daily campus of campus; JAPAPPY ADR-4 6-8 daily GUTARIST is needed with acoustic and electric experience in a broad range of music for a young, ambitious. Lawnwardian. For audition call Tm 749-0891 or Mk 845-5721. *9-23* $25 Women's Self Defense. 12 hours of instruction by married couples. Classes meet at the library, p.m. starting 9-23. Sponsored by the K.U. living groups ask about special rates. Call 841-7803, or show up first class. 9-23 ATTENTION: Established brass band is CHIROPROCRACT—Investigate the natural approach to COVID-19 in Mark Twain Clinic, Chinchilla Clinic, Illinois. 843-8336 Home: 841-3333 9-30 Reward for information leading to return—Train first responders to trim and kex, stolen from Wessex day of trimming, weekday event during day, weekends 9-25 Psychic Personality Readings, $25-50, 843- 9414, 1-9 p.m. Tired of all the stores closing at 5.30 PM Tired of all the stores closing at 5.30 PM, imaginative cards and gifts, fun activities for kids, and awnings. Find our ad in this paper and bring it in to 10% off any gift item. 9-26 Volunteers needed for Campus Safety Services' Escort Service and for Committee Work. Volunteers may attend 3306 or attend the meeting at 7 p.m., Sept. 25th in the Room of the Senate of the School Board. Happy Birthday C.V. from C.T. Doo-Doo to you! 9-22 What's it all about? For answers, attend the informational meeting held at campus of Safety Air Force. Day, S-unit, 25th in the Conference Room of *s*卫星技术 Union . . . 9-25 Come to THE HARBOUR LITES for the first time in front of the Toughee. Touton from 7-10 in front of the Toughee. $65 canx bottles; $125 litches. The Harbour Lites, a Wa- Class Dive, 1031 Museum. 9-22 SERVICES OFFERED CORIES I. D. portability, resume, portfolios, slides color & B.W. Tom 841-7254 9-30 THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional bike repair. Fully guaranteed and ready to work upgrades "ups" and "Total Overhauls." Call 841-2781. tf For the finest complete service on most machines. ICE Over 25 years experience specializing in Datsam, Flat, Honda, Toyota 843-2442. HOUSE OF USHE: EMM MASSACHUSETTS & LAMARCEY ANGELS GARDEN 917-253-8100 Tutoring service for all lower level math classes to Call 115. Callurt at: 4016 9-24 LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes sessions start Monday, Sept. 22. Dedicated classes for start of school year. Need some money? Like to babysit? Add your name to the babysitter list and watch the phone call. Call the KU information center at the Student Employment Center 864-4700. 9-23 TYPING 1 do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf Accurate, experienced typist. IBM Selective. Call Donna 842-744. ti Experienced typist—term papers, Thesis, experience corrected typing, Mrs. Wright. Corrected 843-8544, Mrs. Wright. Expertise K-U theory & IBM Correspondence Science, study and research Technology Sales, Banking and marketing 71-802-365-4222 Typet Editor, Editing Piece / Please, Quality welcome; editor / layout Call Jean, MMJ welcome; editing layout Call Jean, MMJ Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms. Ellen or Joann, 841-2172. 12-8 Ellen or Joann, 841-2172. 12-8 Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with the client. Mail resume to: Betty, 842-699-1 after 5 weeks, if unwilling. ORG 812-2001 FOR YOUR MIND COMPOSE ENCORE COPY CORPS 215-4-Houses - Hardware 643-2001 Experienced (tytit-thesis, dissertations, Experiential studies, selecting lecturers, Bake, after 5 p.m. 843-210-390. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 418-4980. tf Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gagley #10-3 10-3 WANTED My old typewriter doesn't correct mistakes or spells it or spell, but I do not. 748-1313 9-26 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- ception evenings to 11 and weekends. MAYFIELD Roommate wanted for mobile home $80 + 1699. Roommate Furnished Call Home 9-23- 3449 after 5. The University Daily BabySaiting—Have own transportation. Can eat lunch or apt. Call 749-3810, afternoons — evenings. Manual Pica Typewriter in good condition. Call 842-5230. 9-24 Buying gold. Paying $50-$140 for men's watches. Buying $25-$35 for women' 1210 W. 23th, Holiday Plaza, 96-928-9-50 www.holidayplaza.com GOLD- SIVER-DIAMONDS Glame lingerie Gold- SIVER-DIAMONDS Glame lingerie more. Free pick-up, 814-750 or e-mail: info@gold-siver-diamonds.com Drummer for working rock band. No punk, disco, just straight-on rok 'n' roll. CALL JOHN GIBBON. Roommate for 2 bdm. apt—Jayhawk West. $120 + utilities Cailet Bret. 745-398-6. Female roommate to share 2 bdm. fur- mance Towers Apt. Towers Apt. All 92-255. Call $433-4602. Upperclass person or graduate student Upon request. No allowance. month + 1/2 utilities. Must be able to tolerate smoking and pet. Write or come by 2424B Oudahl. 9-26 WANTED: Person to enter cooperative child care center and want to find person with similarly aged child willing to trade child care; 4 morning care; 8-12 hour care; 8-24 combinations. Call 841-0885. Non smoking roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. 1080 sqft. canteen, $125/mon. utilities, manitee, 848-3425 Semi-Vitile non-smoker wanted to share simmiled residence near Hill Nill. $10 9-26 9-26 ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! 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: Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 15 words or less CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 NO DEADLINE to run: Copy dues: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 22, 1980 Jayhawks learn rebuilding lesson from masters By GENE MYERS Sports Editor Dill wasn't rebuilt in a day. It took 10 years. Pitt taught that lesson in football architecture Saturday in Memorial Stadium. The students The Panthers showed that KU, a team that has won seven games in three seasons, could not be rebuilt in one game, the surprising season-opening tie with the Oregon Ducks. The Panthers, who went 10 years, from 1963 to 1972, without a winning season, showed that their seventh-ranked team was a hostile defense and mobile offense better than Kansas. "YOU'RE LOOKING at a 10-year program with Pitt," R. head said in an embrough said. "It was a long, almost alma jaw." KU was ready for 60 minutes of football with the national contenders, but the team was ready for 30 minutes. After the first quarter, KU led 3-0. At the half, Pitil only led 10-3. In the second half, the Panthers would but in the first point if their receivers would have held a two-point advantage. Quarterback Dan Marino threw 39 passes and completed 18. Two went for touchdowns. Most of the slipped off fingerpits, bounced off added chests and fell through open arms. "THE SCORE COULD have been 100 to nothing and I wouldn't have criticized my players." Fambridge said. "I didn't criticize the team we're going on to have a program like that." "But we have a ways to go." The Jayhawks, 24-0 losers last year to Pitt, are improved, according to the Pitt players and coaches. "Kansas is much improved," Coach Jackie Herrill said. "I have a lot of respect for them. "They are going to win some games this year. They are well coached, but our defense did well last season." KU's rushing game gained four yards on 32 carries (an average of 4.5 inches a carry) Saturday, and negative 17 yards in last year's game with Pitt. But the passing game had 76 this year. The KU defense was six points tougher, but 10 yards of total offense weaker this time. THE PITT DEFENSE, called the best in the nation by many, including KU, shackled golden gilded, Frank Seier and Kwai Wan. Frank Seier and Kwai Wan. Seurer and Bell both started, were relieved and then returned. Seurer, hurt by the 38 mph wind and rambling Pitt rush, completed 5 of 13 for 40 vards. Steve Smith, last week's starter, replaced Seurer late in the second quarter and then was replaced by Seurer at the start of the fourth quarter. Smith went 3 of 8 for 42 yards. "Quarterback is like pitching, when it's not working you try something new," Fambrough said. "If we would have had 10 quarterbacks, the results would have been the same." Seurer, who was woozy several times when he defended himself off the artificial turf, said that he had been "bullied" by "I think Fambridge made a real good choice," they were hitting hard and I wasn't used to the tide. BELL, WHO GAINED 69 yards and a reputation in the season opener, needed 14 carries to make 27 yards. Bell said he was with himself and the team but not disillusioned. "They just kicked our ass." Bell said. "They kept pushing us back and I'd just say, 'Here we go again.' "We were not really ready for them. Something was not ticking." "We're a better team than last year," Sydney said. "When we not if together we'll be tough." said. "When we put it together, we are on DEFENSE. KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough. On the special teamity team, KU was tough." (47.7 average and set up KU's only score.) The California kids were not the only KU players Pit picked on. David Verser, All-Big Eight flanker, had one catch for 32 yards. He rested the of game in a defensive straight locket. Harry Sydney, offensive captain, gained 14 yards on five carries and Larry Kemp, Sydney's backup, gained negative one yard and was caught in the end zone for a safety. The Pitt punter, Rick Ryan, had nine kicks for a 34.5 average. Two wobbler into the wind, a 18-yarder and a 19-yarder, started KU's first two inside the pitchist. Pit 50. But both times, KU had to punt. But on Scribner's third punt, a high hanger, Bryan Horn hit Pit's Terry White as he attac- ted the goal. The fumely fluffed and Augusta Kyle recovered for KU. THE SCORING THREAT sputtered until Pitt was called for a personal gift to give KU first down on the 11-yard line. The drive stalled on the end of the field. Kallmeyer kicked his first collegiate goal. KU's last chance to score came on its next possession. But Bell fumbled the ball at the Panther 25 on the first play of the second quarter. When the ball rolled away, so did KU's victor; when it returned, not another first down until the third quarter. "We had no offense at all," Fambrrough said. The Pitt defense was responsible for 99 percent of hits. "I thought they were the best defensive team in the country and I'm going to keep thinking about it," she said. JAYHAWK NOTES: THE KU junior varsity player, Jamie Hunt, was named North Water, Oakla. The JWA wks play Oklahoma State. KU's JV coach, Bruce DeHaven, will take about 45 players to Stillwater. Brett, Leonard, Royals all fall short By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Sports Writer KANSA CITY, Mo.—George Brett didn't raise his batting average to 400, Dennis Leonard didn’t win his 200 game, and the third largest hitter in the league is the Royals play like pennant winters yesterday. The 41,329 fans who die the Oakland A's turn 11 hits and two Kansas City errors into a 9-8 victory over the Royals, champions of the American League West. Leonard, who clinched the pennant for the Royals Wednesday night with a three-hitter, gave up eight hits and three home runs in seven innings. OAKLAND PITCHING continued to be a thorn in brets' side. Brett is batting about 20 against the Rockies. Brett of a second home run. Brett is now batting .394. Brett, who started the game hitting .396, hit a home run in the first, but flipped out his next two trips to the plate. In the eighth inning, he hit a fly ball 128 yards up the field. Dwayne Murray scaled the wall and robbed "It was probably the first time I was rooting for a guy to get a hit against me," Oakland manager Billy Martin said. "I was hoping it would fall in for a hit. I hope he hits, 401. I really "We have haven’t been pitching him well, we’ve just been losing it," he said. "But has not had good enough luck against us." OAKLAND PITCHER Mike Norris, who recorded his 21st victory and 22nd complete game, said that he threw Brett "all good pitches." Royals' fans did not agree. Norris was booed for throwing three straight balls to Brett during one at-bat. He bounced one pitch to Britt in the plate. Another was near his head. Royals' manager Jim Frey said Brett was not under a lot of pressure to hit, 400. "It's hard to maintain 400, but he isn't feeling pressure," he said. "The media attention has not gone away." FREY SAID Oakland, which finished last in 1979 had improved this season because of its pitching staff and especially because of Norris and Matt Keough. "These are two reasons that they're playing better this year than the last two years," he said. "Norris had the fastball, curve and screwball without it. Nothing else. I couldn't tell what in the hell it was." Norsis gave accolades to the A's new manager. "Billy's done a heck of a job," he said. "We may be only one game over .500 but it feels like 800 ball." Frey said the Royals had two goals as they began their final road trip of the season tonight "I'd like the pitchers to get in a good groove," he said. "And we have to hope there are no injuries to people who have recently don't want people crashing into the walls." FREY SAID that Leonard pitched a good game despite the loss. "Dennis pitched well in the second half of the game," he said. "He made a couple mistakes." Chiefs drop third straight Gross banged two homers off Leonard. By United Press International The Brown, who had lost their first two games and their offense, won 20-13 with a time-consuming final quarter drive. With the score tied at 13, the Brown recovered a fumble on the Kansas City 13 with 9:02 left in the game. Cleveland—The Cleveland Browns did a complete turnaround yesterday, and the Kansas City Chiefs continued to stumble around. THE BROWNS' OFFENSE barely even saw the ball in their loss to the Houston Oilers last Monday night. After the loss, Cleveland quarterback Brian Sipe indicated that he was not pleased with the game plan, which had the Brownss attempting to establish a running game. He wanted the team to return to the successful wide-open offense of 1979. Kansas City, which is 0-3 for the season, got victory with 44 remaining and a trailing 20. Coach Sam Rutigliano apparently took his advice. The Brown's first play yesterday was a 12-yard pass completion to tight end Ozzie Newsome. Sipe completed 25 passes in 36 attempts for 295 yards and a pair of touchdowns. "The game plan was to go in on the fast side of the pitch, but he just executed better than the last two weeks." ONE OF THOSE executing better was Heisman Trophy winner Charles White, whose total offense for the first two games was 18 yards. White, Cleveland's first-round draft pick this year, scored two touchdowns, picked up 94 yards rushing and 100 receiving. "Their use of Charles White didn't surprise me," Marv Levy, Kansas City coach, said. "They lost the game, I don't think it's logical for them to do lot of analyzing in the midst of the frustration." "I don't have any cool analysis. We just lost." Next Sunday, the Chiefs play San Diego at Arrowhead Stadium. Young wins meet Young, who was tied with Shelley Hamlin in 5-under after three rounds, started strong, took the lead and never outgrew her. Her final total was 3-under 24. OVERLAND PARK (UP)—Three leadoff birdies, bolstered by two more on the back nine, helped Donna Capron Young to a 4-under 69 yesterday to win the Kansas City LPGA Classic at Brookside Country Club. THE BEST NEW SCREENING OF COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown. 843-5788 U STORE IT FORT KNOX MINI WAREHOUSE (behind K-Mart) 1717 W, 31st SL. 841-4244 Smokey and The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PE Varsity Downtown. 843-1065 The Big Red One 7:30 & 9:35 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-840C 3 Fame 7:20 & 9:20 2 Caddyshack 7.20 A 9.20 1 special edition Close Encounters 7:15 & 8:25 1 Being There 7:20 & 9:30 2 Gone with the wind 7:30 am ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2831 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 C AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Bring a dish of food typical of your country. AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts Food, Fun, Fellowship With People from all over the world. Patronize Kansan Advertisers TONITE TONITE "International Pot Luck" September 22,1980 7:00 p.m.—9:00 p.m. OPERATION Building Bridges Between Countries FRIENDSHIP at "The Center" 841-8001 1629 W. 19th Beginner or advanced. By studying Spanish only, four hours a day, four days a week, for fourteen weeks, you will be able to teach the same as one semester in a U. college, $2,589. The cost is about the same as one semester in a U. college, $2,589. Whether you are a beginner or an advanced student, your Spanish studies will be greatly enhanced by opportunistic study. We have organized test scores of our students show that their Spanish language skills are better overall than those obtained by American students who completed standard two year Spanish programs in United States colleges and universities. This is a rigorous academic program lasting from Feb. 1 to June 1, 1981. The cost of $2,589 includes round trip jet fare to Seville, Spain, from Toronto, Canada, as well as travel for Government grants and loans apply for eligible students. You will live with a Spanish family. FULLY ACCREDITED FULLY ACCREDITED. SEMESTER IN SPAIN 2442 E. Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506 (A Program of Trinity Christian College) CALL TOLL FREE for full information 1-800-253-9964 (in Mich. or if toll free line inoperative call 1-616-942-2541 'collect') ALL TOLL FREE party independent coalition prés—bill odle veep—mike stineman sec—knappenberger treas—amy jo chandler We have plans! FROSH CLASS OFFICERS 1980-81 INTRODUCING DRY HAIRCUT FOR GUYS $5.50 Shear Dimensions 1802 Massachusetts Dillon Plaza phone 842-3114 (No appointment needed Open Evenings) THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS UNIVERSITY LECTURE SERIES PRESENTS YOSHIO OKAWARA Yuichi Shimada AMBASSADOR OF JAPAN TO THE UNITED STATES U1 L S 8:00 P.M. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1980 FORUM ROOM KANSAS UNION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ISORED BY THE CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES 8:00 P.M. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1980 CO-SPONSORED BY THE CENTER FOR EAST ASIAN STUDIES KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Tuesday, September 23, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 22 USPS 650-640 Senate panel denies 3 groups' funding By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Supplementary budget requests from three student organizations were cut to zero last night in preliminary action by the Student Senate finance and auditing committee, constituted by 13 groups. The first cut was the Architectural and Urban Design Council's request for $4,166.68 to pay off a $2,616.68 debt incurred in the operation of a campus art and drafting supply store. The $1,500 remainder was requested to finish payments on a print machine and to pay someone to operate Jeff Hayes, president of the council, said the request was a "please for any help we can get." He said a loan was taken out seven years ago to establish the store in the basement of Marvin Hall. The loan was carried over from year to year. Now that the store has gone out of business, Hayes said, the group needs to pay off the debt himself. THE GROUP *did receive* $80 in Senate fund in the spring for student publications and offices. However, Bren Abbett, Senate treasurer, said Senate funds could not be used to pay debtals incurred during previous fiscal years. A bill would have to be introduced to the Legislature requesting that state funds be used to pay the debt, he said. The committee also decided that funding for the print machine was not justified because of a Senate policy that states "no funds shall be allocated for items in a budget whose primary purpose is for the fulfillment of academic requirements." ON A RULING from Mikl Gordon, committee member on the machine was classified as an investigator. The second organization request cut during preliminary discussion was the Undergraduate Engl It requested $276 for a field trip to the Botanical Gardens in St. Louis, Mo. The request was cut, according to the committee, because it was not considered "worthwhile" to a large segment of the KU population. The Art Education Club request for $50 to cover photo-cooking and postage also was cut. The club had received $188 from Senate last spring. THE CLUB CHARGES $1 dues, and raising dues to $2 the club could cover and聘任 them. The Solar Energy International Club, which was formed this semester, requested $369.05 for office supplies, newsletter and handbook printers, energy supplys, telephone and travel expenses. The committee cut the $124.75 requested for library supplies and voted to give the club $213 Alpha Rho Gamma, a professional society of jewelry and silversmithing students, requested $375 for equipment repairs, advertising and travel expenses. After short deliberation, the committee decided to put the request on hold until an interpretation could be made on whether Senate could pay $250 for trips to other universities. According to the Senate rules and regulations, no funds shall be allocated for sending letters or memoranda. BLACK STUDENT UNION'S $6,844.55 request and Black American Law Students Association's $3,298 request also may be severely cut depending on the interpretation. A large portion of their requests are to send delegates to national conventions Gordon said he would prepare a written statement today interpreting the rule and its effects. The six other organizations presenting their requests were Iranian Student Association, $772; KU Model United Nations, $86.70; Kansas University Advertising Club, $65.19; Chinese Student Association, $400; Occupational Therapy Association, and Israel Student Organizations, $657.75. The committee will hear 14 more groups' requests tonight. ASK begins campus voter registration drive Abbott said all decisions were preliminary and the committee would make final recom- By BILL VOGRIN Staff Renorter Special registration tables will be set up on campus at two locations this week to make it easier for KU students to register to vote, enroll in class or receive the student leader who is coordinating the project. The registration, a service sponsored by the Associated Students of Kansas, will be held in front of Wescole Hall and in the Student Senate office on the third floor of the Kansas Union, today through Thursday. Registration begins each morning at 10 and ends at 2 p.m. "This is the last on-campus voter registration drive," Kuo said. "It is basically a service sponsored by ASK to promote voter registration." A similar registration program was held at Allen Field House during enrollment. Kuo estimated that 500-600 students registered at that time. "I really don't have any idea how many student registrations to expect," she said. "We hope to have more students than during this semester and have central locations and will be very visible." POSTERS, PAID for by ASK, will advertise the registration, and student volunteers and workers from ASK to handle the registrations. We will handle the coordination with the Douglas County clerk's office. "We have had excellent cooperation from the county clerk and his people," she said. "Two people from that office are going to help us out with the registration, and they helped it up." Registering someone to vote is a more complicated procedure than Kuo had expected, she said. Besides complying with rules requiring legal notices, registration assistants must complete numerous forms, and even be deputized. "We all were made temporary deputies to carry out a function of the office." Kuo said. They had to show us a map, tell us the rules and instructions for registering, and how to fill out the forms." REGISTRATIONS ARE being taken during business hours every day at the Douglas County Courthouse, according to Dorothy Baldwin, deputy election officer for the county. "Anyone who wants to vote in Douglas County can register at the county courthouse or at the city clerk's office in the city hall," Baldwin said last week. Besides the campus registrations, there will be several other registration times in the county, including: Registration also will be taken today through Saturday at four Rusty's grocery stores in Lawrence. Registration will be taken from 10:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. each day. The Rusty's stores are at 23rd and Louisiana streets, 901 Iowa St., 808 N. 2nd st. and 6th and Kassol streets. THE CLERK'S OFFICE in the county cour thouse will extend its business hours and stay open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. starting Oct. 1. These hours will be in effect for two weeks, until the registration deadline on Oct. 14. The extra registration times have been established to make it as easy as possible to register. However, Baldwin did not expect the number of voters in the county to reach the record total set during the last presidential election. "There are 32,658 registered voters in Douglas County and according to 1979 population figures there are 74,257 people living in the county," she said. "It is always hard to say what kind of turnout to expect, but I doubt we'll reach the highest registration. That was about 36,000 a few years ago," Baldwin said. OUT-OF-STATE students who now live in Kansas can register to vote in Douglas County if they are not registered. "If they consider this their legal residence, they can register and vote here." Baldwin said. But if someone from out-of-state would rather write a letter to that county clerk is all that is necessary. "Write to your home county and they will send you an absentee ballot," she said. "It is easy to vote by absentee ballot, but the ballot must be returned to that county by election day." SINGING FOR HIS FRIENDS Any change of residence, even from an up- stairs apartment to a downstairs one, makes registration necessary. The clerk's office also handles re-registration. Yoshio Okawara, Japan's ambassador to the United States, spoke on "United States-Japan Relations," last night at the Kansas Union. Okawara is the first lecturer of the 1980-81 University Lecture series. Auto competition healthy Japanese diplomat says Bv VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Industrial competition between Japan and the United States is healthy because it promotes efficiency, Yoshio Okawara, Japanese Ambassador to the United States, said last night. Okawara, who was the first speaker of the 1980-81 University Lecture Series, said competition between the two countries—particularly their automakers—stimulated production. "In our relations there have been ups and downs," he said, "but the friction was always untouched." OKAWARA TOLD the students and faculty who overflowed the Kansas Union's Forum Room, that the Japanese government recognized that many American autoworkers and was trying to help. However, he said, the Japanese government could not help slowing its exportation of cars to the United States. Instead, the Japanese government is considering a plan that would simplify import inspection and eliminate import dates on auto parts shipped to Japan, Okawara said. "We hope through these measures to improve our investments and import from America," he said. In addition, Okawara said, a group of Japanese buyers searched the United States for likely investments in early September, and a second group now is touring the northern states. AS A RESULT the Honda Motor Co. has agreed to produce cars in an Ohio plant, and the Ford and Toyota companies may work together to produce small cars, he said. "The door between the United States and See AMBASSADOR page 5 eeeeOWW!! 1. 2. 3. Olympic ban ruins promotion; Baskin-Robbins bears losses By KARI ELLIOTT Staff Reporter What do you do with 2,300 stuffed Misha Bears worth $13,800 when the United States boycotts the Olympics? Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream Co., of Glendale, Calif., faced a "Rocky Road" when President Carter announced in May that American athletes would not compete in the 1980 Moscow Olympics. The international company had planned a sales promotion contest in which each local store was to give away a one-foot Misha Bear, this week. The store will be responding to Lawrence's store manager, Dou Shade. But Baskin-Robbins is not mourning its losses. Also, the grand prize was to be a free trip for two to the Olympics, Barbara Brooks, national advertising and sales promotion manager, said yesterday. Other prizes included several four-foot bears, dobblins ice cream and double-scoop ice cream creeps. Brooks said the company lost about $100,000 it had spent for the Moscow trip when it was canceled. THE COMPANY also had to pay the shipping costs of the Misha Bears to the 2,380 Baskin-Robbins stores throughout the United States. Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Curacao. Instead of throwing away thousands of Misha Bears, the company removed the bears' Olympic Ring belts and replaced them with a red polka dot bow ties, making them circus bears. Brooks said. The name of the contest also was changed to Circus World Sweepstakes. Now the grand prize will be a five-day, free vacation for four to Riu Palace, and Barramundi The winner will be chosen by an independent seller. Brown and even will be notified around the time of voting. Runner-up prizes will be the same as the original contest, although vintage circus posters Iraqi warplanes bomb nine Iranian airports The local drawing for the small circus bear will be Seet. 30. By United Press International Iraqi warplanes, retaliating for attacks on four foreign ships, struck at the heart of Iran's military complex yesterday, bombing nine Iraqi airfields, including Tehran International airport. Iran struck back within hours, sending its American-made jet fighters on bombing missions against two Iraqi bases, ordering a convoy of ships and declaring its coastal war zones. BY THE END of the day, conflicting reports from Baghdad and Tehran claimed that at least 200 people were killed. or captured, four Iraqi missile boats were sunk, or captured, five Iranian and five Irianan planes or helicopters were lost. A complete wartime blackout was ordered across Iran last night. Troops were dispatched from garrisons and "the committed youth of the country" were asked to join the fighting. Both countries closed their air space to commercial traffic. The latest battles between the feuding countries began yesterday morning when Iran shelled four foreign ships flying Iraqi flags in the strategic Shatt-Al-Arab waterway. LAST WEEK, IRAQ invoked a 1975 border treaty with Iran and announced that ships using the sea route would be subject to U.S. inspection. the move meant "naval clashes are likely in the next few days." The 75-mile waterway at the top of the Persian Gulf on Iran's western frontier provides access to Iran's vital port of Khoramshisb and the city of Khorasan, some of the biggest oil refinery in the Middle East. Iraq is the fourth largest oil producer, but its only way to the world is a vital supply route to the war zone. Shortly after the attacks on the ships, Iraq's President Saddam Hussein went on radio to announce he had ordered "deterrent strikes," and then asked if they would have been hitting all nine of Iraq's major airfields. Ohiat El-ESlam Hashem Rafsanijan, speaker of Iran's Parliament, went on Tehran Radio shortly before the president and announced the nation was on full alert. THE STRIKES left an Iranian Air Force jet burning at Tehran's international airport, sent thousands of curious Iranian citizens flocking to the airport. The Iranian's authorities to order a wartime blackout. "Iran will not allow any merchant ship to carry cargo to Iraqi ports," President Abhassan Bani-Sadr announced on Tehran Radio. "In view of the Iraqi armed forces' violations, all waterways near the Iranian shores are declared war zones." AAAAAHHH Weather Today should be most cool with fair skies and a high near 70, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds should be southerly at 10 mph. Tomorrow should be sunny and warmer with a high in the mid-70s. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 23, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Turkish officials detain political foes ANKARA, Turkey—As Turkey's new Prime Minister Bulent Ulusu pledged to wipe out terror nationwide, martial law officials said yesterday that they had detained 500 people in the last day of a crackdown on suspected political extremists. Uhuu spoke yesterday at the first meeting of his 27-man cabinet. "It would be necessary to ascertain all of its feuds," he said. He also said that the government would "take all judicial and administrative measures to remove inefficiency in the Turkish ad- Martial law officials said those detained Sunday were in six central Turkish cities, all of them strongholds of Moslem fundamentalism. sources close to the junta said similar roundups were taking place all across Turkey, particularly in the eastern half of the country. It still is not clear what the army intends to do with those taken into custody. Many of them are expected to be tried for political offenses or for involvement in violent political activities. Suspect charged in Olathe murders OLATHE--Danny E. Crump was arraigned yesterday and charged with the murders of his former wife and five members of her family. It was believed to be the worst mass slaying in the community since Quantrill's raiders struck in 1862. Crump, a 27-year-old mechanic from Olathe, was arraigned on six counts of first-degree murder, three counts of aggravated battery and one count of Crump was arrested late Saturday, about 15 hours after a bomb blew apart his wife, who is his wife, two sons and two daughters, helping Crump's former wife, Diane. The blast injured Crump's 4-month-old son and an 8-year-old friend of the Postfamily. Police were providing heavy guard for Crump, fearing a possible attack on his life. A preliminary hearing was set for September 9, 2014 at 9:30 a.m., but only three witnesses were present. A notable motives and would say only that they believed it was related to a "domestic situation." they betrayed him. Crump married Diane Post last summer, but the marriage ended in divorce after six months. Authorities said she sought the divorce and won a bitter custody battle over their son. Candidates sling post-debate criticism The first, perhaps only, 1880 debate of presidential candidates behind them, Pence and Clinton, was argued against each other with each other. "Whatever happened to the people," he whipped by hundreds of men. The mood aboard the Reagan campaign plane was buoyant and his aides claimed that he was superior to independent John Anderson and that the John Anderson's campaign staff members said they were happy with the Sunday night debate. At a campaign stop in Springfield, Ill., Carter ignored a forest of signs boosting both Reagan and Anderson and criticizing him for not participating in the debate. Carter jibed at the Republicans for giving "no priority at all" to energy conservation and Resign attacked Carter for letting America's "familial trusts" fail. Reagan's press secretary Lyn Nofziger said that Reagan had not been more critical of Carter in the debate because "we didn't want to produce a sympathy backlash." Polish trade unions approve charter WARSAW, Poland—Organizers of Poland's new independent trade unions approved a charter for their movement yesterday, a spokesman for the dissident Workers Defense Committee said. It was the first day in nearly three months that no workers were on strike in Poland. in the Baltic port of Gdansk, the center of the labor walkouts that rocked Poland beginning July 3, independent trade union organizers from throughout the country met and approved the common set of statutes for the growing movement. The new charter will be presented for legal registration in Warsaw later this week. Despite the new document, the organizers have rejected the idea of forming a confederation of independent unions on the grounds that this would be too much like the official trade union movement controlled by the Communist Party. Instead, they have set up a loose, regionally-based movement called Sandartt under the guidance of a coordinating commission led by Lech Wachstetter. Muskie offers hostage release plan UNITED NATIONS—Secretary of State Edmund Muskie yesterday laid out a specific U.S. proposal to Iran for the release of the $2 American debt. "When the safe return of all the hostages to their families is assured, we are prepared to deal on a basis of mutual respect and equality with all the outstanding issues and misunderstandings between Iran and the United States. We will accept that which will govern our relationship." Mukki told the U.N. General Assembly. Mustie's remarks were more specific than any previous public statements about the possibility of settling the crisis, but his careful language seemed to suggest a sequence in which Iran would first pledge to release the hostages. This could be followed by the convening of an international forum in which Iran's grievances would be aired and the United States would pledge non-interference in Iran's affairs. The secretary also called upon the United Nations to pressure pressure on the Soviet Union to withdraw totally from Afghanistan and he pledged that the United States would move forward on ratification of the SALT II treaty "as speedily as possible." Procter & Gamble halts tampon sales CINCINNATI—Procter & Gamble Co. suspended sale yesterday of its Rely tammons and offered full refunds for the product. Announcing the sales suspension, P&G chairman Edward Harness said, "we are taking this action in response to the company from the controversy." He also called a taxed loan. The tampon last week was cited in connection with a sometimes fatal disease afflicting some tampon users. "This is being done despite the fact that we know of no defect in the Rely tampon and despite evidence that the withdrawal of Rely will not eliminate the occurrence of TSS even if Rely's use is completely discontinued," he said. However, PAG officials said that the U.S. Center for Disease Control's latest study, involving 50 recent cases of COVID, indicated that Hely may be more susceptible to severe infections than usual. Toxic shock syndrome, which usually strikes young women, is marked by key symptoms, diarrhea and a rapid drop in blood pressure, which often results in shear. Since January, 299 cases have been reported to the center. There have been 25 deaths since 1979, the majority having occurred since January. Break-ins unauthorized, official says WASHINGTON - The former head of a Justice Department task force that investigated FBI break-ins in the early 1970s told a jury yesterday that he knew no authority for the bureau to conduct such "black bag jobs" without the attorney general's anoval. The witness, William Gardner, completed his third day of testimony in the comperecy trial of W. Mark Pell, the FB's former No. 2 man, and Edward Barris. Felt and Miller are charged with approving, without instruction from the president or the attorney general, nine illegal break-ins in 1972 and 1973 during an FBI search for fugitive members of the radical Weather Underground, an anti-war organization. Titan warhead moved to Air Force base enegon sources in Washington confirmed that the weapon, which was slightly dented in the fiery sla explosion Friday, was moved to the Little Rock Air Force Base and placed in the nuclear storage area. DAMASCUS, Ark.—A 9-megaton nuclear warhead was removed after it blew off a titan II missile and trucked to a nearby Air Force base. By United Press International THE EXPLOSION, caused by leaking fuel, killed one airman and injured 21 others. the sources said that there was no radiation leakage from the explosion and that no decision had been made about dismantling the warhead. The warhead was moved about 60 feet from the shattered missile site on an 8-vehicle convoy. Van Buren County Sheriff Gus Anglin said he believed that the warhead had been there and that the convoy yesterday was simply a show for the television cameras. GOV. BILL CLINTON yesterday asked state and local officials to list their grievances against the military's handling of the missile explosion, and Lara hawnen, particularly state Public Safety Director Sam Tatom and Anglin, have been critical of the way they say air Force officials refused to cooperate or communicate with them during the four days since the blast. urged Air Force responsiveness to the complaints. Heavy construction machinery was moved into the explosion site yesterday, in an apparent cleanup operation. The news media were allowed to view the scene. danger that it could detonate. But it was not disclosed why the Air Force took so long to remove the warhead from the site, The warhead was the only piece of the Titan II that was not completely destroyed by the explosion that ripped through the underground silo, jarred the ground and sent a large mushroom-shaped cloud into the sky. The missile silo exploded when about 100 tons of fuel erupted, shattering the 740-tone concrete doors that covered the underground missile and denied a bombing attack, then leaking Thursday when a workman dropped a wrench and punctured a fuel tank. OPEC countries to cut production of crude oil THE WARHEAD was blown about 200 yards from the missile, and officials emphasized that there was never any PARIS (UPI)—Several OPEC countries announced plans yesterday to cut production of crude oil, but the cartel's key member, Saudi Arabia, remained silent on whether it would go along with the move. Tehran Radio quoted Iranian Oil Minister Alik Abkar Moinfar as saying 11 of OPEC's 13 members agreed in an unpublicized deal last week to cut production 10 percent Oct. 1 "in order to remove the present glut in the oil market." HIS REMARKS quickly were followed by confirmations from Libya, Algeria and the United Arab Emirates, America's third, fourth and seventh largest foreign oil suppliers, that they would make similar cuts. Iraqi Oil Minister Tayeh Abdul Karim was reported as saying that his country would follow suit. But there was no comment from the Saudis, but left Wienna agreeing to a $2 contract. She insisted that she trained publicly their earlier pledge not to reduce production from the present Moinfar said Saudi Arabia, vital to any serious attempt by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to end oil surpluses, "was finally forced to accept" the decision of the others. SVA FILMS The Ruling Class Tuesday, Sept. 23 The heir to the Eardiam of Gurney is Jack Gurney (Peter O'Toole) who believes himself to be Jesus Christ. Eventually he became a pastor and was named Jack the Ripper. Peter Medal's sharp satire is a merciless, hilarious comedy leaving no sacred cow untamed. He also wrote the book Alistair Sim and Harry Andrews; a real treat (154 min). Color: 7:30. Wednesday, Sept. 24 Women in Love (1970) D. H. Lawrence's novel about two sisters (who have always loved each other) is brilliantly realised on screen by Kruse Russell. Glenda Jackson (who won the Best Actress Oscar and the Academy Award for her roles as Bates, Oliver Reed and Eleanor Brown) out the fine line (129 mln). Color: 7:30. Flimed during actual hotties in life, half-dead from surgery and shortcomings by its immortal and realism. The story of a black woman searcher for her husband, look in a maze of colorful scenes on the screen of a fine film . . . a revolutionary picture." —John C. Brown, New York Times, 102 color. Ml;30-70. Thursday, Sept. 25 9. 5 million barrels a day if OPEC hardliders did not lower their prices. Sambizanga The crew of a commercial ship, the Nostromo, are awakened by a distress signal .. by the time they realize it is too late. Intuitively, creature has invaded them, it is too late. Ridley Scott's film is a masterpiece of horror. With Siggery Wawryne. Tom Cruise and Rafe Reed. Bugs Bunny, (1247 minute) Color. 3:30, 7:00, 9:30. Friday, Sept. 26 (1972) sato. Demand for OPEC oil by the end of this year has been forecast at about 25 million barrels daily. A 10 PERCENT cut by all OPEC states would bring production down to about 24.3 million barrels, about its average level of last year, analysis Alien OPEC's tri-ministerial meeting at Vienna produced no announced agreements on production The high priced oil from Iran, Algeria, Libya and Nigeria has been difficult to sell in recent weeks because of the glut. Unless otherwise noted, all film will be shown on Tuesday. Union, Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Sunday films are $2.00; Midnight films are $2.00. Ticket sales are on-site Union, 4th level. Information 884-956-3870 No smoking or refresherations allowed. Athletic budget tight despite extra funds An unexpected year-end surplus in the athletic department is not likely to provide any immediate help for KU's financially troubled non-revenue sports, according to University athletic officials. Bob Marcum, athletic director, said he was not certain all the department's surplus came from the Williams Fund. If not, the money would not be restricted to use for scholarships. A recent audit of the KU Athletic Corporation showed that private contributions to the Williams Educational Fund for fiscal 1980 exceeded $34,000, allowing KUAC to finish with a surplus of $35,673. But Williams Fund money, which pays for athletic scholarships, cannot be used for other operational expenses, according to Susan Wachter, athletic business manager. use Williams Fund surplus for travel expenses, the area hit hardest by budget cuts this year. Wachter said. Marcum said there were no immediate plans for increasing nonrevenue sports budgets even if it could legally be done. Men's non-revenue sports cannot "I hope we can do well enough this year to put some additional money into those sports," he said, "but it's too early to tell yet." Women's sports are funded by the state and are not subject to KUAC budget cuts. $\Psi \mathrm{X} /_{\text{Club}}^{\text{Psych}}$ Sept. 23 4:30 p.m. Rm. 4 Fraser - Films • Field Trips • Graduate School Info. • Guest Speakers • B.A. Job Info. This Week's Speaker Will Talk On Graduate School Admission In Clinical Psych. Funded by Student Activity Fee ASTA Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Flowers by Alexanders --- MOMENTUM: THE COALITION WITH MOVEMENT! Pres. Mike Wagner V.Pres. Roger Day Sec. Suzy Stevenson Treas. Susan Hansen Vote Freshman Class Officers '80-81 Paid for by Momentum Coalition What A Deal! $1.49Meal A Hardee's Big Cheese is two pure beef burgers charcoaled with a whole lot of tangy melted cheese all hot and juicy. Add a regular size order of fries and a cool refreshing small soft drink and you've got a real meal. all for $1.49. But hurry, this offer ends Thursday Good at participating Hardee's only! Hardee's "Best Eatin' All Around!" 2030 W. 23rd Hardee's French Fries Big Cheese,Regular Fries&Small Soft Drink L By Sta fanfares® fanfares fanfare there's nothing quite like clogs... your wardrobe's best friend McCalls 141 Glenwood Avenue and Shops 829 Massachusetts DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE McCall's Best & newest on our Shoes t a o e e y d l- u t e g g a University Daily Kansan, September 23, 1980 Page 3 Dog virus checked, vets say ByGENE GEORGE Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Strict leash laws and preventive medicine may spare the Lawrence area from an expected second wave of Parvov virus, a disease that infects dogs, W.F. Bradley, a local veterinarian, said yesterday. During July and August, parts of Kansas experienced what some officials called an epidemic of the newly-dcovered virus. Jacob Mosier, head of the Surgery and Medicine Department at the Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine, said that the state should brace for an increase of the illness this fall. BUT BRADLEY, who specializes in treatment of domestic pets, estimated that 95 percent of his clients' dogs had been vaccinated. Bradley said Lawrence had tough leash laws that discouraged people from letting their animals run free. If the law is enforced, he said, dogs will be caught if they get out of which is transmitted by contact with an infected dog or the dog's excrement. Not all veterinarians agree on the mortality rate of the virus, but William Bayouth of the Lawrence Animal Hospital said about 50 percent of the dogs that contracted the virus died from it. Mosser said the mortality rate varied between classes of dogs, with puppies under the age of three months and show dogs being the most susceptible. THE SYMPTOMS of the illness are vomiting and diarrhea, Bayouth said. The only treatment is restoring the liquid the dog's system has lost and letting the animal fight the virus, he said. Bradley said Lawrence had a serious problem with the virus this summer, "Back in July and August," he said, "I had about a dozen cases. I lost three." Bayouth estimated that the entire city had only 20 to 40 cases this summer. PARVO VIRUS was discovered in the United States in 1978, Mosier said. He said there was some evidence that the might have been in Europe in late 1977. Not much else is known about the virus, he said. Moster discounted the theory proposed by some scientists that Parvoy is linked to the distemper virus found in cats. He explained that the only clear connection is that the first vaccine developed to fight Parvio was made from the distemper virus. . When Parvo became a nationwide problem, Mosier said, only one company had the approval of the Food and Administration to market a vaccine. THE SHORT SUPPLY of the vaccine contributed to this summer's epidemic, he said. "As soon as the supply builds up," Mosier said, "then the problems will get controlled, and we'll see only an occasional case." Bradley said that not all Lawrence veterinarians had an adequate supply of the vaccine, but he added that his team had chosen a point where the virus was under control. It is still important, Bradley said, to dog once each year after the first wave. On the Record Lawrence police arrested a 24-year-old Lawrence man yesterday morning and charged him with aggravated buriallarv. The man was being held yesterday afternoon in Douglas County Call in lieu of arrest. Police said that at about 2:30 a.m. yesterday the man entered a house on the 1600 block of Northwood, entered a room and threatened the woman with a handgun. Police said the woman then screamed, waking her two roommates. One of the roommates turned on a hall light and called police, while the other came out of a nearby room with a rifle, police said. According to police, the suspect then fled through the woman's bedroom window moments before police arrived. window moments before the suspect shortly afterwards. LAWRENCE POLICE are investigating a burglary in which athletic clothing and equipment worth more than $8,200 was stolen from First Serve, Inc., 804 Massachusetts St., police said yesterday. Police have no suspects in the incident, and the case between 7 p.m. Friday to 9:48 a.m. Monday. According to police, the athletic store had a security guard through a skylight in the case of the bulldog. A GLASS WINDOW about one-quarter-inch thick fell from the fifth floor of the newly constructed east wing of Malott Hall Friday afternoon, KU Police Captain John Mullens said yesterday. No one was injured when the glass fell and shattered on a workman's car below, chipping paint and denting the car, Mullens said. LAWRENCE POLICE also are investigating a rash of car vandalism in which 31 cars were vandalized over the weekend. Twenty-six incidents involved windows of cars being either shot out with BB gun pellets or smashed with blunt objects, police said. Each car suffered between $35 and $150 worth of damage, police said. THE KU THEATRE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE will feature "A Toby Show," written and directed by Aurand Harris, who stars in the University Theatre in Murhvall Hall. On Campus An Art film titled "BEYOND CUBISM: MASTERS OF MODERN ART" presented at it p.m. in the Helen Foreman Spencer Museum of Art Audition. TODAY The Tau Sigma DANCE CLASS will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson with instructor Faria Clark. TONIGHT Arthur Young and Co., an accounting firm, will present "INTERNIEW TECHNIQUES" at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room in the Kansas Union. There will be an informal lecture, a mock interview, and a discussion. Refreshments will be served. THE BIBLICAL SEMINAR at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Committee TOMORROW The SIERRA CLUB will meet in the Regionalist Room of the Kansas Union at 7 p.m. --the new programs is to accommodate more people and provide more variety. The KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7 am in the Kansas Union Parcels and A The SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS will meet at 4:30 in 332 Malott Hall. ECKANKAR will meet at 7 p.m. in 112 Fraser Hall. Dr. Rose Greaves, professor of history, will lecture on "THE PERSLAN GULF REVISED" at 11:45 a.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center as part of the University Forum program. Fitness clinic aids neglected bodies By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter Despite an increasing awareness of the benefits of physical conditioning and exercise, KU health official's said recently that the majority of faculty, staff and students were out of shape and doing little about it. "Certainly more than 60 to 70 percent probably are not taking care of themselves as they could or should." said Wayne Osmess, professor of health, physical education and recreation and co-director of the KU Fitness Clinic. THE FITNESS CLINIC is a facility in Robinson Center that offers scientific fitness evaluations and is part of several new programs developed by the department of health, physical education and recreation. The clinic is open to students, faculty and staff, as well as the Lawrence community. Though the new classes—rhythmic aerobic exercise, aerobic swimming and weight training—also are aimed at improving fitness, Ossess said the main purpose of Aerobic activity classes and weighttraining sessions will supplement the department's morning cardiovascular program, now in its seventh year. "I'ts just been too crowded in the cardiovascular fitness program. I don't have to." NO CREDITS are offered for the morning programs. Osness said they were not meant to take the place of fitness classes offered for credit, but those who cannot attend regularly offered classes during the day." Rhythmic aerobics consist of a series of exercise routines of jogging, skipping, dancing and other rhythmic activities set to music. The class will start on Monday, August 16th, days, Wednesdays and Fridays in the new gym at Robinson Center. Conditioning drills and lap swimming for intermediate and advanced swimmers will be the focus of aerobic swimming from 6:30 to 7:15 a.m. on Tuesday and Thursdays in the Robinson pool. Survival skills and basic strokes, such as the crawl and breast strokes, will be emphasized. BEGINNING SWIMMERS should enroll in a beginning swimming class offered by HPER for credit, Osness said The weight-conditioning program will be offered from 6:30 to 8 a.m. Monday through Friday in the weight room of Robinson Center. Osness and Jean Pyfer, professor of HPER, will continue to direct the cardiovascular fitness program from 6:45 to 7:15 a.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in Allen Field House. The program emphasizes flexibility, exercise, running, jogging and some muscle toning, that is "all scientifically organized and based on heart rate or stress." Osness said. The cardiovascular program is managed according to results gathered THE PHYSICAL FITNESS tests offered by the clinic are fed into a computer, which evaluates physical performance and translates the results into a numerical profile. The profile is then compared to that of all people of the same age and sex who have been tested. All persons over 35 who wish to participate in any of the morning programs must have the evaluation, which costs $15. Onessa said the money would be used for training and perform the tests and for any supplies used during the tests. The tests consist of measurements of heart rate, blood pressure, and several measurements of heart and lung capacities. Oness and Michael Bahke, in academia and HEPN, will be in chance of operating the THE BEST HOME IN WOODS COMMONWEALTH THEATRES COMMUNITY HEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 642-5786 Smokey and The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 P8 Varsity Downtown 643-1085 The Big Red One 7:30 & 9:35 Hillcrest With love 643-8400 1 special edition Close Encounters 7:15 & 9:25 2 Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3 Fame 7:20 & 9:20 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 2 Gone with the wind 7:30 only 1 Being There 7:20 & 9:30 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOSTEL RESERVATION ■ EURAL PASSES ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOUFS CALL TODAY! CALL TODAY! 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843-1211 The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People presents Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office. Call 913-864-3982 for reservations. A Toby Show By Aurand Harris ☹️ ☹️ ☹️ V September 27. 10:30 a.m. University Theatre, Murphy Hall All seats reserved at $1.50 The Arts Pursue the sea as a Surface Warfare Officer, Aircraft Carrier Pilot, Submarine Diving Officer, Nuclear Power Officer, Aviation Maintenance Officer, or a U.S. Marine Corps Officer. You will get a world tour. Take advantage of 2 years of paid tuition and a global voyage. Could the Navy interest you in 2 years of paid tuition and a world tour? If you are a sophomore at The University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Chief of Naval Education and Training will even include $100.00 a month Spending Money that's TAX FREE. When you graduate, you will have a job in the Fleet. Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. (He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC).) Take paid tuition, spending money, and a job that gives you a world cruise. That is Navy ROTC. Save up to '4.00 off film developing 12 Exposures 110 or 126 Kodacolor Print Film Developed and Printed, now only $1.99 20 or 24 Exposures 110 or 128 Kodacolor Print Film Developed and Printed, now only $3.49 Offer expires Sept. 30 QUICK-STOP PHOTO-SHOP 711 West 23rd The Mallis Shopping Center 841-2778 KODAK-FILM LIMITED STOCK PHOTO SHORE ONE DAY PHOTO FINISHING 1980-81 EE and Computer Science Graduates Today,in Wichita NCR means the very latest minis microcomputers and peripherals. As well as an opportunity to be in the forefront of these and other significant on-going development areas. NCR means everything from microprocessor chips to mainframes. And being part of a company that puts as development as it puts on hardware development. It means contributing, not to isolated components, but to interconnected, grated, working solutions to specific customer needs. In short, NCR means an opportunity to grow. To excel. To help shape the future of an organization that in little over 10 years has become one of the world's largest computer companies. On-Campus Interviews: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2 Sign up for an interview at your Placement Office, or write directly to: Ms. Chris Campbell, Professional Recruiter, NCR Corporation, 3718 North Rock Wichita, Kansas 67226. NCR Complete Computer Systems An Equal Opportunity Employer Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 23, 1980 Opinion Lawrence gets bargain For several years, Lawrence has been shopping around for a solution to its retail problems. Last week, city commissioners finally got an eye-opening bargain. The city long has been toying around with the idea of building some kind of major mail to try to regain some of the retail dollars now falling into the hands of retailers in Kansas City and Topeka. Lawrence is losing about 15 percent of its potential retail dollars because many residents choose to do their shopping elsewhere. The city has considered the development of a major mall either downtown or near the edge of the city limits. Many of the city's residents and businessmen resent such an idea. Yet a reasonable compromise may be on the way. A consultant told city commissioners last week that the addition of several downtown department stores would be more practical than a major mall. Moreover, the consultants concluded that a major downtown or suburban mall would be counterproductive. The suggestion to add a few large department stores in the downtown area would solve many problems and, at the same time, would avoid many hassles. The new department stores would revitalize the downtown area, but not so much of the city would have to be torn down as it would if a downtown mall were built. The compromise would increase retail dollars, but preserve the city's small-town flavor. If a suburban mall were to be built, the downtown would lose much of its business. The compromise actually would attract more residents to the downtown without rearranging the business district's face. That fact would be enough to console those who oppose any kind of mall action. Teska Associates, an Evenston, Ill., firm hired by the city, was paid $25,000 to study the city's retail problems. The firm's solution, although quite simple, was worth every last penny. It's hard to believe that no one thought of it sooner. Unique sweepstakes gimmick: Win a car, help cure cancer The canary-yellow envelope looked like any of the others, but you seem to find in the mailbags almost weekly bits of Act now! One entry makes you eligible for more than 1,000 prizes," the envelope announced. "Plus: $1,000 prize just for promptness." A mock rubber stamp imprint, printed at a slant for effect on the front of the envelope, announced a "dramatic new kind of sweepstakes." A second peek into the peak of an official-looking document embossed with the words "grand prize," no doubt to entice the recipient. You know the type. Inside, a full-color brochure glamorized a few of the prizes that were being offered: an Old BLAKE GUMPRECHT smobile Omega coupe, a video cassette recorder, televisions, watches, jewelry . . . But it was different. A full page of the brochure was devoted to a spread on the grand prize “two-carefree weeks in Bermuda and Acapacina for two”—with color photographs of the sea and sparkling blue ocean. It seemed to be no different from the dozens of similar packages I had received previously and had quickly thrown out. I did a double take. I wasn't sure what to think. This was no typical prize package trying to lure the recipient into subscribing to a magazine, buying land in an Arizona desert or joining a cancer research group. It was to the National Foundation for Cancer Research. Apparently others also wondered whether the promotion was legitimate. A television station in Washington recently concluded an investigation into the promotion, I later found out. It found It seems that the National Foundation for Cancer Research, the younger, poorer, struggling competitor to the American Cancer Society, has simply been badly in need of funds. The foundation, based in Bethesda, Md., was formed about eight years ago and since then had een operating on an annual budget of about $5 million. The American Cancer Society, by comparison, is more women old and works with a budget of more than $300 million. "We just didn't have enough money to do what we wanted to do because of the company's executive board." C. Salisbury, S.C. Salisbury. The promotion was Salisbury's idea. He long has been a mail sweepstakes buff and religiously returns the necessary material for every prize package that renders him a favorite player on boys plays nonetheless. The promotion idea came to him about two years ago. "I was sitting at my desk taken the Readers' Digest sweepstakes," he recalls. "It occurred to me that the same type of thing could be done for a good cause as well." The resulting promotion, masterminded by a New York advertising agency, has been responsible for doubling the amount of contributions the foundation receives each year. The foundation, which operates 35 laboratories in 10 countries, now receives more than $10 million in contributions annually—and donations continue to increase. Acceptance of the idea didn't come quickly though. She was soon laughed it off as Olsen offered. Others offered at the end. "It took me about a year to sell the idea," he says, "I had trouble convincing the people within the foundation. We have a very conservative organization. They said it wasn't dignified. I pointed out that there's no dignity in dying of cancer." Money for the prizes given away in the fund will be made to regular fund by regular contributors, Salisbury says. At first, only 50,000 prize packages were sent. A total of 12,000 prizes sent out this month, giving 10 million houses. "The response," Salisbury says, "has been absolutely amazing." Salisbury predicts that either a cure or a control for cancer will be developed within five years. The promotion, however unorthodox it seems, could move that date even closer, he said. Still, it seems a perverse commentary that a non-profit cancer research organization has to resort to such basic forms of gimmick advertising. But if it works . . . The University Daily KANSAN Editor Carl Beiler Business Manager Elaine Struber Managing Editor Cynal Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jeff Sjerven Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editor Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Dylan Whittle Sports Editor Gena Myers Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Kenin Playoff Editors Bob Schaud, Ellen Iwamoto, Jennifer Holler Makeup Editors Tom Tedeschi, Lori Winkelman Wire Editors Eleni Nawambo, Gall Eggers Copy Chiffle Chris Kold Chief Photographer Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, Scott Hooker, Shaaf Photographers Dave Kraus, Drew Torres Columnist Amy Holwell, Ted Lickingt Monera, Brett Cooley Scott Faust, Fred Markham, Susan Schonmaker, Blake Gumprechut Editorial Cartoonist Joe Bartos Staff Artists John Jinks, Michael Wenner, Nive Bolton Staff Writers Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Kevin Konter National Sales Manager Karry Guason Campus Sales Manager Barley Coon Classified Manager Tracy Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Weedcock Staff Artist Judy Seiler Staff Graphographer Brian Watkins Teasheet Manager Brian Sompbe Sales Representatives Binkhink, Annette Conrad, Terr Fry, Bill Groom, Larry Leibengood, Paul O'Connor, Paula Schweiger, Bill Roberts Thaine Shelter, Anthony Tilson, Kaye Wucrop, Susan Birnbaum General Manager and News Adviser ... Rick Mussel Kanera Adviser ... Chuck Chowta Unlabeled editorials represent the opinion of the Kanana editorial staff. Signed columns represent the views of only the writers. Letters are welcome. They should be typewritten. If the letter is printed on a computer, it must be typed. If the writer is affiliated with the University, the letter should be the writer's class and hometown or incity or staff position. The Kanana reserves the right to edit letters for publication. They can be delivered personally or mailed to the Kanana newsroom, 181 Flat Road, New York, NY 10024. OPEC squabbles; U.S. fills 'er up The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, meeting last week in Vienna, demonstrated that the group's stranglehold on the motorist is loosening. The oil ministers broke up without accomplishing much. The average driver can expect to escape with only about a penny rise in some prices because of the shells bundling. The break occurred when Saudi Arabia, which had planned to implement a price indexing system based on importers' inflation rates, and Iran and Libya, price hawks, split because Saudi Arabia charges $28 a barrel the lowest in the cartel. Iran, Libya and sympathetic cronies thought the Saudis had betrayed the intent of TED LICKTEIG MARCO FUCHIO the cartel by holding down the price while the price ceiling stood at $37 a barrel. The Saudi recognized the glut of oil in the world market, however, and realized that a price increase might have only further hurdles. In June dipped to its lowest level in nine years. As a compromise and for the sake of OPEC unity, the Saudi factions were sent and pushed to change their position. [343] BiblioBazaar OPEC's supply problem is quickly growing to the point of embarrassment and is another wedge in the group's solidarity. An oil industry official said recently that there could be as much as a week's worth of U.S. oil imports floating in tankers off the Texas coast. U.S. imports in August were down 37 percent compared with last August. Nigeria, the second largest supplier of U.S. imported oil, tried to head off the glut in August by cutting production by 10 percent, but failed miserably. The U.S. oil companies also are in a bind. Production costs continue to rise, but demand falls to justify more price increases. Even price increases do not necessarily guarantee the companies further reductions in demand. The International Energy Agency says that a 1percent rise in energy prices results in only a 0.15 percent drop in demand. The avowed goal of certain OPEC extortionists is to raise the price of oil to slightly more than $60 a barrel, which is the estimated cost of similar forms of energy on a unit-fort-unit basis. Dernand in the oil market and OPEC feuds are working to defeat that goal. The Economist, an international economist magazine, says that the international oil companies will be left holding 400 million barrels of oil each year to distribute requirements or winter sales. Joe Bantos '80 KANSAN All the while Iran is charging a ghastly $35.50 a barrel for its low quality crude. And the barometer of oil demand worldwide, the spot market, recently has seen prices for oil Those fiends! One more price raise on my imported liquor and I may consider doing something about it! below that of the contract prices charged by OPEC members. The production of Alaskan crude also is muddying the picture. Because of the slope's production, more oil wells are being drilled than ever. A 2-cent-a gallon subsidy was removed by the Department of Energy on Alaskan oil companies. Of course, the major U.S. oil companies have had to reduce prices slightly to move supplies. The dispute between Iran and Libya and Saudi Arabia may have developed in part because of Iran's internal domestic policies. Alkbar Aibar Moinfar is burdened with the task of selling oil to customers who are outraged at Iran for the hostage stand-off. Oil sales are now more critical than ever for Iran because of the turmoil and the resurgence of the tumultuous period after the revolution. Meanwhile, the Saudi oil minister, Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamiani, has threatened to cut daily production by a million barrels a day as a sign of Arab unity against the Israelis. But simultaneously he has only verbally tried to keep the troops out of the United States in the Middle East. More fireworks can be expected in November at the meeting of OPEC's heads of state and in December when the oil ministers meet again. Letters to the Editor To the editor: Sen. Dole's record misconstrued in column While I may differ with Sen. Dole on various issues, I do believe his record should be reported accurately. Lied Tickelg's articles on Sept. 15, "A Letter to the Editor," suffered itself from some bad information. In his second paragraph, Lickteig writes, "Last spring ... Dole forsook his membership in the Senate Agriculture Committee. Dole switched to the Finance Committee . . . In paragraph four, Lickteig underlines his error by writing, "Dole ... cannot say that he has switched to the grain embargo because he is no longer a member of the Agriculture Committee." Questionable research, Lickteig. Dole has been, and is still, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee since coming to the Senate in 1968. Before that he served for a number of years on the House Agriculture Committee. While deciding to become ranking minority on the Senate Financing Committee, Dole remains the third-ranking minority member of the Agriculture Committee. It is unfortunate that Lickiegh has used false information to illustrate his arguments. However, I don't believe his argument to be worthy of great praise, either. While I don't want to take up space for a usually fine paper, I do believe Lickie's main point to be wrong. Besides being a bit of a generalization, I'm not sure I agree that serving the great mysterious public interest and being re-elected are two activities dramatically opposed. Lieickig writes, "This (political) disease has resulted in the loss of effective leadership in Congress because each Congressman is insured by re-elected, not in serving the public interest." Anyway, I hope Lickteig will improve his research. Scott Morgan Shawnee law student What is freedom? To the editor: The first statement below comes from the forward of an official 1890 government publication of a noncommunist country. The last two, published in the same booklet, were made available at the University. Could you possibly guess which country they came from? Read them carefully and try: "The success of Western civilization has been built on the twin pillars of free enterprise and democratic government. It is because the alternative posed by communism eschews both these principles, while it presents an increasingly sinister threat to our survival, that the West calls itself the free world. We share that freedom and intend to maintain it." "My government is indisolubly committed to the ideal of freedom which can only be attained within a framework of order. We therefore strive for an order which will guarantee maximum freedom to individuals and nations. Order and freedom in their turn are crucial to realizing our potential to realize his or her potential, in this way guaranteeing the greatest prosperity for our community." "The order which Marxism creates leaves no room for freedom. The greatest good is not stability per se, or for order its own sake. A system in which freedom is limited to which material welfare is limited to a few within a sea of poverty is not only defensible, it is objectionable." Incredible' and ridiculous as it may seem, the statements were published in "Towards a Constellation of States in Southern Africa", published by the Republic of South Africa, the government official who made the last two statements is the country's Prime Minister, P. W. Botha. I'd just bet that until you read this, you didn't even know what true freedom was. Professor of economics and Soviet and East European studies Preacher right To the editor: But what was going on in the minds of the many quiet, sober-faced lookers? Today I paused for a few minutes to hear Cindy assets teaching me the art of perchance a 100 chapter book on her latest reading. Certainly she was not shoving anything down the throats of a captive audience. They were there by choice, and enjoying it, judging by the vocal responses. Many smiled, a few snuckered, and several maintained a current of challenges to her stand on campus morality. I do wish she had spoken with more compassion for fellow young people. I believe in hellfire, whatever that is, but fear alone. Nothing else can answer. Nothing else satisfies completely, permanently. One wiscracker's ribald comment drew a quick "You pervert!" from Cindy. Delighted applause followed this thrust. Hope Icandy is not wrong. That's known. At any rate, she speaks on the right side. A Electrician, facilities operations Chick Howland's article in the Sept. 12 issue concerning cheating and plagiarizing was most interesting. What is the University Daily Kansan's position? I would presume you don't support plagiarism. Yet the insert "Ampersand," distributed with the Kanasen several days earlier, included an advertisement on page 7 for a term paper catalog. It's actually a term paper "assistance" catalog, but the true intent is only thinly veiled. Cheating promoted J. Bunker Clark Professor of music history I suggest the Kansan staff reconsider whether to continue the use of "Amersand." To the editor: Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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. University Daily Kansan, September 23, 1980 Page 5 Ambassador From page 1 Japan is open," he said. "No procedural barriers are in existence." Yesterday morning, Japanese Foreign Minister Ito met with Vice President Walter Mondale and National Security Adviser Zigwain Brezinski to discuss Japan's alliance with the United States in trade and in world politics. Okawara said political doors between Japan and the United States also were open. "I felt that the meeting was a success and that it affirmed the close and friendly relations that we had in our community." IN THE PAST year Japan proved its friend-ship with the United States by boycotting the Samurai games. He said Japan honored U.S. economic sanctions against the Soviet Union following its invasion of Afghanistan when other Western nations found reasons to ignore the sanctions. Okawara, who was introduced by Acting Chancellor D Shanel, said there were ties between the University of Kansas and the Yankuaab, an institution about 60 miles from Toki. c o m m n helli ve no answer.ently. THE UNIVERSITIES organized an exchange program two years ago, Shankel said, and they now exchange two students a year. About 100 of the students also are enrolled in KU this semester. Okawaara said the students were attracted to KU's research programs and its study of Eurasia. The United States and Japan have been economic partners throughout the 20th century, he said, and the volume of trade between the two countries has doubled every five years. The diplomat predicted that in the 1980s the two countries would work together to achieve goals such as strengthening international law, promoting world economy and helping developing countries. "For the past century, Japan has been driven up by the East. West. Japan has now caught up." Okawa翅了 And, according to a report by the Humane Society of the United States, college students are not the best reciprocators when it comes to continuous care of their pets. 2 issue as most Kan- don 'don't' "Am-several on page a term intent is Love is a warm puppy—but only if that love is reciprocated. "At the end of every semester we get students trying to return their dogs and cats to us because they don't want to have anything else to do with them," said Linda Decdele, manager of the Charles Ie Memorial Animal Shelter, 1805 E. 19th St. She said she refused some students outright if they lived in residence halls or did not act as if they had put enough thought into their request for a pet. "So many students just don't think far enough ahead when they want a pet at the beginning of the semester," she said. Society says students make poor pet owners To reduce the number of animals returned to the sheiktar, Deccan said, she screens all apples and bananas at the airport. Fish are the only pets allowed in KU residence halls. Most apartment complexes in Lawrence also do not allow dogs or cats, but some allow small animals, such as gerbils or hamsters. Staff Reporter By LINDA ROSEWICZ Most young pets also require daily exercise, treatment, vaccinations and special food, she said. e history Decelles said it was important that a pet owner had enough room for a young, peppy animal to move around comfortably. Even if students are allowed to keep pets, Decellas said, they first should consider the time and cost required to keep a pet. They also should consider their summer semester breaks, weekends and after graduation. Lawrence pet shops report an increase in pet purchases at the beginning of each fall term at KC. "It just wouldn't be fair for a frisky pup to be caged up in a small room. On days like this, he would be healthy and for him, too." "Especially after country club week is over and classes begin, we get a lot of students coming in to get pets," said Woode Brinkerhoff, owner of Pet Step, 711 W. 23rd St. "When students get settled, they seem to want something else to keep them busy besides watching television and studying. A pet is a good alternative." He also said he sold many gorblis and hamsters to students living in apartments. Brinkerhoff said aquarium and fish sales were the busiest throughout the year because fish are the quietest and cleanest of his animals. Decellle said students should thoroughly consider their plans for a pet before they step in to care for them. "I If I know a student won't take care of a pet— it sometimes I just get a gut feeling on it—I won't get that one." The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven 13 wounds or lower $2.25 $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.25 $4.25 $6.25 $8.25 $9.25 $10.50 15 wounds or lower $2.25 $2.25 $2.75 $2.75 $3.25 $4.25 $6.25 $8.25 $9.25 $10.50 ADDEADLINES ERRORS Monday ... Thursday 5pm Tuesday ... Friday 5pm Wednesday ... Monday 5pm Thursday ... Tuesday 5pm Friday ... Wednesday 5pm The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE if charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 844-5388. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS HILLEL GENERAL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Tuesday, Sept. 23 - 7:30 p.m. Kansas Union International Room For further info call 864-3948 ... to elect officers and board members and discuss activities for the coming year... Come share your ideas with us! Refreshments will be served. Warm to learn more about the Bible of fellow Warsaw Jews, and to learn more about pern. Pern. Wartsaw Jews, the Salt Blood Jew. ENTERTAINMENT lse schoermen of cold Cores every Monday at LOUSE'S BAR, 1069 Mus. tt Looking for something new on Sundays? 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Comin' for our SUNDAY SPECIALS! Open from 5 p.m. till 3 a.m. Membership available! Packing is our business. 9-30 Outside Outdoor Killerlaking 10:30 Mama, Charm City 6:30, Fiddy 6:30, Mama 12:10, Killerlaking 7:30 Fiddy 7:30, Mama 12:10, Killerlaking 7:30 TED THE DEAL--S men playin' to win—coming in October. 9-28 This week on "BringIt," it All Back Home! It's blues with Lynch Mechee, a clip of Joshua Kellogg and Wednesday. Friday 6:38 p.m., Saturday 10:38 p.m. on Cable 6 - Watch It! FOR RENT Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting - 1, pool, batched attachment gauge, all airplanes, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Parkway Townhouse, 50th, 642-840, 182-880. These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downstreet! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic openers, kitchen with low-cabinet, wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $95 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-44558 a. 5 p.m. For rent, mike apt. for men, rent to campus. To pay, my help out part of report to call 841-1853. BeForest for 4 students. Close to bus route. beForest for 8 students. Close to bus route. dicaplex for 6 students. Close to bus route. diacaplex for 6 students. All appr. new and contemporary 2-level duplex. available. immediately 2 bdms, study, teaching room rm. lm. rm. 2 furnish- ings. room rm. lm. rm. 5 furnish- ings. information call 842-4855 a.m.-p. 9-30 formation call 842-4855 a.m.-p. 9-30 3 bbm, townhouse, on KU bus route, across the street, and tennis courts $400 month. 81-553-634 3 barm, townhouse with burning fireplace 86. 843-7301 Will take 2500 jiffy 86. 843-7301 Furnished studio available immediately, quilt, Meadowbrook $205, $424-900, 9-23 **Villa Capit Apartments.** Unfurnished 1 & 2 bedroom apts, apts. central. Air wall to balcony. 21% blocks south of Fraser Hall. Call 849-9703 for 5:30 a.m anytime on weekends. KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished 2 13-28. KUMC's 6-story, beautiful building! Call 913-381-108. 10-3 Neced: Roommate to stare a 4b. dorm. house Calls Doug 841-2871 7-94 Call Doug 841-2871 7-94 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 835-4539 or 824-4185. tf for fall or spring, Naisimhail Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a private room. It is weekly maid service to clean your room and bath all night long. You can call if you looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you are looking for. 1600 Naisimhail Drive. 843-8550 **If** For rent to students 1 bdm. apt. fur- room $159 + insurance at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdm. basement with lots of windows at 1423 1425 + electricity. 841-720-700 1413 $179 $220 money. Utilities paid 3 large attractive tuition fees. Attendance to campau and downtown. Leave runs up May 31. 1811 61 W. Ninth. attains See 1841-8155 p. wk days. Weekdays 9-26 841-8155 Nice 2 bdm. basement apt. furnished-3 blocks from campus- $250 month. 81- sox. 96-97. Lift efficiency Apt. Nice, clean on Tennessee U.S. Airways. Get 1. $160 utilities. 843-1054 Recompute Wanted—Nice apt, adjoining camp Call 749-735-174, heat and water Toll Number 749-735-174 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialist. Parts; service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-9069. 3900 W. 4th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense to use them—1). At study makes sense to use them—2). At study examination preparation. New Analysis of West- ern Civilization Notes Musical Instruments ... 1929 Gibson L-4 with case $65. 1930 Gibson Upright Piano with case $65. 1912 Nielsen Upright Piano with case $65. 1912 Nielsen Upright Piano good tone $325. Nice solid top student cello only please Guitar 643-766. Serious Ingr only please Guitar 643-766. g-84 MATTRESSES. Orthopedic sets from $239 each. Price our first prices. Payless Furniture, one block west of 9th and 10th, 842-2696. ff New excellent bedding—orthopedic matress sets. Be sure to check on prices. Leden's Furniture, 1200 New York SL. 843-3228. 975 Tissl 123-Coord condition, high gas size, $1600 or best price 142-852-2888 9-833 For sale now=1978 Rally Sport, fully new-1979 Rally Sport, fully new- 1929 Rally Sport, newly in- 1929 Rally Sport, 1843-441 or 842-823. 1978 LT Camaro, Fully equipped, low mileage, new condition. Call Todd at 841-1262. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $56.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-1366. tf 1972 Plymouth Valiant. Good condition. Must sell. Call Lorellia 841-387-3000. 9-23 Sleek B & O turntable. Like new with B & O 6000 cartridge $250, $250 128 dynamic range enhancer and noise reduction system. Barely used. $200, 81-0255. 9-24 10-speed. Cajui Mondo for sale. New, Ec- k. price. Cajui Mondo 811-846-103 after 5 weekends MOPED. New 1989. Metocarbur M-S6-5TB (ref. 842-386, over 400 pack). (carrier at 9-36 MUST SELL 713 Mazda wagon. Good shape. Air cond. AM-FM stereo. 14-905 - 923 75 Toyota, Corolla 160, 4 cylinder, Best offer, 841-645-829, Jayhawk tauk #A3.603 B4.603 Bookcase $28. record cabinet $31, also record cabinet $40, also bookcase title m.c. M. B. Stryker 89-9282, 9-924 89-9290, 9-9291 1971 Penitence Leman's, red with black vinyl 18300 Calvary 749-1275 after 6 81300 Calvary 749-1275 after 6 Must mail—Quality Oponia loudspeakers Fine Condition. Listen to them. 9860. Fine Condition. Listen to them. 9860. Fine Condition. Listen to them. Kenwood receiver. KR 4700, 40 watts/channel. $110. Call 841-9269. 9-28 1927 VW Bus- Rebuilt new tires, just inspected Call 145-8815. Keep traps 21" 10-speed Motobike. Good condition 1948-03-30 Keeprying. 9-29 FOUND Lone key on key ring in 111 Flint. Call 843-458 and ask for Elaine. 9-23 Found calculator: Call Albert 843-9515. 9-23 Found one ladies jacket with yellow band and black trim on 7-123. Call 646-3086. Call 646-3086. Prescription. pinki lash at 1309 Chilo on Sunday. 841-8219 9-23 Mary, grey and white Hiten 2nd and Natal Karen, Saturday 6:40 - 8:30 Karen, Karen. 9-23 Found a pair of keys near Parrott Athlete events evening. Calling, 841-872-9 841-872-9 HELP WANTED Needed immediately-School and personal care attendants to assist a young female student in the classroom or on call. Set hours. Call Dana Wray 843-812-7971, 812-813-1011, 9-23 Need R.N. to supervise quadripleate care, Need R.N. to supervise quadripleate care, Need R.N. to supervise quadripleate care, n Director of Instrumentation and Electronics (1981-1985) responsible for software available on or after January 1, 1981. Creative ability required in design of analgesic drugs, mini- and micro- computer hardware and software applied to chemistry and bioinformatics, valanil, $180,000-$240,000 [lax mct] depending upon experience and qualification. Send resume, J.D. DeFrenzel, Chemistry Department, Kansas University, 2, two letters of recommendation to Professor J. D. DeFrenzel, Chemistry Department, Kansas University, November 14, 1980, AAA/EDO Employer, 9-26 ORGANIC CHEMIST. Immediate opening in the department of medical Research, follow with interest in cancer drug development. Qualified individual with training in the synthesis of new compounds. Should be familiar with all types of laboratories, facility, IV, NMR, and chromatography. Salary negotiable. Contact or send resume to American Cancer Center, University of Kansas, Attention: Dr. David A. Ks. 6k. 1035. (913) 884-670. An equal opportunity affirmative action employer. CONSTRUCTION INSPECTOR ASSISTANT (University of Kansas AGEMENT) The University of Kansas Medical Center requires a top ten person knowledge to represent the University's knowledge to represent the University's building and operating projects at the Kansas B can campus. The success of the building and operating projects at the Kansas B can campus will be determined by or years of experience or two years of under- graduate work plus 5 years of experience. benefit and salary range of $12,000 plus are October 1, 1980 at the Employment Office. 6163 University of Kansas College $6163 University of Kansas College of Health Sciences and Hospital. An equal on- DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night (10 a.m.) at McDonalds on 6th; $4, $3- $2, $1 McDonalds on 6th; $4, $3-$5 notice TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE CLUB LOUSE. On Mondays nights year long, only at your place. The all night hugh. Only at your place. THE LOUSE where "Partying is the best" the LOUSE where "Partying is the best" 9:30 We want to work for you. Give us the chance. NOTICE SHIATSU-KU Explore the Oriental Healing Arts in this new student organization. Informal class in SHIATSU (Japanese finger pressure treatment) now being scheduled for October. FORMORE INFORMATION Vote Enterprise 842-8965 Jill Eisenkramer—President! Scott Crenshaw—Vice-president Carole Bittman—Secretary Dennis DuPont—Treasurer For Freshman Class Officers LOST Reward for return of my passport lost 8-23 Vice President of High School. Call 845-0128 - 923 Vice President of High School. Call 845-0128 - 923 Black and silver puppy. White paws and sandals. Black earlobe. Black ears. And Kutanee. $35 kitten tag. no. 168. Reward code: #79902. Brown cobra skin wallet lost in front of Johnson Library. Reward if found. Tum- 1925 307 Lost-Brown Leather Purse between Nail- sth and Park 25, Reward #493-6068. Supplier Diameter value: 1.6 in. Discount value: Reward offered. Call 843-9248 a 4 p.m. PERSONAL LOUISSE WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday supper and 12 & 50 pie cards, Tenth and Mith. Partying with the best of Louisse. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821 9-30 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth care. Counseling. Bachelors degree, cap call, app call. Bachelors degree, 5 mth. (18) 824-3100. 4491 W. 10th Street, Overland Park, Kansas. fax 617-277-4500. HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. EVERY 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 nibbles (75 on Thursday); backpacking; and the atmosphere of 4292 "Partying our business." If 4292 "Partying our business." If Play Ping Pong Tuesday, 9/23 7-10 p.m. Union Ballroom SUA LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are only $10 on weekends; every Wednesday there is a free drink. Club Lounge, 580 Locust. 842-942-93. 9-30 SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOUISE, 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. tf PART TIME INTERRNSHOP OPPORTUNITY. If you're undecided about a career, but you're willing to learn in职 in sales and management with a large eastern based company, our part-time internship may be the right fit for you. Terry Westend, 816-421-1411. Equal Opportunity Employer MMP In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for less cash, Louise DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the girls in the club only $2.50 TGIE AT LOUCES BAR with $155 pls- Friday from 2 tills & be There-aloain. If WITH Looking for the perfect gift ideas We've got it ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-6169. tf Singing messages for all occurrences Delliv- sion assistance ASTA Singing Telegra- phones 841-619-6000 Take a break after classes at LOUIS'S Afternoon sessions every day until 6. Green's Liquor has 1976 German Pleasantors and 194a Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon-290. and excellent training equipment. $ PSYCHIC SELF- AWARENESS CLASS: self-dressing. Surts very soon. Cost $10 per bursa, for 10 weeks. Eve Learns $24-28 In copying driving you BATTY Don't KAT come. Come to Copy Cover Corp and let us take the KINKS out of your copies! Copy Cover Corp 5th & Iowa. @294-820-91-30 GUTATRUST is needed for acoustic and electric experience in a broad range of music for a young, amorous, Lawrence舞舞 Tim 745-6891 or 843-5721. 9-23 Beginning band is looking for BASSIST with singing ability. For questions inquire online at bassist@music.mit.edu SKY SKYWALKER you left your toys at HAWK'S CROSSING. New state of the art games, great food, cold beer 1 bottle per person. APPY HOUR 11 am-4 pm with 12.5 milers per人 ATTENTION: Established brass band is now holding auditions for talented drummers. Serious inquiries only. Call 841-7137. WOMEN: 18-60. Scientists, attractive, good dress sense. Tailor, designer, inventor, inventor, cook, dancer, etc. into SIM. M.E., see com- puter science. Write computer programs. sic, etc. Write W. M. P. Box 32L, Law, Syndication. $25 Women's Self Defense. 12 hours of instruction with a private instructor; Tuesday, Thursday, 7-9:30 to 10:30 noon; Saturday, Tuesday, and Thursday, 7-9:30 to 10:30 noon. Guru Pu Club. $25 per person—organized living groups ask about special rates. Call 800-241-4911. CHIROPRACTIC—Investigate the natural phenomenon of chiropractic skin from JOHNSON CHRISTIAN Clinic, 69th and 80th Avenues, New York, NY 10022. THE BAFTA STUDENT UNION Bible 1989b Call 841-8001 for transportation of the book. Reward for information leading to return- White Royal Administrator typewriter, black typewriter, Wesley on Wesley 12, 84-6184, 5-10, weekday evenings, during day, weeks. Psychic Personality Readings. $25-50. $43- 9414, 1-9 p.m. 10-3 Tuesday night is Blue Grass Night at the Xpot Feller and The Skunk Valley Drifters. What's it all about? For answers, attend the informational meeting for Campus Safety Thursday, 5 p.m. in the held at 7 p.m. Thursday, 5th. 5th in the Conference Room of the Satellite University. 9-28 Volunteers need for Campus Safety Servi- work. Work to Volunteer, Call KU info at 464-3366 or attend the meeting at 7 a.m. (Sept. 25) in Conference Room of the Line Union Hey Paul Donald- The Grin is getting very angry. He only can help him! WOMO wants you only one job and can help! WOMO wants you I'COME TO THE MOUNTAINS Night at the HARBOUR LITES. A Busch long, but no less than from 7-10 p.m. to HARBOUR LITES. A Maasaiach 9-23. First-Class Dive. Ileen SERVICES OFFERED H-ade Start needs you to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a tacher for two hours, one morning to camp. Campus 10-62515 for information. THE BREK GARAGE>-Complete professional warehouse service, catered by a specially trained carver, specialty- ly tuned 300-volt DC charger, complete wiring, and more. COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2½ EACH HOUSE OF USHER 802 MASSACHUSETTS 574 LINCOLN ST. BROADWAY WASHINGTON, D.C. 20210 For the first Guatemala service all must be over 25, with experience specializing in Over 25 years of experience specializing in Guatemalan language. Tutoring service for all lower level math courses up to Calc. 115. Call Curt at 841-4016. 9-24 Astrology provides a frame of reference for you. If your life is in turmoil, if your life is far from where you are going in your life or want your life to be better, make a difference for you. Call 843-195-3950. Need some money? Like to babysit? Add your name to the babysitter list and call the EU information center 864-3563 or the Student Information center 864-4709. 9-23 EINSTERN'S TUTORS Expert assistance CS math. Dave 841-7683, English grammar, composition, research, typing Randy 843- 7680 TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt Accurate, experienced typist IBM correct- Experienced typem-term paper, thesis, documentation. Resumes will be spelled spelling corrected. 843-9554. Mrs. Wright t Experienced K., U. typet, IBM Correcting Experienced K., U. typet, IBM Correcting Sandy, evening and weekends, 76-81 Sandy, evening and weekends, 76-81 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selecricht. Call Ellen or Jeanenni, 841-2172. 12-8 02-2001 ENCORP COPY CORPS ENCORP COPY CORPS 843-560-1940 Typeit Editor, IBM Pica Elica Quality Software, New York, NY welcome / editing/ layout Call Joan 842 www.typeit.com Thé University Daily UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Typing prices discounted. Excellent work in developing pricing algorithms. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 and weekends. Experimented typet–thesis, dissertations, research projects, correcting selective splicing, 5 ppm. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast rec- laborate, accurate, IBM tmc cello, 862-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. My old typewriter doesn't correct mistakes . or type . or spell . but I do! Kav 149-1331. Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-3203. to. 4 WANTED For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tt GOLD - SILVER - DIAMONDS. Clas rings Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling earl we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-7414. 542-2686. 10-6 Roommate wanted for mobile home $90 Furnished - Furnished Call John 608- 3469 after 5 p.m. 8-23 babysitting—have own transportation come to home or have apt. Call 749-1415 afternoons - evenings. 9:24 Buying gold Faying $50-$100 for men's class ring, less for ladies &RdCoin Shop 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza. 842-9628 9-30 Manual Pica Typewriter in good condition. Call 842-5230. 9-24 Drummer for working rock band. No punk, no disco, just straight-on rock 'n' roll. Call 841-2678. Keep trying. Roommate for 2 bdm apt. -Jawkah West. $120 - Uses call. Cust Ref. 740-3866 Penalty roommate to share 2 bdm fur- mance. Call 955-3525. All答应. Call .paul. Call 843-4602 All答应. Call Uppercase person or graduate student needed for a roommate 2 Nirmr. $125 month + 19 utilities. Must be able to toilete, wash and pet. Write or call 2428420 Ashuelf. 9-26 WANTED: Person to enter cooperative child care center with siblings and want to find person with similarly aged children. Please send 4 hours for 4 afternoon hours. 5 days a week. Send 2 hours per day. Combinations. Call 841-0885. 9-24 Non smoking roommate for 2 bbm. apt 1250 sq ft. $125/mon. utilities. Jeanie, 684-3425 Vii-Steepable non-smoker wanted to share furnished residence near HILL. $10, 841-843-7255. ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! 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: Dates to Run: ___ To ___ RATES: 18 words or less additional words 1 time 2 time 3 time 4 8.25 8.50 8.75 9.00 9.25 9.50 9.75 10.00 9.25 9.50 9.75 10.00 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch= $3.75 AD DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: __ ADDRESS:__ PHONE:__ --- Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 23, 1980 Backs graduate from Pitt 'D' school, want to start giving offensive lessons By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Sports Writer Last year's Edison High backfield graduated Saturday afternoon. Sure, they graduated in June, but Frank Seurer and Kerwin Bell finally were initiated into college football last weekend by Pittsburgh's hard-hitting defense. Seurer and Bell, from Edison High School in Huntington Beach, Cal., had respectable opening games against Oregon, but both learned more against seventh ranked Pitt. "I WASN'T REALLY nervous." Bell said. "I was too tough going. I thought we played well the night before." "We can sustain an offensive drive, but we're not really ready for a team like that. They're in a position to win." suerer, too, felt that Pitt's defense overhelmed the slowly rebuilding Jawhawk队. "They were strong everywhere," he said. "We were strong, the weakest part, and it was just as strong as the rest." Seurer said he was glued to hand over the quarterbacking chores to Steve Smith when Kansas coach Don Fambrough made that substitution late in the second quarter Saturday. "He made a good choice," Seurer said. "Maybe another quarterback would get the job." That switch, however, did not help. "If we would have played 10 quarterbacks, the results Fambridge stressed the importance of the school's recruits learner in the Pittsburgh school district. Just know. would have been the same," Fambrough said. "These quartenbacka found out what it was all about." "They've still got a lot to learn," he said. "They found out today what big league football is all about. They will benefit. In the future they will be fine players for us." HUGH GREEN, PITT's hammering defensive end, agreed with Fambrough's prediction about "He has a lot to learn, then, he'll be really good." Green said. Fambrouch said that the remedy for Bell and Seurer's problems would be a good offensive game. That could be Saturday in Memorial Stadium against Louisville. "They need to have the opportunity to work the offense," Fambridge said. "They had to grow up sometime. They've never been hit like they were. It might well happen to them now." Bell expressed his concern with the offense. "Our offense didn't execute too well," he said. "Frank's come along so good, but it doesn't bother me to change quarterbacks. The quarterback position is not definite." "There were a couple of times when I had open receivers," Seuer said. "It was frustrating for me. I felt I can throw better than I did. I wasn't used to the hard hitting and the turf." Fambrough, though, is a believer in Seurer. Barnabas said, "It's all matter of time." Fambrough said, "It's a matter of time." WITH NINE GAMES left in the 1980 season, time is on the side of the vince California duo. "This game helps more than it hurts us," Seurer said. "The better teams we play, the better we will play. We need the tough schedule." JAYHAWK NOTES: Kansas' junior varsity football team won its season opper yesterday, defeating Oklahoma State 17-14 in Stillwater, Okla. Kansas' varsity players suffered only minor injuries Saturday against Pittsburgh. Reserve cornerback Dan Wagner is expected to miss Saturday's game with Louisville because of a shoulder injury. Linebacker Kyle McNorton, who suffered heat exhaustion Saturday, will not practice until tomorrow and is a questionable starter for Saturday. Punter Bucky Scribner, the nation's second leading punter, was Kansas' innomie for Big Eight defense player of the week. Scribner, the Big Eight's best punter this season, has punted times for a 47.0 average. The dayhawk may not accommodate any offense player of the week. Lanecker Mark Carlsen from Iowa State was named the Big Eight's defensive player of the week. He returned an interception 25 yards for a touchdown in the Cyclones 7&4 victory against Jets Stats. Jeff Quinn, the quarterback for the Nebraska Cornhusskers, received the offensive player of the week honors. Quinn led the Cornhusskers with three touchdown passes in their 57-4 out of Iowa. 11 CHRIS TODDI/Kansan staff Kerwin Bell and Frank Seurer, part of the KUbackfield this season, took some hard hits Saturday from the PIT defense, but said they learned from the game and were ready for more. VIN Meisner Milstead LIQUOR Featureting one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza KINKO'S No brag, just fact. That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4th a page. 994 Vermont And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos; no one else is as fast and good as us. 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 843-8019 10.5 Sat 12.5 Sun More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a **free** blow dry with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo free with all services. Call or come by. M-Thurs. 8-8 Friday 8-5 Saturday 9-3 841-4489 --at the regular price, get the second BORDER BANDIDO BARBEQUE SANDWICH with this coupon buy one 1528 W. 23rd. 842-8861 FREE offer good through Wednesday, Sept. 24 MEXICO CITY BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques footlights Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbriar's Deli) PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND THE PEOPLE BOOK ARE ACCEPTED USE THEM 1741 Massachusetts OVERLAND PHOTO phone 811-9300 OVERLAND PHOTO 841 070 EXILE 15 West 9th We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 842-3059 Place a want ad in the Kansan Call 864-4358 THE KU ACCOUNTING CLUB sponsors INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES presented by Arthur Young & Co. 7:00 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 23, 1980 Student Union-Forum Room The story of a bourbili's love for the Jews in their darkest hour. 7 two Units Gaukawk Room THE new year baby goes on and the world moves on. ANNOUNCEMENTS THE HIDING PLACE. 20th Dec. 1987 THE HIDING PLACE, 1987 10.00 AM THE HIDING PLACE, 1987 10.00 AM Thurs. Sept. 25 the CROSS and the SWITCHBLade They thought they were tough until the stranger faced them with a book PH 90986 | e-mail master@tcm.com TEL 17234567 Fri. Sept. 26 THE GOSPEL ROAD A story of Jesus sung and old by Johnny Cash THE GOSPEL ROAD Sat. Sept. 27 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2831 Mon. Sept. 29 THE MONUMENTS OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE OF THE WESTERN STATES WITH PICTURES OF THE FOLLOWING LEGENDS: JEAN BOUYS (1805-1924) MICHAEL JAMES (1863-1929) RUBY HOWELL (1870-1939) HALLIE ABBOTT (1857-1929) ROBERT E. GRAFF (1893-1974) 0111 7 pm Union Gayhousk Room NO DISCRIMINATION - SIGN UP for a personal interview with *RCA Recruiting Representative* who will be at your Placement Office on Wednesday, April 30. REA----E.E.SENIORS - ASK your Placement Office for pamphlets telling what the job requires and how you can be a challenging career with all advantages of Federal Civil Service. - LOOK into the engineering opportunities open in rural electrification and telephony NO DISCIMINATION Bill Lynch and Lee McBee BAND Apeman's First Appearance On His Word Tour 80 His World Tour 80 TOMORROW FREE Showcase Extravaganza KLZR APEMAN NIGHT $1.06 Pitchers and Drinks 8-9 Plus Other Specials NO COVER KLZR Draft Card Offers JOHN HARTFORD with ALLEN WEISS FRIDAY 26th Flying Fish Recording Artist $5.50 Advance Tickets Still, Available 100 ULTRAVOX MONDAY 29th Chrysalis Recordings Artists ULTRAVOX Opening Act BROWN & LANGREHR Advanced Tickets $4.00 THURSDAY OCT. 2nd THE ELVIN BISHOP BAND with LARRY RASPBERRY and the HIGHSTEPPERS $7.50 Advance Tickets Now Available And Going Fast Coming Events 27 ALCHEMY 30 ALLEN GINSBERG $4 100 Tickets Avail. at Dearborn Only September October 3 & 4 THE SECRETS 3/4 THE SECRETS 16 CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN 17/18/19 BLUE RIDDIM BAND 20 JOHN COUGAR November 2 SPLIT ENZ Where the stars are 7th & Maas 842-6930 lawrence Opera House University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Wednesday, September 24, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 23 USPS 650-640 Senate to studv clubs for duplication of service By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The Student Senate finance and auditing committee voted last night to investigate the Latin American Solidarity Club and the Latin American Club for duplication of services. According to Senate rules and regulations, "No funds shall be allocated for projects, services or materials which are duplicated functions or services of the Student Senate." The Latin American Solidarity Club presented its $1,050 supplementary budget funding request last night, the second night of preliminary discussion of student organizations' supplementary budget requests. The club requested supplies, telephone expenses, expenses, library supplies, telephone expenses, and co-sponsors to conferences on Latin America. The group received no Senate funding last spring. THE LATIN AMERICAN Club, however, was allocated $43 in the spring for advertising, office and merchandising expenses. production of Latin America Night. It is not requesting supplementary funding. Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, called for the investigation. However, he said, "I'm not going to talk." He said the situation was similar to funding the Iranian Student Association and the Iranian Student Organization last spring. The two groups were funded by a number of the hearings and were funded as one group. Although Abbott initially called for a freeze on Latin American Club's account, he later amended his motion and called only for the investigation. Rhonda Neugebauer, coordinator of the Latin American Solidarity Club's budget, said the organization was concerned with making others aware of Latin American social, economic and political situations. While interested in political concern she does not endorse political candidates, she said. According to Neugebauer, the Latin American concerns itself only with students from Latina. A finance and auditing subcommittee meeting to talk with the two groups about their activities and membership is tentatively scheduled for 4 pm. THE FINANCE AND auditing committee will automatically accept the subcommittee's In other preliminary decisions, the committee voted to cut the Hispanic-American Law and the Federal Election Law. The committee said it could not pay for the association's $12.10 photocopying bill from the last fiscal year, its $35 typewriter repair bill on a newly-owned typewriter or study guides for its library. Two of the items, the committee said, fell under Senate rules and regulations that say no Senate funds can be used on bills incurred during the impeachment process. The state did specifically to fulfill academic requirements. The committee also said it should not pay for repairs on University-owned equipment. THE SENATE AND committee funding philosophy, which recommends no funding to the senate in this respect. programs, was the committee's rationale for not funding $835.60 in travel expenses. The committee also voted to temporarily cut travel expenses and two film rents from the KU German Club request, cutting the amount from $1,000 to $87.50. Discussion was started on Kansas Law Review's request for $871.50 to buy a new typewriter, but the discussion was tabled until Monday night. Abbott suggested the group charge a Lawyer's prescription price to make money to buy the Two-Wheeler. The Kansas Undergraduate Business Council failed to appear before the committee to present its justification for a $414.40 request. The committee action until the group could explain its absence. The other 10 groups presenting their requests for supplementary funding were the Psychology Club, $507.70; Consumer Affairs Association, $646.94; Hilltop Child Development Center, $628.34; University of Kentucky Defender Project, $1,536.69; Kansas Engineer Magazine, $900; Blacks in Communication, $1,910; KU Accounting Club, $818; and KU Folk Dance Club, $300. Mikl Gordon, committee co-chairman, submitted his written interpretation of the Senate rule that says no funds shall be allocated for sending delegates to conventions, meetings, or According to Gordon, the rule precludes the committee from recommending that Senate funds be allocated for transporting delegates to meetings in person or by mail, and attaching them from sending a chair to sing at a convention. In the memo, Gordon wrote that he hoped committee members saw the "irony" of being able to send singers but not students wanting to receive information about programs to conferences. He suggested the rule be amended so future committees could allocate funds to send delegates to the congress. Iraqis bomb Iran's giant oil refinery The committee will hear 14 more groups' requests tonight. Abbott said that all decisions were preliminary and that the committee would make final decisions. By United Press International Iraq said it "destroyed and burnt" Iran's giant Abadan oil refinery yesterday in its one-day-old invasion of its eastern neighbor. Iran, meanwhile, bombed the Iraqi capital of Baghdad and threatened to blockade the Strait of Hormuz, through which much of the West's Persian Gulf oil is shipped. The IranianParliament declared a "freeze" on any moves to free the 52 American hostages and turned its attention to the war between the two most powerful states in the Persian Gulf. U. N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim called an emergency meeting of the Security Council. IN RETAILIATION, Iraq said, "our brave suppliers destroyed and burn all oil of installations." Iraq said Iran's U.S.-made warplanes bombed Baghdad and its military and civilian airports twice yesterday. The bombing claimed scores of five Iranian planes were downed over the city. Iraq claimed to have crossed the Iranian border, driving as far as six miles into Iran to the disputed Shatt al-al-Rawah waterway at the head of the Gulf. A British oil tanker on the waterway has collapsed in an oil refinery, the largest in the world, was ablaze following an attack by Iraqi bombs. Iraq said that its tanks "circled and completely cut off" Abadan and the nearby port of Kharramshar from the rest of the Iranian army. Abadan, still burning from the air strikes that killed him, told the oil refinery, was said to be about to fall to the Iraqi forces on the Iranian side of Shatt al-Arab. A THIRD MAJOR Iranian city, Qaar- Shir, 30 miles north of Khransharzil, reported was a bombing site. See related stories page 3 it would be a stunning defeat for the once-mighty post-war United States, and likely post- revenue attacks on the Western and Middle East. As the Persian Gulf fighting escalated, reportedly with hundreds of casualties on both sides, Iran said it had taken control of the strategic strait of Hormuz. It warned that the ships of any nation that tried to interfere risked being attacked. The official Kuwaiti news agency said the strait, the bottleneck at the mouth of the Gulf, already had been closed, trapping 90 oil tankers. But the Pentagon and Western oil companies said that as far as they knew, the strait was still open to tanker traffic. AS THE FIGHTING escalated, it threatened to imperil only the flow of oil to the West but could also inflict further damage. quickly became a weapon in the war being waged by the two nations, Campaigning in California, President Carter asked the Soviet Union not to "interfere" in the conflict and said it was "too early to assess" the conflict's effects on the hostages. At the Pentagon, spokesman Thomas Ross said no U.S. forces, including two warships in the Persian Gulf near the fighting-bead been put on alert. "We are not ordering alerts of any kind," he said, as the ships are continuing normal operations. He also said the Strait of Hormuz remained open. Iraq said it had shot down 67 Iranian planes in aerial duels over Iraq and Iran, and Iran said its air force bombed Baghdad and other Iraqi cities including the vital port of Basra opposite Abu Hamzah on Shatt al-Arab waterway, on 34 Oct. and causing "irresponsible losses to the enemy." It said the Strait of Hormuz, through which 100 oil tankers pass daily to bring 60 percent of the Gulf's oil supplies to the West, "was under the control of Iranian forces." In a warning that appeared to be aimed at Saudi Arabia and other states using the strait, Iran said any "interference" with its control of the Strait would be met with its narrowest point, would be met with force. Post-season travel puts strain on budgets By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter Although the women's sports budget has increased this year, coaches now face the problem of making travel budgets cover the cost of postseason trips. While more travel money was budgeted for three women's sports—basketball, softball and soccer, the team paid $725. In the past, the travel budget has not included post-season travel to championships. This year it large enough to cover post-season costs, said Pat Collinson, an administrative assistant in the athletic department. Collinson works with the women's sports budget. "In effect, it is not an increase," she said. LAST YEAR, the women's basketball team spent slightly more than its $23,000 travel budget during the regular season. An additional $11,000, not in the planned budget, went for championship travel. The extra funds came from the University and the KU Athletic Corporation. cover travel expenses if the team makes it to post-season competition. The softball team got a $1,000 travel increase, but last year the team spent $2,300 on travel to This year's travel budget is $27,434, but it must Travel is traditionally a problem when money is tight, Collins said, because coaches' salaries, equipment and other areas are necessary and difficult to cut back. "There aren't a lot of variables left that can be cut." she said. Additional problems are caused by a rise in travel costs in the last year. See SPORTS page 5 Lawrence pizza parlors panning out HENRY WOODS DAVE KRAUS/Kansen stat Randy Hird, manager of the New Yorker, 1921 Massachusetts, removes a freshly cooked chicken dish from the kitchen and mixes dishes and other dishes, pizza accounts for the majority of the business on any night of the week. By COLLEEN KEEFFE Staff Reporter Another pizza was on its way to a KU student's stomach. The students standing in the residence hall cafeteria line just looked on hungrily as a delivery boy, cradling a large toasty-warm box, nudged his way toward the elevator. At some family pizza parlors, such as Godfather's Pizza, 711 W. 23rd St., students constitute about 25 to 40 percent of their business. But, the owner of Pyramid Pizza, 507 W. 14th St., said almost all of its customers were KU students. Pizza is still a popular commodity among KU managers and the managers of several local pizza establishments. Most of the managers of 10 local pizza parlors said that about 50 percent of their business came from them. ROV ANDA, Pyramid's owner, said that most of his customers were students because of his store's location below The Wheel, a bar, and because of Pyramid's delivery service. Most of the restaurant's revenue comes from deliveries, Davis said. "A lot of students don't have cars in town, so it's easier to call out for a pizza." he said. Bruce Borkosky, manager of Domino's Pizza South, 145 W. 23rd St., said more than half its orders came from KU residence halls. Domino's North, 610 Florida St., caters mostly to apartment dwellers. Domino's is strictly a pizza business. On a good Friday night, between 3,000 and 3,000 pizzas are sold in Lawrence, pizza parlor Courtyard. PIZZA CONNOISSEURS can relish a variety Pizza PIZZA page 5 TAMPA BAY PHOTOGRAPHY Jesse Brown, Tonganoxie, removes the hook from the mouth of a fish he caught yesterday while fishing in the Kansas River just east of the Massachusetts Street bridge. Brown says he likes to fish and relax at that spot while waiting to pick up his grandchildren from school. Bad grade appeals increase; success rate remains stable By CINDICURBIE Staff Reporter Although more students are appealing grades now than they were a decade ago, the chances for student success have not increased. William Balfour, university ombudsman, said yesterday. He said one reason they had not increased was that decisions on appeals were made within KU departments and faculty members were reluctant to overrule their peers. As I see it," he said, "it is difficult for a committee in a department to disagree with a committee. "One of the biggest problems is that nobody faced competent to tell another professor that he'sgré- féé." "It's part of academic freedom that a teacher has complete control in grading his class. He doesn't expect to be told that any particular grade should be given to any student." A GRADE APPEAL is reviewed by the department chairman of the class the student is taking, the dean of the school and finally the candidate to the position, cannot be recruited between the student and the department. Balfour said most grade appeal cases that came to him were settled between the instructor and student without further action in the department. However, he said, when the case moved into the department there was a possibility the designation might have been A way to provide impartiality would be the formation of an entire University committee that would handle the appeals separate from the departments of the University, Balfour said. For the past three years, Balfour said, his report to the University Senate executive committee has recommended an impartial University committee to deal with appeals HE SAID THAT WICHTT T State University approached a program that had been successful for its programs. James J. Rhatigan, vice president for student APRIL 5 APRIL 5 Weather ♪ 1992 It should be mostly fair today with a high weather 77, according to the KU Weather Tonight, a weak cool front will push through eastern Kansas with a slight increase in humidity and showers in the region. The front will bring cooler temperatures with a low Tomorrow should be mostly sunny with northerly winds at 10 miles an hour and a cloudiness of up to 65%. high of 73. The extended forecast calls for little or no precipitation and mild temperatures. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 24.1980 News Briefs From United Press International Inflation increasing after July respite WASHINGTON—Food prices jumped more quickly in August than in any month during the past five years, the government said yesterday. As a result, the brief, one-month hull in the cost of living ended and prices continued to rise at an annual rate of 8.6 percent. The big increase in food prices, larger than most economists expected, broke the nation's one-month respite from inflation in July, when consumer prices rose by 2.3%. Department Demographics in and out of government predicted inflation would continue to happen in the months ahead, running into double digits by year's end. prices tamed off, prices of the firm increased. In August, prices were up a seasonally adjusted 0.7 percent. A sharp acceleration in food costs accounted for about half the increase, the Labor Department said. however, August's inflation rate of 8.6 percent was low compared with the first few months of this year, when prices rose at an annual rate of 18.2 percent. crease over last August a 3 percent The Consumer Price Index now stands at 249.6, which means the same goods that cost $100 in 1967 now cost $249.60. In other words, the 1957 dollar is worth only 40.4 cents today. Warhead reportedly flown to Texas LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A dented nuclear warhead that was blown from a Titan II missile in an underground site explosion Friday reportedly was flown to Amarillo, Texas, yesterday for examination at a nuclear weapons plant. plant. Officials would not say immediately whether the warhead was aboard the Military Airlift Command C-141 cargo plane that flew from Little Rock Air Force Base to Amarillo International Airport. Force base of Ammarillo International, import Hazardous material frequently is flown into Amarillo because of the Pentax nuclear weapons assembly plant, the final assembly point for the country's nuclear weapons. Fran Carriano, chief of the Federal Aviation Administration flight service station at Amarillo, said she was informed about 11:10 a.m. that the Texas pancanbe airport would receive an incoming Air Force plane from Rockwell Aircraft at 12:12 p.m. Carriano could not confirm that the aircraft was on the plane. As the reported shipment of the warhead was under way, an investigation was beginning at the explosion site in Darmascus, Ark. An inspection team comprised of Air Force personnel and a few civilians began sifting through the debris of the ruined missile silo. The eds of the book are Dr. Ed Neumherz, a Strategic Air Command spokesman, said that he did not know how long the team would be at the site, but that it would be several months before the investigation was completed. Maine residents vote no nuke issue AUGUSTA, Maine—Maine voters turned out in large numbers yesterday for the nation's first referendum aimed at closing an operating atomic power plant, and pro-nuclear advocates said they hoped the big turnout would swing the vote their way. "We are optimistic that a large turnover will mean a lot of people are taking the matter seriously," he said. Thompson, apologized to IBM for having overlooked the major stockholder in the nuclear power plant. "The larger the turnout, at least we hope, the greater the number of people voting to keep the plant from being shut down," Thompson said. volving of reefs in issue proposal before Maine voters called for immediate shutdown of the Maine Yankee power plant at Wiscasset, the state's only nuclear plant. The plant began operation in 1972 and supplies one-third of the state's power. Leaders of the anti-nuclear movement stockpiled champagne in their Augusta headquarters yesterday and declared a victory before any returns The Maine referendum was a crucial test for the nuclear power industry. The referendum drew strong interest from out-of-state utility companies and investment groups. The committee, Cornish said, demanded that the $700,000 it spent trying to defeat the referendum was donated by big business interests across the country. Chrysler future bright, Iacocca says I laocca said there was a better than 56-50 chance that Chrysler would not need more than the $300 million it already has drawn from the ad package. Iacocca was in Washington for one of a series of presentations around the country introducing Chrysler's 1981 models, focusing on its new fuel-efficient "K" cars. He declined to predict how large a profit he expected after seven straight quarters of losses. The Big Three automakers—Chrysler, General Motors and Ford—expected to lose a total of $7 billion to $8 billion in 1900. Chrysler has not been taken. Under terms of an aid package worked out by Congress when Chrysler was on the verge of collapse last year, the automaker draw up to $1.5 billion in loans and assure the lenders they are backed by a federal guarantee of repayment. Foster parent lobbies for spankings TOPEKA-A - A Geary County foster parent told the Joint Committee on Rules and Regulations yesterday that spanking has been an approved form of punishing children for centuries and should be allowed in Kansas foster bapes. However, Sharon Scoggin, Junction City, was the only person to testify before the committee in support of removing the prohibition against corporal punishment in foster homes from state regulations. Child care experts and state agency heads urged that the state keep the regulations. State Rep. Ed Rolfs, R-Junction City, a member of the committee, wants the panel to recommend that the agencies licensing and monitoring the foster homes—the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services Department and the Kansas Health and Environment Department—change the regulation. The committee took no action on whether to recommend a change. Scoggin said the regulation should be changed to allow foster parents to use some form of physical punishment. Although thousands of students across the nation returned to classes this week, teachers' strikes continued to drag on in school districts from coast to coast. Philadelphia teachers return to work About 220,000 students in Philadelphia returned to their schools this week after the end of the nation's largest strike, which began on Labor Day. Elsewhere, teachers in San Jose, Calif.; Bellevue; Wall Township, N.J.; and Co-opley and Bangor, Pa., erased walkouts; had at least 40,000 students. Other strikes, some four weeks old, continued in Arizona, Illinois Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, closing classrooms to at least 134,000 students. Philadelphia teachers Monday ratified a new two-year contract that restored jobs to all workers laid off in June to balance the school budget—a major stumbling block in the negotiations—and granted a 10 percent wage increase in the second year. Eleven districts remained on strike in Pennsylvania, involving 3,109 teachers and 64,232 students. Reagan attacks Carter over hawkish comments By United Press International Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan bitterly attacked President Carter this week for what he called the unforgivable suggestion that he would be more likely than Carter to get the United States into war. Carter denied that he was calling his opponent a warmonger but said Reagan had advocated military force on a number of occasions. the president, who repeatedly has emphasized Reagan's hawkish reputation, said Monday night in Los Angeles that voters face the choice this year of whether Americans "have peace or war." "I think that to accuse anyone of deliberately wanting a war is beneath decency," Reagan said at an airport rally in Pensacola, Fla. IN AN INTERVIEW yesterday with a San Jose, Calif., television station, Carter said that he did not mean to In the interview summary, Carter said that he was not trying to predict what kind of decisions Reagan might make as president, but that he hoped the American people would never have to find out. imply Reagan would start a war, but that the Republican nominees had made very strong statements advocating the war in Iraq is a variety of situations over the years. But his campaigning also was marred by scuffling when the students at a predominantly black Southern University protested what they called the "forced" appearance of their band at the LSU rally. Reagan campaigned in Pensacola, Fla., and Baton Rouge, La., yesterday drawing a large and enthusiastic audience at Louisiana State University. Protesters tried to block the buses taking band members to the affair, and witnesses said several people were hit and kicked in the confusion. House debates cleanup bill for hazardous waste dumps WASHINGTON (UPI)—The House began action yesterday on a bill that would create a fund for emergency cleanup of hazardous waste dump sites such as New York's Love Canal. The bill would create a four-year Hazardous Waste Response Fund, allowing the Environmental Protection Agency to clean up abandoned hazardous waste sites across the country. The fund would not provide compensation for victims affected by the dumps. The size of the fund depends on whether the House accepts the $600 million figure approved by its Commerce Committee or the $1.2 billion amount agreed to by the House Ways and Means Committee. Money for the fund would come in equal parts from the chemical industry and the federal government, with industry paying through liability assessments and fees on petrochemical feedstocks, inorganic elements and compounds, and domestic crude oil. THE BILL results from the 1978 incident at Love Canal, near Niagara Falls, N.Y., where 200 families had to be evacuated from their homes due to flooding and abandoned underground chemical waste dumping site. The EPA estimates that about 2,000 of the 50,000 abandoned hazardous waste sites nationwide present serious health hazards. the chemicals, buried decades earlier, had seeped into yards and basements, killing plant life and causing illness and birth defects. Under the bill, anyone generating or handling hazardous substances would be responsible for later consequences. Chemical dump owners or operators would be required to inform state officials within six months where the dumps were located. I'm heading to Mick's to get my tail light. Mick's Bicycle Shop I'm heading to Mick's to get my tail light. BE SEEN AT NIGHT. W wonder bicycle light 1339 Mass. 842-3131 Mick's Bicycle Shop I'm heading to Mick's to get my tall light. BE SEEN AT NIGHT. bicycle light 1339 Mass. 842-3131 SAVE $4.00 Tempo CASSETTE CASE Tempo No. 5226 SALE $5.95 reg. $9.95 Holds 12 cassettes. Your choice of blue, brown or tan. RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd Phone: 913-842-4587 "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" HOURS: MON-FRI 10 am - 9 pm SAT 10 am - 5 pm Advertise in BE SEEN AT NIGHT. Wonder wonder bicycle light SAVE $4.00 Tempo CASSETTE CASE Tempo No. 5226 SALE $5.95 Q COPY WARS ENCORE STRIKES BACK COPY WARS ENCORE STRIKES BACK - 8½ x 11 Regular 3c Copies - Free Collating - Highest Quality Eastern Copy Corp. Lawrence Kane ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa—Holiday Plaza 842-2001 S PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) - Rush Services Available on Black and White Dependent * Printing - Rush Contact Sheets (B + W) * Rush B + W Enlargements - ★ Black and White Prints from slides in 2 days - 16x2D* B + W Prints from color or Black and White film - 4x6" Color Prints from 30mm Charges available Ta K. U. Departments 1741 MASSACHUSETTS OVERLAND PHOTO Phone 841-9780 Patronixe Kansan Advertisers SVA FILMS Wednesday, Sept. 24 Women in Love D. H. Lawrence's novel about two sisters seeking something more, finding separation and intimacy on the screen by Ken Russell. Glenda Jackson (who won the Best Actress Oscar and best supporting actress in Bates, Oliver Reed and Eleanor Bron, round out the line cast (129 color). *Mirror*. Thursdav. Sept. 25 Sambizanga Flimed during actual hostilities in Angola, Sambuka balances over its few resources and remains an iconicism. The story of a black woman searching for her husband, last seen in a cavern is "a very fine film ... a revolutionary picture." Nona Sayre, *The New York Times*, (1922) 386. Friday, Sept. 26 Alien the crew of a commercial ship, the Nostromo, are awakened by a distress signal ... by the time they realize a creature has invaded them, it is too late. Ridley Scott's film is a masterpiece of horror. With Sigourney Weaver. Tom Skerritt "Plus: Birth of a Nation," with Skerritt (1247 m). Color. 3:00-7:30. Saturday, Sept. 27 Alien 3:30,7:00,9:30 Sunday, Sept. 28 Interiors (1978) Woody Allen's allure into serious filmmaking is the story of three sisters (Diane Kastner, Kate Winslet, and Jacked when their father announces he is leaving their embattered mother for a life, vivacious and compelling), who work by ingmar Bergman, Allen's film is nevertheless a very personal, insightful work. "The Dove" (93 min.) 11m/. Color Unless otherwise noted; all film will be shown at Wooldudt Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. Published Monday through Friday. Tickets available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th level. Information 864-377. No smoking or refreshments allowed. Re ft nd 906 9780 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Page 3 jip, then distress alize a structible too late. joice of piece of n. "with or. 3:30. or. 3:30. film- e - sisters the Kristin the their vivacious influenced influenced artwork artwork [Colon] [Colon] Shortage of spare parts handicaps Iran terms will be in the are $1.00; and Sunday are $2.00; office, Kan- napolis 864 affirmations al- By United Press International WASHINGTON-Iran has more military equipment and people than Iraq, but it could lose an all-out war because its soldiers lack discipline and hardware is not in top shape, the military analysts said yesterday. Among the points they consider is that the fighting could elicit a new sense Most analysts, however, said they were not ready to predict who would win the conflict or to speculate on how intense it would become. of determination in the Iranian military and could unify the country. A strong sense of national purpose could make up for hardware deficiencies. On the other hand, some analysts Analysis think the spreading conflict could damage Iran severely if it continues that losses in major battles might lead to demoralization, which in turn could open up opportunities for foreign-directed subversion. In addition, there is a danger that separatist tendencies among ethnic groups in Iran could lead to a disintegration of the national government. Iran, which has a population of 39 million compared to just 13 million for Iraq, has received sophisticated military equipment, including high performance aircraft such as F-4S, F-4Ss and F-14S, from the United States in the past. However, after Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's government took American hostages last November, the United Iran suspends discussion on hostages By United Press International A false propaganda report yesterday by Baghdad radio, which said the hostages had been freed, effectively seizing a building that they would be freed, analysts said. The Iranian Parliament yesterday declared an indefinite "freeze" on the issue of America's 52 hostages, dashing recent hopes for their release. Secretary of State Edmund Muskie said in New York that any action on the release of the hostages had been halted and Mr. Muskie said by the fighting between Iran and Iraq. The hostages have been in captivity 325 days. The radio report, monitored in Beirut, said, "the racist Farsi regime has uncontrollably released the 82 hostages on hostages on Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomeini." Tehran radio denied the report as part of an "obvious and desperate campaign of lies." Addressing "those who may be deceived by such cheap lies," it said, "The U.S. hostages are still in the grip of the Iranian revolution pending a decision by the Islamic Majlis (Iran's Parliament)." Later, Tehran radio announced, "The media decided to freeze the issue of the package." Analysts said the Iran-Iraq war could not have come at a worse time for the hostages. The recently-started Majlis debate, though it produced much anti-American rhetoric, was the first public discussion in Iran of a crisis that many Iranians blame for everything from high prices to continuing instability. States imposed an embargo on spare parts to Iran. That raises the question of how many aircraft can fly and for how long. With the issue in the open, moderates hoped the Moslem fundamentalists would realize that public opinion increasingly supports President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr's view that the hostage affair should be resolved quickly. Expertis declined to speculate on the reasons for the false Baghdad report. However, they did say it might be an attempt to make the Iranian regime look pro-American and therefore suspect in the eyes of radicals. They noted another Iraqi charge that Khomeini was a U.S. "stoole." What the report did was dash a very slim chance that Iranian moderates could sell the war situation to funnelling voters. A number of Americans go home, experts said. At the same time, Iraq has been well supplied by the Soviet Union with MIG-21 and MIG-23 fighters. Extremists in Tehran now might see any gesture on the hostage issue as task for a terrorist group. President Carter has declared that the United States will take a neutral stance in the conflict. As a result, most officials are restrained in discussing it. According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, Iran possessed something of an edge over Iraq in hardware as of last October, and that much of it may be in dispair because of a lack of spare parts and maintenance. Iraian claims to have about 447 combat aircraft to 339 for Iraq. Iran possesses 1,985 tanks to 1,900 for Iraq. Although both field hundred of armed infantry fighting vehicles, Iraq is superior in this category. Iran has more than 1,000 artillery pieces; Iraq has more than 800. Pentagon spokesman Thomas Ross said no American military forces had been put on alert, even though the conflict could threaten to halt oil supplies from the Persian Gulf to the West. The United States now has two ships in the Gulf, the LaSalle, flagship of the U.S. Middle East Force, and the frigate Bogey. The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Eisenhower and its ac-commissioning ships are about 1,000 miles away. In addition, 1,800 U.S. Marines are aberd four amphibious ships in the Atlantic. FOR LADIES ONLY!! J. J. Angela's invites you to a "SPECIAL"showing of our new Fall Shoes. Thursday, September 25,1980 from 5 PM til 9 PM $500 OFF any pair of Fall Shoes in our entire stock. Refreshments, too. 2449-D Iowa HOLIDAY PLAZA HZR106 LAZER ROCK-Free Night At The OPERA HOUSE 1st Stop On The Apeman World Tour 80 Draught Card Speciale $1.06 Drinks & Pitchers 8-9 Bill Lynch Lee McBee BAND EXCITING BLUES BY NO COVER Album & Poster Giveaways SEE The Apeman And Other KLZR Stars KLZR Draught Cups Tspirit House Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House Spirit Theater BERNICE TODD YOUR CO. TREAS. PER Todd for Treasurer Bill Halvorsen, Treas. Pol Ad REP. INTRODUCING ★ ORIGINAL SILK SCREEN T-SHIRTS A Different Kind of Store KRAZY KARL'S ★ FREE LOGO T-SHIRT WITH EVERY PURCHASE (opening week only) - PLUS MACRAME HANGING TABLES, PLANT HANGERS, SUSPENDERS, AND GLASS MOBILES OPENING SEPT. 29 OPEN 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 15 east 8 st. Located at BORDER BANDIDO BARBEQUE SANDWICH buy one at the regular price, get the second FREE with this coupon 1528 W. 23rd. 842-8861 offer good through Wednesday, Sept. 24 Mexico On Campus TODAY THE CONTEMPLATIVE PRAYER SESSION at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building will meet at 7:45 a.m. everyone is welcome. THE GRADUATE BUSINESS COUNCIL meets at 9 a.m. in the conference room of the Satellite Union. All business students are invited to attend. The SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS will meet from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in room 323 Malot Hall. THE UNIVERSITY FORUM at the ECM building will feature a lecture by Rose Greaves, professor of history, at 11:45 a.m. She will speak on "The Persian Gulf Revisited." Bring a sack lunch. TONIGHT THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINAR will meet at 7 p.m. at the ECM building to discuss readings on non-violence, Cornell and Dorothy Dav, and Danilo Dolci. The KU SAILING CLUB meets at 7 p.m. in Kansas Union Parlors A and B. The SIERRA CLUB will not meet this evening as announced yesterday in this column. Sierra Club will meet Oct. 8 and Nov. 12. TOMORROW BUY OR SELL The East Asian Languages and Cultures department will sponsor a discussion of the television mini-series, *The Room in the Forum* Room of the Kansas Union. SILVER, GOLD & COINS CANTERBURY HOUSE will hold government services at noon in Dandorah Chapel. Boyds Coin & Antiques Class Rings Antiques-Furniture GERMAN CLUB will meet at 4:30 n.m in room 4065 Wescoe Hall. SCOREMBe will meet at 6 p.m. in 2007 Learned Hall. A RAPE PREVENTION AND LEGAL RIGHTS SEMINAR sponsored by Phi Delta Sigma Social Service Fraternity and the KU Police Department will be from 7 to 9 p.m. in Lewis Hall. Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Contemporary issues of sex as pleasure, and religion and idealism will be discussed during the LIFE ISSUE NETWORK ALITY at 7 p.m. in the ECM building. Associated Press correspondent John Roderick will speak on "CHINA at the room in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. Roderick is AP's chief CX writer. footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (arrears from Gravelawn Bldg.) (across from Greenbriar's Deli) ViN Meisner- Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town we have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza KENWOOD IS COMING! and Kenwood now has one of the finest lines of CAR STEREO! because River City Radio has a reputation for handling only quality merchandise, it has been chosen to carry the KENWOOD line. Coming Oct. 1st! Q RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd Phone: 913-842-4587 "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" HOURS: MON-FRI 10 am - 9 pm SAT 10 am - 5 pm UNITED INFORMATION THE HIDING PLACE TULLE MARRIAGE AIR SPORTS COURSE JANET TAYLOR Free Admission 7 pm Union Jaykawk Room Thurs. Sept. 25 Sat. Sept. 27 7 pm Union Jayhawk Room The Scripture Center of Southern Indiana A story of Jesus sung and told by Johnny Cash THE GOSPEL ROAD Free Admission Fri. Sept. 26 the CROSS and the SWITCHBLade They thought they were tough until the stranger faced them with a look. NEW JERSEY, MICHIGAN 101-1539 Free Admission 7 pm Union Gaykawk Room Mon. Sept. 29 Cult Explosion exposed by those who have escaped Free Admission 7 pm Union Gayhawk Room Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Opinion A Anderson intellectualism alienates everyday voters WEBSTERS BOLTON Whether putting the New Yorker aside, washing a last bite of spinach quiche down with a bit of vin blanc or capping a textbook highlight pen, John Anderson's supporters prepared to watch the presidential debate Sunday night. The words of the silver-haired Illinois congressman, intellectualism's last hope, surely brought approving nods from these fans of the Anderson ethic. They weren't the people Anderson needed to reach, however. The debate was to be an opportunity for the state to send a message to all Americans, not just the wealthy. No, not just the rich. Anderson's showing in the debate may bring him up slightly in the polls, and he may gain some Carter voters disenchanted with the president's desirable avoidance of the debate. But Anderson failed miserably in his goal of reaching Mr. Average American. As he has throughout the campaign, Reagan capitalized on a dramatic, sincere delivery marked by the right sorts of pauses and emphases. The undeclined voters and Reagan's supporters out in blue-collar land wanted to know whether Anderson put on his white socks one foot at a time. To them, Anderson must have appeared an icy elitist whose vocabulary often was far abhorred by the average citizen, adapted to a changing world must have sounded unappealing next to Reagan's optimistic insistence that only the suffocating presence of government, not Americans themselves, must change. Predictably then, Reagan, actor and aecdotal maker extraordinaire, excelled in theatre. Anderson, in contrast, carne off as strident and quite a bit more nervous than his sound- John Kennedy proved in his 1960 debates with a sweating, ashen Richard Nixon that the value of a televised debate for a candidate rests on his ability to project well before a camera. Ragan related the nation's problems in countryside to what he said the man in the street and used simple statistics. SCOTT FAUST Anderson seemed to be speaking to a Congressional subcommittee, reeling off reams of figures which were difficult to absorb through the split-second medium of obeying. JONATHAN BURTON Both Reagan and Anderson repeated the stands they had taken throughout the campaign, and both were able to make fairly decent rebuttals when not launching into bits reagan, for example, referred to Anderson as "John," and looked at the camera when speaking. Sounding overly formal, Anderson called Reagan "my opponent" in a way that he did not actually questions directly at the questioner. His eyes only occasionally glanced into the camera. Anderson repeatedly used words that, while showing off his excellent vocabulary, did little to bring home his message to the TV audience. He referred to "monetarization" of a budget deficit, the "infrastructure" of U.S. cities, the need for "retrofitting" homes for better energy efficiency and said that the United States used more energy than the "Federal Republic of Germany" by a "bactor of two"—instead of saying "twice as much." Reagan, on the other hand, put his arguments in simple terms and used the "If you've got a kid that's extravagant, you can lecture him all you want to about his extravagance." Reagan said, defending his tax cut proposal, "or you can cut his allowance and achieve the same end much quicker." Perhaps the stylistic difference between the two came across most clearly in their closing lines. metaphor of the everyday man to make his points. Reagan had a tremor of emotion in his voice when he said of abortion that there was "one individual not being considered at all—that's the one being aborted" and that he sensed "the hunger in America for a spiritual revival." He spoke with the same emotion at the debate's close, when he said: "Together, we can meet our destiny, and that destiny (is) to build a land here that will be for all mankind a shining city on a hill. I think we ought to get at it." Anderson, the stern realist, refused any rosy optimism in his closing remarks. Quoting historian Henry Steele Commanger, he noted the continued existence of atomic weapons and the continued insistence on "anachronistic" nationalism as a solution to global problems. Anderson is, of course, correct in denying the existence of any quick fix. His habit of saying the things people would rather not hear is brave, but this instinct for bravery may end in his martyred in a paltry November 4 showing. He should continue to say what he believes, for it needs to be said. But from now until November, he should work within the world of realpolitik. He must coach his tough answers to tough problems in more appealing ways and adapted to the cars of American voters. The oval office is a much safer place than the campaign trail for verbal complexity. Preachers awaken even reluctant minds for flow of ideas "The morning, which is the most memorable season of the say, is the awakening hour." [Hawkley] Autumn, like the morning to day, is the awakening hour of the school year. It is the eyepener after the long summer slumber, a kind of Bloody Mary of the mind. In the greater scheme of things, these college years are the mornings of our lives. Indeed, what an awakening it is to study Plato, plate tectonics, the finite verb or the Italian Renaissance for the first time. What an awakening it is to hear theories bombasted that once seemed infallible, or to hear those proven true that once seemed absurd. How appropriate, then, it is for "professors" to wander the university grounds this fall, professing their ideas. Cindy and Jedi, it seems, came to the right place. Daily the evangelists ranted and raged, pounding their "good book", in the hopes of awakening the curious minds encircling them. It was often the case that drew the crowds, not sympathy for the word. Many called it a circus, the daily preaching on the ground. It was. There were burning exchanges between different cultures. crowd. Many called it a farce, a capitalist ploy to wealthy innocents into God's collection of culture. But it really was the free exchange of ideas, ideas that many of us do not find true, but ideas nonetheless. People were thinking. It really doesn't matter what the students hanging around for hours were thinking about the ideas, it simply is significant that they were thinking. Passers-by stopped to listen and maybe they missed a class, maybe even two. So what? Their thoughts probably were more awake out on the lawn than they would have been in the classroom, mindlessly scribbling notes from a rambling lecture. Ideas are meant to be heard and disseminated freely, on the lawn, in the lecture hall, at the bar, over dinner, wherever. They are meant to be challenged, to be pondered. Every person bears thoughts and theories; every person has the right to have these thoughts and theories heard. Perhaps Jed and Cindy were abrasive in proclaiming their philosophies, condemning as they did the "heather" student and his/her sex, drugs and rock in roll. This condomination seems contrary to the "Christian" ethics that the evangelists professed. But mode aside, the Their morals don't jive with ours, but at least they induced us to do some thinking, if only to prove why our own are "right". Fortunately, no preachers on the green were welcome relief from the otherwise mundane middays. AMY HOLLOWELL one was forcing us to listen to the ragings, we chose to stand there hour after hour. And fortunately, no one was attempting to stifle the daily sermons, either. rmus was the purest freedom of speech, the truest proclamation of ideas, that this "University" has seen for quite some time. If the voices of the many can't be heard by the many at an institution of the many, where can they be heard? At a time when there is a wide issue of considerable concern at this University, the unhampered preachings were encouraging. tators. Hour after hour, the circles around the evangelists grew. Many of us laughed, but the fact remains that the preachers held a crowd. What if the "professors" embodyed the people? How did they increase the size of the crowd they sustained out on the lawn? We would have many starving professors. Still more encouraging was the energy generated by the sermons. Maybe it was a circus atmosphere, but people were stirred by the mere presence of speakers on the green. Content didn't matter, their presence was enough to awaken sleeping minds. Encouraging also was the number of spec- Musicians, clowns, a fellow posing as the devil, everyone got into the act. Things happened. As Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote, "Not he is great minister matter, but he who can alter my state of mind." Now, as the morning season dwindles, the campus is quiet once again. If we are lucky, other "philosopers" will wander onto the green and we will hear more thoughts and theories, continuing to awaken to new insights. This would be good, this would be really good. We would be thinking, really thinking, and our days would be perpetual mornings. Letters to the Editor Carter qualities not 'presidential' To the editor: Scott Faust's column on the horrors of 'a Ronald Reagan presidency started me thinking about the qualities needed in a president, qualities that are evident in President Jimmy Carter.' First of all, this country needs a president who can carry his own suitbag. America also needs someone who wears a cardigan sweater well, this is clearly one of the important requisites of the job. Skill in bringing up topics for dinner must be demonstrated, and more manageable diaries at a State dinner in Mexico show that he is eminently well-qualified in this area. Being a good judge of character is another quality that must not be forgotten. It is so comforting to know that people like Hampton Jordan are helping the President make crucial decisions and even more comforting to know that Jimmy's brother Billy, whom he loves very deeply, is carrying on this country's relations with Libya. The team was necessary too, and Carter plainly demonstrated this ability in announcing a U.S. boycott of the Olympic Games. Thought the Games were not called off, the Russians were undoubtedly quaking in their boots. Yes, all in all, President Carter is clearly the man for the job. Not only is he an expert on diarrhea, but he also has a terrific smile. A man who perceives foreign problems in their proper light definitely is an asset. President Carter certainly gained the respect of the 52 Americans in Iran when he said that the hostage situation was not going to be any more can't get too concerned about 52 Americans being held hostage in Iran, can we? Doug Cunningham Pinestone. Minn.. freshman Stadium beer sales To the editor: It is my understanding that the athletic program and associated activities at the University of Colorado are in a state of shamles. Not too long ago, there were those who thought that the University should be a disgrace to the Big Eight Conference and should be removed and replaced by another school. If the University of Kansas needs a model to emulate, why not pick the University of Oklahoma, Nebraska or Missouri? What are the schools selling or not selling beer at athletic events? I do not drink alcoholic beverages nor do I parae to chide those who do. Consequently, the there act of selling or not selling beer in Memorial Stadium will cause me no dismay. However, I strongly feel that the University of Kansas will be making a mistake if its starts making decisions using the University of Colorado's actions as precedent. Roland A. Schank Lawrence law student The University Daily KANSAN (USPS) 650-640) Published at the University of Kansas (August 19, 2008) The U.S. Postal Service will pay the students early every Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 6645 in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year up- ward in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $3 a year paid through the student payment form. Postmaster: Send chances of admission to the University of Kansas as soon as possible. University of Kansas *Postmaster:* Send changes of address to the University *Postmaster:* Int Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansas. KS 80549 Editor Business Manager Baker Elaun Strahler Manager Carol Beder Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Jadie Woodburn Campus Editor Jeff Sparrow Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Don Munday Sports Editor Cindy Whatchone Associate Sports Editor Gore Nine Associate Kerry Muhlman Makeup Editors Ellen Iwambo, Bob Schaud. Retail Sales Manager Kevin Kovacki National Sales Manager Nancy Clauson Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Campus Sales Manager Tracy Cooper Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wenderton Staff Artist Judy Selter Photographer Phil Shepherd Photo Den Assistant Leslie Leagley Tearsheets Manager Brandon Sparrow Kansas Advisor Chuck Churows Harder work, more self confidence cannot help all blacks E. Bernard Franklin, chairman of the Board of Regents, delivered a message to black KU students several days ago. He told them that if one could take responsibility for themselves no one could keep them from succeeding. It was a clear, straight-forward message that probably made sense to most of the students who attended the Black Awareness Seminar/Symposium. Franklin's advice obviously worked for him as he was the first black to be elected student body president at Kansas State University and now works for the Commerce Bank in Kansas City, Mo. However, I could not help but wonder how applicable Franklin's advice would be for the blacks whom I went to school with in Wichita. They did not come to Lawrence, because they were shut out of the educational system and they were deprived to it to KU to work hard and better themselves. I had no awareness of the problems blacks faced in education until I entered the seventh grade. It was then that the federal government undertook that blacks equality in education through busing. In Wichita that meant that blacks were bussed from their local junior high school to the one I attended, which was white, lower-middle-class and racist. I gained my first lesson in interacial education during the first few days of school when I saw three white students beating a black student. Later, while walking down the hall, I looked up just in time to dodge a black fist aimed squarely at my head. BRETT CONLEY M. After three tense years in junior high, we all moved on to the same high school. Although it did not have the prison atmosphere or riots of the junior high, it became obvious that nothing had changed. The blacks knew they were trying to survive in a white school, and because the government told them they had to be there there was little they could do. *a* was a classic example of what an eminent black writer, James Baldwin, meant when he wrote that "the educational system of this country is, in short, designed to destroy the black child . . by stoning him in the ghetto or by driving him mad in the isolation of Harvard." The blacks in my high school made it through the three years, got their degrees and passed from my sight. One came to KU with me. Few of them went on to graduate. A handful went to Wichita State University. Most, I think, were tired of being kept from succeeding by a white-dominated educational system and gave up the battle. No matter how hard they worked to try to better themselves they made little progress. Instead they became angry at the educational system that, although it was their only way out, remained unopen to them because they were black. Baldwin wrote that it "it is an extraordinary achievement to be trapped in the dungeon of color and to dare to shake down its walls and to step out of it, leaving the jailhouse keeper in the Franklin's advice to KU black students is to learn, to better themselves and to work hard. That is good advice, because they have succeeded in making it to college. What Franklin must not forget is that he will find themselves in Baldwin's dungeon and whose problems are too complex and deeply rooted to be solved by merely working harder and suffering more. University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Page 5 eshman lo Irate we here emotional ever I saw will making lorado's athletic at the shamose who colorado sense and another a model rarity of what are beer at student if Kansas durs day holidays. as 60454 a 122 year year out semester, University 7 University Kansas. otto or by arrived." it through and passed in me. Few. ful went to Manager Manager Hughes Lewin Lewin off Jeffersen off Jeffersen Munday, Munday, Meyer Myers Meyer Myers Attlethwaite Attlethwaite ob Schaad, ob Schaad, Koster Koster ey Charles ey Charles Race Coonty Race Coonty Judy Seier Judy Seier an Winkler an Winkler Shafer Shafer Clock Musket Clock Musket Work Shoots kept from educational matter how themselves y became although it open to them From page 1 traordinary dungeon of walls and toeeper in the Appeals students is to work hard. have succed at Franklin majority of Baldwin poor company by merely affairs at WSU, said that the Court of Student Academic Appeals, which deals with grade appeals, was an impartial committee convened in a hearing for both the teacher and the student. Rhathan said the appeals court was composed of three tenured faculty members and two students, each associated with a different department of the university. A student with a complaint could write an appeal to his office, Rhaitan said, and he would forward the appeal to the chairman and dean of the appropriate department. THE CHAIRMAN AND dean could then decide whether an appeal should be given or denied, and they have the option of not commenting on the case. If a hearing is held, it is a general hearing the court hears both sides of the grade conflict. Hridigan said the court did not deal with the specifics of whether a paper deserved an "A" or an "F" but whether the instructor changed his test score, and then his evaluation of them without informing them. Because actual specifics of grading were not discussed, he said, it was justifiable for an engineering instructor, for example, to pass on grades given by an English instructor. Balfour said the same criteria would apply at KU under his proposal. The committee or court would be a subcommittee of the SenEx, he said. A PROPOSAL THAT would redefine and streamline the grievance procedures at the University allows for an appeals committee, he said. The proposal, which would restructure the grievance procedures of the University Code, Rules and Regulations, was written this summer by a SenEx-appointed task force. It would change the composition of sever governing boards and simply re-name others. Balfour said that before there was a formulated method for appraising grades, few teachers were able to do it. Since then, he said, students have begun thinking about their rights, which has resulted in legislation. He said he handled about 30 grade appeal cases, the percent of which were decided in favor of the student. At WSU, Rhagitan said, about 15 to 20 grade appeals went to the appeal court with 20 percent of cases. (AP) However, an instructor changing a final date and a student who thinks he deserves a better grade will not be happy. THE GROUNDS FOR appeal at KU are primarily the same as at WSU, Balfour said. 'Frequently, it comes down to. 'He doesn't like me.' That's very hard to prove, 'Balfour said. It is particularly hard to prove that the supposed ill-ill-waived a student's grade, he said. Balfour said the hardest appeal cases he had to decide were those where a student claimed a drop slip was lost and received an "F" for a final grade as a result. He said it was difficult to know whether the student had not turned in the slip or whether it was actually a slip. MOST STUDENTS generally lost in those cases, he said, but one student had won. Balfour said he thought the majority of the students disappointed with their grades either realized they deserved the grade or just accepted it. Students who had something important to lose, such as scholarships, were most persistent in the appeal, he said. Pizza of pizzas in Lawrence. Gone are the days of the ballpark of drive-in and pizza joints. From page 1 Depending on the establishment, a customer can choose from pizzas that are thick, thin, chewy, crispy, taco-flavored, or even pineapple-topped. The favorite topping among pizza eaters in Lawrence, the managers said, is canadian bacon, followed closely by pepperoni, sausage or mushroom. At Godfather's, the $7.85 large "combo", which has five different toppings, ranks highest among customers. Another popular pizza speciality is "the works" at Ken's Pizza, 2626 Sports From page 1 "It is unfortunate, because without travel you just can't get good competition," Collinson said. MARIAN WASHINGTON, women's basketball coach, said it would be a challenge to get by on the travel budget. She hopes the problem will be minor. "There is no question that we will have to make cutbacks, but I'm not sure where," she said. "It may be we have to travel more at night. I don't know." If the basketball team does need extra funding or championship play next spring, it is uncertain. "It could not come from the existing funding," Collins said. "No one sport can get more money than running." Athletic Director Bob Marcum said he was not sure what would be done if the basketball team had lost to Tigers. "Before, some of the money has been from the University and KUAC has put some in," he said. "We have to make sure that we can make it work." Iowa St., which has eight toppings, and costs $4 for a large. Pyramid's "Kint Tuf" boasts 14 stems of upright pine. Julie's Restaurant, 3216 Iowa SL, offers a 32-inch diameter pizza, which feeds from 12 to 16 people. Prices are $45.99. PIZZA HUT'S Sicilian Pan Pizza, a deep-dish pizza introduced last spring, has caught on with pizza eaters, said Dave Scott, assistant manager of the Pizza Hut at 1606 W. 23rd St. Can these spicy, flavorful pizzas possibly be good for you? Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, said, "Nothing is 100 percent good or 100 percent bad. Pizza does provide food from the basic four food groups—bread and cereal, dairy, meat, although it is pretty weak in the fruit and vegetable group." She suggested that those concerned about eating a balanced meal accompany the pizza CROSS WARNED, however, that just one piece of pizza would not meet basic nutritive requirements, and that too many pieces of pizza can be fattening. For example, two slices of Pizza Hut's large slices are super cheese pizza contain about 50 calories. As for the merits of pizza, Cross said, "It is a source of energy for kids who need energy." "You can get quite a bit of mileage out of one pizza." RICK'S BIKE SHOP raleigh bikes ph. 841-6642 1033 VERMONT BAD SHOE STYLE INTRAMURAL TENNIS (doubles) The deadline for entering intramural tennis is Wednesday, Sept. 24 at 5:00 p.m. in 208 Robinson Center Recreation Services 864-3546 Stereo sound you jog around Introducing the 1 Bone Fone Reg $89 Save $10 on this unique sound system! The Bone Fone offers convenience and great stereo sound at a reasonable price! You'll never be without music again! Q RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd HOURS: Phone: 913-842-4587 "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" --- OURS: MON-FRI 10 am - 9 pm SAT 10 am - 5 pm SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 BOBBY BELL'S BAR·B·QUE COUPON SPECIAL! BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING *2.49...GET FRFF BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAR-B-GUE BEER AND GRATED SAUCE PRIED CHOPPED BARB-OLI GLUE BEER AND GRAFTED SAMPLED IN BREADS FOODS FRIED WITH GRANULATED BEEF FRESH 2214 YALE ST. ILLINOIS, OWNER STATE BANK Expires 9/30/80 2214 YALE ST. VALUABLE COUPON 842-6121 HUGO BOSCA·YVES ST LAURENT BRITCHES CORNER LAWRENCE - CALVIN KLEIN·JOHN HENRY·MERONA SPORT· Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Graduate to a higher challenge. Texas Instruments. ALEXIS TAYLOR For years you've been proving to your professors just how good you are. Now it's time to prove it to yourself. With a higher challenge. With Texas Instruments. Prove yourself where innovation's the rule, not the exception. As a matter of corporate policy, TI has built-in budgets for new, innovative ideas. If you have a revolutionary concept that deserves to be put to the test, the money's there. That's just part of the TI challenge. Prove yourself in the world's "hot" technologies. No technology is hotter, or more fantastic, tham microelectronics. And no company is hotter in it than TI. Example: The TI 59 handheld calculator has more than twice the primary memory capacity of the three-ton computers of the 1950s. And look at these credentials. TI is: - The world's leading supplier of semiconductors - The patent holder for the single-chip microcomputer and the handheld electronic calculator. - The designer and producer of the most complex MOS chip and the most popular microcomputer. - The inventor of solid-state voice synthesis. - The largest producer of microelectronic memory products. - The world leader in Very Large Scale Integration. - The primary supplier of airborne radars to the U.S. defense program. - The leading developer and producer of infrared and laser systems. - The world's foremost geophysical survey company. Prove to yourself where you have the freedom to grow. Because TI is like many companies in one, you have the opportunity to move laterally from one specialty to another as GRADUATE DEGREES well as move up. Without changing jobs. ALEXANDRA BLAKE TI's advanced It's advanced system for lateral career mobility lets you move up faster. Because the freedom to move sideways is the best way to compare technologies and define career goals early on. The frequently published TI Job Opportunity Bulletin lists openings at all TI facilities and gives TI people first crack at them. Prove yourself where it counts. TI has been acclaimed as one of America's best-managed companies because we've stayed young and vital while growing big. One major reason for our high energy is our move-up environment. New people don't get buried at the bottom of a peeling order, because there isn't one. So if you get a good idea your first week on the job, it gets heard. And you get rewarded. 1978 At TI, you get every chance to show what you can do. And prove what you deserve. Prove yourself in an international company. TI has hometowns in 19 countries on six continents. You'll find manufacturing in Singapore. Dallas, Tokyo. Nice. Buenos Aires. And many other cities around the globe. TI has hometowns to match your lifestyle. No matter where you call home From New England to Texas to California. Texas Instruments is interested in graduates from the following specialties: - Electronics Engineering - Electrical Engineering - Electrical Engineering - Mechanical Engineering - Computer Science (Software/Hardware) - Industrial Engineering - Materials Science - Solid-State Physics - Engineering Physics - Metallurgy - Engineering Science - Metallurgical Engineering - Chemical Engineering - Chemistry - Mathematics - Plastics Engineering - Manufacturing Engineering Technology - Geology/Geophysics TI Finance and Account- Campus Interviews TI Consumer Products Group. From calculators and watches to home computers, electronic learning aids and more. 11 Finance and Accounting. For group, division, corporate staff or multinational. *TI Digital Systems *11 Digital Systems Group. A leader in getting the computer closer to the problem through distributed logic and memory. Oct. 9-10 TI Facilities Planning and Engineering and Engineering. Responsible for facilities necessary for manufacturing and testing TI products. *TI Equipment Group. Electro-Optics, Radar and Digital Systems, Missile and Ordnance. Oct. 8-9 TI Information Systems and Services. State-of-the art computer systems and services to TI's worldwide operation. TI Materials and Electrical Products Group. A world leader in engineered materials systems and home appliance and industrial controls. Geophysical Service Inc. A world leader in the search for oil. *TI Semiconductor Group. Semiconductor components, materials and technology. Oct. 8-9 TI Corporate Research, Development and Engineering. Pioneer ing the technologies required by present and future business opportunities. *Only these groups will be interviewing on campus. If you are unable to attend these interviews at this time, or if you wish to apply with another group, send data sheet to: George Berryman Texas Instruments, Corporate Staffing P.O. Box 25474, M.S. 67, Dept. CG Dallas, TX 75265 Fifty Years of Innovation TEXAS TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INCORPORATED An equal opportunity employer M/F Copyright©1980, Texas Instruments Incorporated University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Page 7 'Birth scene' changes with new options By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter The typical "birth scene" has been rerun countless times in television comedies. Wife goes into labor, husband becomes hysterical and leaves the room. Wife and husband taxi and gives birth as husband pieces nervously around waiting room. Such a scenario, however, is neither realistic nor necessary today, according to area parents who met last week. There are alternatives to traditional birth hospital. LAWRENCE COUPLES who have used birthing rooms, non-hospital birthing centers and home-birth techniques related their experiences at the third annual Public Birth Forum held in the Lawrence Public Library. The forum was planned by the Lawrence Association of Parents and Professionals for Safe Alternatives in Childbirth. The organization has been operating in Lawrence for a little longer than three years. After being "singularly unimpressed" with the normal delivery rooms at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and other hospitals, Jane Betty, 1708 died in a birthing room. to have her baby in a birthing room. Bettie said she had hoped to use the facilities at LMH, where a birthing room is located. However, the hospital voted last June to postpone a decision on the proposed birthing room for six months. The department of obstetrics and gynecology submitted the proposal and will report to the hospital's board of trustees in December. Betty then arranged to have her baby the birthing room at St. Francis Hospital. "Hospital delivery rooms are, well, just operating rooms," she said. "The they're cold, brightly lit and have no windows or curtains." She said much warmer and more comfortable. JEANIE MKEWAN and Michael Staver, 1803 Valley Lane, rejected the idea of hospital birth and opted for the Holistic Birth and Growth Center in Topeka. Their son, Nicholas, was born last May. The birthing center, run by two to four hospital birthing facility in Kansas. Its two birthing rooms are "honey," much like bedrooms, she said. Couples can bring tapes and listen to any kind of music they want during the delivery. Two nurses and two aides, with whom the mother has worked throughout her pregnancy, are present during labor and birth, McKewan said. The couple can stay at the center as long as 24 hours after the birth. The nurses visit the new mother in her home for the next two days to make sure that everything is going well. THE CENTER has set up an emergency service with a nearby hospital to handle any problems during birth, and all couples who use the center must have a pediatrician in attendance to be available for consultation. McKewan said. Staver said that the husband was involved in all aspects of a delivery at his home. McKewan said she would like to have her next child at home but would not trust an uncertified midwife to deliver her baby. Her next choice would be to return to the birthing center, she said. Cathy and Scott Dryden. 2613 Belle home birth 11 months ago. "We wanted to take full responsibility for the birth ourselves, and we thought it would be easier to do that at home," Cathy said. Home birth is still a controversial subject, and most Lawrence doctors refuse prenatal care to couples planning home births, he said. Dryden said a couple must be comfortable with its decision to try a home birth and must have faith in birth as a natural biological process. "You have to learn to follow the birth," he said. "The hospital is there. If you have a medical problem, you'd be a fool not to use it." The Drydens said they attended a prepared childbirth class and extensively studied nutrition and the birth process before their home delivery. On the Record One count of aggravated burglary and two counts of aggravated assault were filed yesterday in Douglas County District Court against Ronald. A. of Northwood St., in connection with an incident early Monday morning. Payne was being held yesterday afternoon in Douglas County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bond. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for Oct. 2. According to police, Payne allegedly entered a house in the 1600 block of Northwood and threatened a 22-year-old woman with a gun. The suspect pointed his gun at one of the roommates, who shot both other rooms with another nearby room. The woman screamed, waking her two roommates, police said. The man, Roger E. Pitt, was being bougainvillea Douglas County Jail in lieu of $35,000 bail. AN OCT. 1 hearing date has been set for a 56-year-old DeSoto man charged with two counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child and with two counts of enticing a child to a secluded place. Pitts was arrested by Lawrence police Saturday night for allegedly mating minors—yew-yew girls in Edgewood Park earlier Saturday evening. Freshmen begin selecting class officers KU freshmen today began casting votes to elect their class officers. roils will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow at the west end of the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall, the Information Booth on Jayhawk Boulevard, the Kansas Union lobby and the Satellite Union. Poll also will be set up from 5 to 9 tonight in Gertrude S. Pearson, Joseph R. Pearson and Oliver hills, as well as in Pearson Scholarship Hall. Poll will be open from 5 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Delta Chi and Sigma Chi fraternities and at Naismith and Corbin halls. the classics penny and tassel by Bass royal college shop eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255 eight thirty seven massachusetts monday-saturday 10-6 Pentel Precision Writing Instruments R-68 69c Mfg. List 79c P203, 205 207, 209 $3.25 Mfg. List $3.95 Two locations to serve you Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop,Satellite Union BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICES * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the ONLY bookstore to share its profits with KU students. VOTER REGISTRATION September 22-25 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Registration sponsored by A.S.K. and BALSA In front of Wescoe and in the Student Senate Office, B105, Kansas Union This advertisement funded in part by Student Activity Fee Thank You Student Season Ticket Holders For Supporting Your Jayhawks In 1980! KU Gives You Four Super Remaining Home Games! Coach Don Fambrough and the 1980 Football Squad express their grateful appreciation TO YOU for your vital support Sept. 27 Louisville Oct. 11 Nebraska Oct. 18 Iowa State Nov. 8 Oklahoma IT'S THE SHORT BURST FOR SIX AND THE LONG, LONG PASS. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! YOU ARE WANTED IN MEMORIAL STADIUM: Student Season Tickets are still available THIS WEEK at the following: SUA—Kansas Union SUA—Kansas Union Satellite Union KU SUA—KU Med Center Athletic Ticket Office-Allen Field House --- Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 us Your money in a uSave Account is like a NOW Account . . . NOW and that's Smart Money in Lawrence, the smart money goes to the University. . . uS University State Bank 9th and Iowa 26th and Iowa Member FDIC STOP RAPE! Protect Yourself Attend the Rape Prevention & Legal Rights Seminar Presented by: KU Police Dept. Thurs., Sept. 25th 7:00 p.m. in the Lewis Hall cafeteria Sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. Student draft protesters appeal trespassing conviction MOMENTUM: THE COALITION WITH MOVEMENT! Pres. Mike Wagner V.Pres. Roger Day Sec. Suzy Stevenson Treas. Susan Hansen Vote Freshman Class Officers '80-81 Two KU students convicted of criminal trespassing Sept. 11 in Lawrence Municipal Court have filed an appeal with the Municipal Kithinan Lawrence attorney representing the two, said yesterday. Paid for by Momentum Coalition The two, Iliyah Matatum, Overland Park sophomore and junior, were MIDNITE DELITE Fri, & Sat, at Midnite THE HOTTEST UNCUT GAME IN TOWN BALL GAME MUST BE 18 OR OLDER DOWNLOAD 05432368 Varsity charged after they distributed antidraft leaflets at Lawrence High School April 16 with other members of the Kansas Anti-Draft Organization. Max Rife, division principal at the school, said that the protesters refused to leave school grounds after being told to do so by the principals. Matamua and Bradley maintained that they were given permission to distribute the leaflets on school grounds by Brad Tate, School principal, when it met with another anti-draft member a short time before the incident. Klinknett, American Civil Liberties Association said he was eagerly awaiting the trial. "These will be brand new trials," Klinkett said. "We will take a fresh look at all the evidence and go from there." Municipal Court decisions may be appealed directly to District Court for rehearing. The protesters faced a maximum sentence of a $100 fee, 90 days in jail or both. However, Municipal Judge George Catt suspended the sentences on the condition they not violate the law for six months. RUSTY'S IGA ROLLEABALL IS COMING! 7Up - Diet 7Up Royal Crown - Diet Rite 18 ounce returnable 8 pack $1.15 plus deposit Rusty's Westridge Cheese Shop Aged Wisconsin Cheddar Cut from a Mammoth 500 lb. Cheese $2.19 lb. reg. $2.99 lb. Available at Rusty's Westridge Only 7Up - Diet 7Up Royal Crown - Diet Rite 16 ounce returnable 8 pack $1.15 plus deposit Rusty Dell Fried Chicken Fresh cut-up complete chicken Available during dell hours $2.99 Available at all 4 Rusty's Rusty's Westridge Cheese Shop Aged Wisconsin Cheddar Cut from a Mammoth 500 lb. Cheese $2.19 lb. reg. $2.99 lb. Available at Rusty's Westridge Only Rusty's Westridge Dell Special Breakfast Scrambled eggs, sausage or bacon hash browns, biscuit, gravy, coffee Served 7 AM to 10 AM 99¢ reg. $1.49 Available at Rusty's Westridge Only Ad Prices Good through 9-29 Rusty Dell Fried Chicken Fresh cut-up complete chicken Available during dell hours $2.99 Available at all 4 Rusty's Rusty's Westridge Dell Special Professionals + $ = energy There's only one equation that will solve the nation's energy crisis . . . and that's to combine talented and concerned people, provide capital to get the job done and then se demanding but realistic goals That's what we're trying to do at Cities Service, a diversified natural resources company. Our professional requirements include most disciplines applied from discovery to market, computing to research. We have opportunities, not only in this country but abroad. If this sounds like your kind of challenge, learn more by making an appointment with our college representative through your placement office d and pital to et oals o do We will interview on your campus... October 7,8,9,14 & 15 or write: College Relations Manager Cities Service Company Box 300 Tulsa, OK. 74102 Cities Service Company an equal opportunity employer اول ائمار اهل آل عباس بابرہی. اول ائمار اهل آل عباس بابرہی. اول ائمار اهل آل عباس بابرہی. اول ائمار اهل آل عباس بابرہی. امام صالح 1451-1775 COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey and The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 P6 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 The Big Red One 7:30 & 9:35 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 special edition Close Encounters 7.15 & 9.25 2 Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3 Fame 7:20 & 9:20 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 1 Being There 7:20 & 9:30 2 Gone with the wind 7:30 only Tampon-borne illness deadly if not treated By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter It was a critical situation for a Prairie Village senior when she arrived last March at Watkins Hospital with symptoms that later would be identified as toxic shock syndrome. Barnes was dehydrated and feverish, and her blood pressure had dropped dangerously low, she said. Laura Baresm was not aware then, she said, that her symptoms could have been caused by toxic shock, a reaction to the drug ampiracetam aggrigated by the tampons she used. She almost died in the ambulance that rushed her from Watkins to the University of Kansas Medical Center. She said the doctors thought that she would die. A 15-year-old girl who was admitted the night before had died of similar symptoms. Doctors at the Med Center thought she had spinal meningitis. She was moved to intensive care, started on antibiotics, 5,000 milligrams of antibiotics a day. Two weeks later, however, Barnes was able to go home. "I'm glad people are becoming aware of the disease," she said. BEFORE 1975, the occurrence of toxic shock was so inifrequent that in many cases the symptoms were not associated with the disease, said Don Wilcox, director of the state Bureau of Epidemiology. Reported cases of the disease have increased significantly since 1975, according to the Center. Three out of 100,000 women will fall victim to the disease. Seven out of 100 victims will die. Toxic shock is a disease that most frequently afflicts tampon users. It strikes rapidly. Its symptoms are fever, vomiting, diarrhea and a sudden drop in blood pressure, which often results in shock, said Raymond A. Schwegler, a physician at Watkins. Staphylococcus aureus, a bacteria, causes the disease. Wilcox said that the bacteria are found in the nasal cavity and attested to the tampon by the fingers. Wilcox said that the disease frequently appeared to occur in women who have left tampons in too long. TOXIC SHOCK usually occurs, Schwegler said, toward the end of the menstrual period and after continuous use of tammons. In response to the Center's findings, Proctor and Gamble, the maker of Rely tampons, pulled the tampon off the market this week and has offered full refunds for the product. Severely percent of toxic shock victims used Rely tampons, while 30 percent used other brands of tampon. This was due to the Center for Disease Control. THE HIGHER INCIDENCE OF Rely tampon use in toxic shock cases probably is because of the way the tampon is constructed, Wilcox to be done to determine how the tampon may contribute to toxic shock. The disease has a recurrence rate of 40 percent, Schwegler said. Research has not shown why those who have had the disease contract it again. THE UNTRADITIONAL TRADITION VOTE "Striving to enhance the KU traditions" VOTE For Freshman Class Officers Sept 24-25 Paid for by the Untraditional Tradition. 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133501 STATION 133601 STATION 133701 STATION 133801 STATION 13390 Save $1000 on this Introductory Offer! 10 Mitsubishi Car Stereo sale price $139^95 Take advantage of this new addition to River City radio's car stereo line. The Mitsubishi RX-732 MEMS features a dockable card, rider and balance locks, a backlighted vertical monochrome installation - plus lots more. MITSUBISHI CAR AUDIO SOUND US OUT RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd Phone: 913-842-4587 "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" HOURS: MON-FRI 10 am - 9 pm SAT 10 am - 5 pm FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS September 24, 25, 1980 Vote Today (8:30-4:30) - Wescoe 4th Floor West End - Jayhawk Blvd. Information Booth - Satellite Union-Second Level - Kansas Union-Fourth Level, Lobby Vote Tonight (5:00-9:00) - Joseph R. Pearson Hall - G.S.P. - Oliver Hall - Pearson Scholarship Hall Paid for by Activity Fee University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Page 9 City 32 EM viance ontal RI pm pm Commission approves hiking trail along river By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter Before receiving the easement at the commission meeting, commissioners walked the one-mile trail with Brier. The Lawrence City Commission accepted last night an easement granted by Kansas Secretary of State Jack Brier for a hiking trail along the Kansas River between Riverfront and Constant parks. Last night, the commission also asked Lawrence's neighborhood associations to reward their bylaws to eliminate what the commission called discriminatory membership fees. A DOWNTOWN BUSINESSMAN complained two weeks ago that he had been asked for a $20 associate fee for the Lawrence lawrence Improvement Association. Regular ELIA memberships are $1 for residents and property owners in the new neighborhood, but the group had been soliciting downtown businessmen for $20 non-voting associate memberships. Dick Dunhaupt, ELIA president, said the bylaws were written so businesses could make donations and show support for the group. The commission also decided to try to defer the demolition of a south side of the City Hall building at 8Xth and Massachusetts streets. BRYAN ANDERSON, former owner of the building, presented alternatives to the city's planned parking lot there. Anderson's building was condemned this summer for a small lot to provide about 25 parking spaces. Anderson, who is appealing the building's condemnation, said the plan was too costly and suggested the city build a two-story parking garage on city land just east of the present lot. ASTA Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Flowers by Alexanders AFTERNOON SPECIAL Buy one donut or roll, and get one free with your KUID. Good from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Friday. CAROL LEE DONUT SHOP 104 N. STREET AVE. LOS ANGELES, CA 90026 88010 for more information see classified ads under what else, help wanted. We style your hair . . . to fit your fashion AURH SECRETARY (2) HELP WANTED GO M AT Gentleman's Quarers we offer personalized service to assure each of our customers a hair style that will complement their own "fashion." Call for your appointment soon. GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter 611 W.9th Alumni Center to cut 15 parking spaces 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 843-2138 Everything's up to you when you become a Provident Mutual insurance agency. You can work 2 hours a day. Or 5. Work before class or a day. Usually, the more time you have to put in, the more money you make. Call our campus office and let's discuss how we can help you get the most out of life. Make your own hours and write your own paycheck. --- Get the most out of life with The new building will allow greater accessibility to the Alumni Association office for those people who have business there, Kearns said. PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA Terry Westmond Senior Vice President, the Jamaican Agency Suite 711 Commissary Bank Bldg. Suite 61248 / 84124 / 1411 841248 / 1411 The new building, which will house Alumni Association offices, retired faculty services and an alumni-faculty club, will be built on Endowment Hill. The campus is surrounded by the water tanks on 13th and Oread streets and west of Louisiana street. Home Office: 4601 Market St., Phila., Pa. 19101 When the KU Alumni Center is built during the next three years on the parking lot at 13th and Great streets, there will be a decrease in the number of parking spaces. THERE ALSO will be better traffic movement and control because the new entrances will be farther apart than they are now. he said. The existing lot and portion of the land that is weed-ridden will be terraced and landscaped. A retaining wall will be placed at the bottom of the Many visitors to campus park their cars in the lot while doing business at the Union and the Alumni Association office in the Union. Preliminary architectural plans for the 32,000-square-foot building indicate that there will be room for 65 cars and three service vehicles, Dick Wintermite, director of the Alumni Association, said early this week. That would be a loss of about 15 of the 80 spaces available now. MOST OF THE lot will be used for University parking. Some of the parking spaces will be reserved for visitors to the Alumni offices. ACCORDING TO preliminary drawings, all of the米eter and blue-zoned lot will be gone, and remaining spaces will be farther from the Kansas Union and Smith Hall, said Don Kearns, director of parking. "We're not using the lot to full capacity now." Kearns said. But Kearns and Wintermorte said they did not expect any problems. hill near Louisiana, to allow for grading and leveling of the land for the new lot. Visitors may park in another lot on Cread across from the existing lot if the Avenida de la Reina. Although final plans for the building have not yet been completed, Kearns and Wintermote expect them to differ little from the preliminary plans in the amount of parking that will be available. OPEN HOUSE Emily Taylor Women's Center 218 Strong Hall 3-4:30 pm. Wednesday, Sept. 24. Come by, see the center, and meet the new staff! Getty One word for success . . . INTERVIEWING For permanent positions in the exciting and challenging fields of the exploration for and the production of crude oil and natural gas. Getty representatives are meeting with students with master's of science degrees in GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS on October 9 SIGN UP NOW Getty Oil Company is an equal opportunity employer M/F LOUISIANA STREET ORLEAD AVENUE 15TH STREET 2030 W. 23rd Prairie Schooler SEAFOOD Murray BAI 6010 "Best Eatin' All Around!" JOHN JINKS/JKanaan staff 925 Iowa at Hickcrest Across from bowling tanes Open 6 days a week Market 841 6610 925 lawn at Hillcrest A Hardee's Big Cheese is two pure beef burgers charcoaled with a whole lot of tangy melted cheese all hot and juicy. Add a regular size order of fries and a cool refreshing small soft drink and youve got a real meal, all for $149. But hurry, this offer ends Thursday. Good at participating Hardee's only! Architectural rendering of the proposed Alumni Association Center to be built on 13th street between Louisiana Street and Oread Avenue. Hardee's. Alaskan Salmon Steaks $3.95/lb. Reg $4.89/lb. Jumbo Stuffed Clams $2.65/doz. Reg. $3.25/doz. Nova Scotian Haddock Fillets $2.29/lb. Reg. $2.99 Your response to the Shogun Special on Tiger Prawns has been so great that I have decided to keep these large lobstery-tasting cousins of shrimp in stock regularly. Free Tiger Prawn recipes from the world over are available from the Schooner. Michael Caron, your local fishmonger Big Cheese,Regular Fries& Small Soft Drink MITSUBISHI ELECTRONICS MODEL SG-69WA 6" x 9' 2-WAY. • 10 oz Wooster Magnet. • Frequency Range 50-20,000Hz • Maximum Input 20W, 4 ohms • Grill included MITSUBISHI CAR AUDIO SOUND USE AUDIT SAVE UP TO $20 a pair! ON ALL MITSUBISHI SPEAKERS IN STOCK Mitsubishi quality at sale prices! MODEL SG-69TA 6" x 9' 3-WAY. • 1 Wooster: 1 Tweeter. 1 Mid-Range. • 21 oz Wooster Magnet. • Maximum Input 20W, 4 ohms • Grill included MITSUBISHI CAR AUDIO SOUND DESIGN SAVE UP TO ON ALL MITSUBISHI SPECIAL 6" x 9" 3-W. • 1 Wofer, 1 Tweeter, 1 Mic-Range. • 21 oz. Woofer Magnet. • Maximum Input 20W, 4 ohms. • Grill included. Q MITSUBISHI Phone: 913-842-4587 RIVER CITY RADIO 1116 W. 23rd Phone: 913-842-4587 What A Deal! $1.49 Meal Hardees French Fries HOURS: MON-FRI 10 am - 9 pm SAT 10 am - 5 pm "RADIO FOR THE ROAD" Bill Lynch and Lee McBee BAND FRIDAY 26th Flying Fish Recording Artist TONIGHT FREE Showcase Extravaganza KLZR APEMAN NIGHT $1.06 Pitchers and Drinks 8-9 Plus Other Specials NO COVER KLZR Draft Card Offers Apeman's First Appearance On His World Tour 80 JOHN HARTFORD with ALLEN WEISS $5.50 Advance Tickets Still Available ULTRAVOX ALEXANDRIA MORRIS BEGINNER'S TANJUN BEGINNER'S TANJUN MONDAY 29th Chrysalis Recording Artists ULTRAVOX Opening Act BROWN & LANGREHI Coming Events September 27 ALCHEMY 30 ALLEN GINSBERG — @ 400 TITLES Avail. at Allot Only October 2 ELVIN BISHOP BAND 3 & 4 THE SECRETS 29 JOHN COUGAR Advanced Tickets $4.00 November 2 SPLIT ENZ Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Lawrence Operatic House 799 HOUSE --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Berman and Eldredge vie for 2nd District seat By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter Jane Eldredge has made stiff accusations and relied on speculation to swaiy voter opinion in her challenge of Arnold Berman for the 2nd District state Senate seat. Berman's reaction has been constant he has refused to answer any of the charges and has labeled them "stillness." YOLENA PETERSON Analysis Eldredge, 36, a lawyer and former computer programmer and systems analyst, in the Republican candidate and has received support from at least two area businesses through Political Activity Committees. The 2nd District has shown favoritism toward Democrats, and local elections have consistently placed Democrats in state offices. The 2nd District includes parts of the 4th, 48th, and 70th districts of Representatives, and all boasted Democratic incumbents before district reappointment. Berman, the incumbent, is a Democrat and thinks he is running far ahead of Eidrideg. The district divides Douglas County in half and includes the University of Kansas and Lawrence. Besides the university, the institution, the district is generally liberal. Harriece has strong ties with civic organizations and has criticized Berman for losing touch with the voters of the district. She suggested he might be taken them for granted by not making accessible to the people of the district. OTHER CHARGES by Eldredge implies a conflict of interest in Bermann's advice. nuclear energy and waste and an abandonment of the district by moving out of his law office in downtown Lawrence. "I thought about running for office several times before but I just ended up working as a campaigner for other candidates," Eldridge said yesterday. "But there were couple of things that came this time and convinced me to run." ALBERT M. DAVIS "One was the closing of Berman's law office in Lawrence and the other was his handling of a nuclear waste proposal in the Senate." She saw Berman's office closing as a retreat from the community and a step in his loss of communication with his family. He then moved manhasset his law practice to Toopea. THESE COMMENTS incited the 51-year-old senator. Berman moved his practice out of a downtown office building and into his home in Lawrence. ARNOLD BERMAN “There are so many other things to talk about. I'm getting just a little tired of that kind of talk,” Berman said. “There was never any question of a conflict of interest and I do still practice law in Lawrence and she knows it. "It is all getting rather silly." The nuclear waste proposals became an issue when, Eldredge said, it turned out that Berman had been hired by a company dealing with nuclear waste. The company neglected not to participate on a nuclear waste proposal, but later flown-on it. "The question of the conflict of interest makes me wonder just who Berman is representing," Eldredge said. BERMAN I is steadfast in his refusal to answer Eldredge's charges directly. tactics just cheapen and corrupt the political process. I will discuss the issues and my record." The incumbent noted that his opponent has not attacked his voting record for the past four years in the Senate, nor has she found fault with any of the legislation he proposed or co-sponsored. "I just refuse to conduct a political campaign on inundatedos and lies, and I will not participate in that kind of campaign," Berman said. "Those "Apparently she is pretty happy with the job I have done in representing the community," Berman said. berman sees KU as the focal point of any district business and considers his membership on the Ways and Means act as a definite advantage to the district. "The budgetary decisions in the Legislature are all made by the Ways and Means Committee and by the Senate-House Appropriations Conference Committee." Berman said. "I am a member of both committees, one of only three members of the Senate portion of the conference committee." He said the importance of his participation on those committees to KU was obvious. BERMAN HAS described himself as a powerful member of the Senate, and he said his power and value to KU was in the Haworth Hall addition on campus. "The Haworth Hall request was never made by the Regents; they refused it," he said. "I spoke personally to the governor about it, and he added it to the plan of the Senate to Legislature. I shepherded it through committee and got it passed." Berman also takes credit for helping KU, during his first term, receive 45 percent budget increases, $45 million for capital improvements, a partial tuition-free waiver for graduate salaries and a channeling of state money into the state scholarship program. "KU is the bedrock of the Lawrence economy and is extremely important to anyone representing the 2nd District. Eldredge has argued that Berman's position on important committees is not that great of an advantage and not a weakness that he will return to those positions. SHE SAID HIS inability to get his proposed legislation through the Legislature showed his ineffectiveness. "There is no guarantee that he will return to his committee assignments," Eldridge said. "Typically a senator from Douglas County is placed on the Ways and Means Committee and my chance is as good as his." "His work sponsoring bills and getting them passed has fallen short," she said. "He has only passed one out of 20 bills that he has proposed. This is pure speculation, but I think it could be that he is a hard person to work with." "Absolutely, I think KU is very important," she said. "I think the most important thing government can do is promote higher education. Eldredge also voiced a strong commitment to KU and its programs. She is also concerned about KU libraries. "One of my pet projects is the library and its book acquisition program," she said. "It is hurting and needs funding if it is to keep up to date." Among Midwest universities, KU ranks 11th out of 14 in faculty salaries. We need to continue to work to reach at least a medium point so we can stay in competition and attract quality faculty to the University." Both candidates have lived in Lawrence about a decade and are graduates of the KU School of Law, who have spent about their chances to win the election. Fair introduces engineers to employers KU engineering students will have a chance to see and be seen by prospective employers at the 2nd annual engineering career fair tomorrow and Friday, according to Pam Madl, director for the School of Engineering. Representatives from 35 companies, including DuPont, Exxon, Boeing and IBM, will set up exhibits on the second level of Allen Field House for the fair. "The career fair is a pre-recruitment tool for the companies we invited and gives students a chance to talk to prospective employers." Madi said. This year, she said, prospective employers for engineering students are in a sample supply. However, most companies offer several services to find the right job. Because graduating seniors are seriously looking for jobsthis fall, Madi said, the fair will be open only to them from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday. 280 graduating seniors attended the conference. He shows a similar travel this year. "That way there won't be as many distractions," she said. All KU engineering students may attend the fair from 1 to 4 p.m. Thursday, and from 10 to 1 p.m. Friday, the fair will be open to all students who display a KU ID. Last year, 70 percent of the school's Many of the companies represented at theair will bring exhibits, brochures and free samples of their products, Madl said, so even students not in engineering can find something to interest them. Tonight RUBY STARR (1 night only) Ladies Night Ladies drink free from 7:00-9:00 PM Thursday, Friday and Saturday PLAIN JANE Tomorrow Night only Dorm Night— free beer to dorm I.D. and class card holders (7:00-9:00 PM) G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa, Below J. Watson's Bass Guitar --energy lasers, communications systems, plus other future projects still considered science fiction. THESIS BINDING XEROX COPYING LAWRENCE PRINTING SERVICE 512 EAST 9th St. at NEW JERSEY THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS IT IS PERMANENT BINDING-DOES NOT FALL APART WITH USAGE Old World Quality Handwork Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry Quality CHOICE OF COLORS: Maroon Black Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEED OUR CUSTOMERS RECOMMEND US - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - with backing SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge * delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - stitched bine We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 Could the Navy interest you in 2 years of paid tuition and a world tour? If you are a sophomore at The University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Chief of Naval Education and Training will even include $100.00 a month Spending Money that's TAX FREE. When you graduate, you will have a job in the Fleet. Pursue the sea as a Surface Warfare Officer, Aircraft Carrier Pilot, Submarine Diving Officer, Nuclear Power Officer, Aviation Maintenance Officer, or a U.S. Marine Corps Officer. You will get a world tour. Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC). Take paid tuition, spending money, and a job that gives you a world cruise. That is Navy ROTC. Take advantage of 2 years of paid tuition and a global voyage. COSMiC COALESCENCE Where does science fiction end and reality begin? It's all in the mind's eye. Be it the creative imagination used to produce Star Wars, The Black Hole, and The Empire Strikes Back, or the more scientific approach of hypothesis testing and experimentation, the distant galaxies of science fiction coalesce into reality with the advanced technology now being developed at a company called TRW. It was the Defense and Space Systems Group of TRW who made possible the Viking Lander biological experiment which looked for life on Mars and the High Energy Astronomical Observatory which looks for quasars, pulsars and black holes in deep space. Professionals at TRW-DSSG are now involved in such impressive technologies as high A company called TRW will be on campus... to interview graduates in scientific and technical disciplines. OCTOBER 9-10 Contact the placement office to schedule your appointment. If unable to meet with us, send your resume to: College Relations Bldg. R5/B196 UK9/80 One Space Park Redondo Beach, CA 90278 A Company Called TRW Equity One A Company Called TRW Equal Opportunity Employer M.F. & F.L. DEFENSE AND SPACE SYSTEMS GROUP ENERGY SYSTEMS GROUP University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 Page 11 Scorecard theiliar Sports Calendar 24 7 p.m. - Volleyball team at Beneficence 9:30 p.m. - Kansas City Royals at Seattle Mariners 25 — Women's golf team at Iowa State Invitational 8 a.m.-Voltley队 Nebraska at Hobbs crossroads vs. Southwestern Illinois University at Laurence City Tampa, FL Twelve minutes of Milwaukee Twins (KKMB, AKM, KKFM) 26 Q Sports Quiz Today's question: How many football captains have returned to their alma mater to assume the head coaching position. Name the two. C Last Wednesday's answer— EAST | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 97 | 74 | 642 | — | | Baltimore | 97 | 69 | 584 | — | | Pittsburgh | 79 | 69 | 539 | 16 | | Milwaukee | 81 | 72 | 524 | 17 | | Detroit | 77 | 74 | 510 | 22 | | Seattle | 74 | 76 | 434 | 22 | | Toronto | 74 | 87 | 412 | 33 | List #10: WESTBROOK SUNRISE Mike Hubach is the only KU football player to lead the Jayhawks in scoring four straight years. Hubach is now a punter for the New England Patriots. AMERICAN LEAGUE Major-league Baseball | | W | L | Pct | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | x-Kansas City | 92 | 60 | 165 | 68 | | Oakland | 77 | 74 | 507 | 20 | | Oakland | 71 | 70 | 470 | 20 | | Minnesota | 70 | 82 | 461 | 22 | | California | 64 | 86 | 427 | 21 | | California | 64 | 86 | 427 | 21 | | Seattle | 82 | 97 | 391 | 38 | | Seattle | 82 | 97 | 391 | 38 | Yesterday's Games NATIONAL LEAGUE W W L Pct GB Montreal 82 68 547 Philadelphia 62 68 349 St. Louis 79 78 414 St. Louis 78 62 457 New York 63 62 417 California 61 68 414 Baltimore 8, Boston 6 Dallas 8, Detroit 7 Albuquerque 2, Minneapolis 1 Buffalo 2, Minneapolis 1 Chicago 4, Chicago 6 Dallas 4, Chicago 6 The University Daily Yesterday's Games Chicago 6, New York 5 W 8 L Pct GB Houston 85 66 561 Los Angeles 85 66 561 San Diego 83 72 546 Atlanta 72 72 547 8 San Francisco 71 78 518 8 New York 71 78 518 8 Call 864-4358 KANSAN WANT ADS Montreal 1, Pittsburgh 1 San Diego 1, Houston 4 St. Louis 6, Philadelphia 1 Calgary 3, San Francisco 1 Cincinnati 2, San Francisco 1 CLASSIFIED RATES one tire two tires three tires four tires five six eight nine ten 15 words or fewer two.50 two.75 two.75 two.35 two.35 two.45 two.45 two.45 two.45 two.45 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 ten.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m. Thursday Friday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or simply by calling the Kansan business office at 804-4588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Walmart to learn more about the Bible of fellow students. Study it, buy it and enjoy it. The Bible is easy. The Wall Street Ebook. The Salt Block. IDS-3 For rent to students, 1 bdm. apt., 2naires 2naires 1naires at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdm. basement with lots of windows at 1423 1423 electricity, 875-770 or 1433 1433 SCHOLARLY LITERARY TECHNICAL HANDICAP HOME EXAMINATION BOOK HOGSKILL WEAL. Also we have 25,000 15价 paper backs in Cahoot and browse. We see you at 1443 www.1443.com 841-4644 9:24 ENTERTAINMENT 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. tf Looking for something on Sundays? TRY THE CITY LOUSE, 508 Locust 927 Compt. Rentals 91.466.3740, 91.466.3741, 91.466.3742, 91.466.3743, 91.466.3744, 91.466.3745, 91.466.3746, 91.466.3747, 91.466.3748, 91.466.3749, 91.466.3750, available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 THE DEAL--8 men playin' to win—coming in October. 9-26 Outdoor Rollerblading 1012 Mass. Tues- Thursday, 3 p.m. 12:00 a.m.-12:00 m. and Ired. Friday, 6:30 p. 12:00 p.m. Sat. & Sun, 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Deposit–image Su- f FOR RENT This week on "Bringin' it All Back Home" it's blues with Lynch, Lyman, Band, Wednesday and Friday 6 p.m. Saturday 10 p.m. Only on Cable 6 - Watch 11 9-26 For fall or spring, Nainshal Mist offers you for the best of dormitories. We offer a good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, full schedule of social activities and events, and a private home or if you are an apartment isn't what you want, HALL OR, if you need it, Nainshal Mist, 1800 Nainshal Drive, 843-8550. ttf 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid.quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 843-9579 or 842-4185. 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now, 12'h, attached garage, all appliances, you'll like our and Kasak. Southern Parkway township, 26th and its Kasak. 749-150-787. Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. $112.50 each per month. Large 4 bdm. duplex, central air conditioning, all appli- tions. Call 815-5730 or 815-2704. For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. tf New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdms, study, dining room, dining room. No pets. No nets. No pets. For more information call 842-4455 or 8 a.m.-5 p.m. information call 842-4455 or 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 3 bbm, townhouse, on KU bus route, across national pool and tennis courts, $400 mortgage. KIMC duplexes-newly refurbished. 2 bed, 1 bath. Beautiful housebuilding Call 913-381-2808, 10-5 Rent for 3 bdm. arpt., $200 a month, all services included. Call 913-381-2808. Guile Call 913-249-8 from 5 akl for Julie. 2 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tt Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downstairs! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with open space, kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4458.5 a.m.-5 p.m. $250 month. Utilities paid 3 large, attractive rentals and a kitchen and downtown. Lease runs until May 13, 2011. 611 W. Ninth. upstairs. Weekend 9, wkdays. Weekday 9, 843-8185. Nice 2 bdrm. basement apt. furnished—2 blocks from campus—$250/month. 841-9247. 9-26 Roommate Wanted—Nice ap, heat and adjoining room. Call Tom 749-1732, call Paid Tom 749-1732 9-25 Graduate student needs person to share two baskets of $15; +12 tufts. No. 9-30 841-1829 near campus 2 Bdm. apt, Compatible for laptop 3 Bdm. apt, Compatible for 841-3215, 841-0707 after 6 p.m., 9-30 Sublease nice, clean one bdm. apt. Willing to give one month rent security deposit 843-1116. 10-3 Needed: Roommate to provide 4 bdrm. house Roommate: $171.50 + $1.25 Call Doug 841-2877. 9-24 FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialist. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 38000 W. 6th. tf WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843- 1386. tf New excellent quality bedding—orthopedic bedding sets. Be sure to check on prices. Ledder's Furniture, 1200 New York St. 843- 728. MATTRESSREP, Orthopedic sets from $39. FURNITURE, one black west of 9th and low. Furniture, one black west of 9th and low. Musical Instrumenta 1839 Gibson L-4 Hand Piano with case with $25. 1812 Wilson Upright Piano with case with $25. 1912 Wilson Upright Piano with good tone piano $25. Nice solid top student cello only please. Gibson G-43 765-656. 9-24 only. please. Gibson G-43 765-656. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them — An all-study makes sense to use them — An study exam preparation — New Analysis of West- ern Civilization — Oedipus Crits Mails Bookstore and Oedie- Book Crits Mails Bookstore and Oedie- Book For sale now—1979 Rally Sport, fully equipped, low mileage, like new condition. 843-4431 or 842-9231. 9-29 Must sell-Quality Opunica loudspeakers and adjustable stands. Crisp highs and deep bass. Fine condition. Listen to them. 842-9360. 9-26 Bookcase $28, record cabinet $35. I also take custom wood-working orders for cedar chests etc. M. J. Bough 845-889. 9-24 Sleek B & O turntable. Like new with B & O 6000 cartridge. $250 dx 128 dynamic range enhancer and noise reduction system. Barely used. $200. 841-0295. 9-24 10-speed. Capri Mondo for sale. New Ex- change. Call 841-6481 after 5-94 and weekends. MOPED: New 1980 Motobecane M-50B Traveler. Cost over $600 new. (sacrifice at $430) 842-384-368 9-26 1978 LT Camara, Fully equipped, low mileage, new condition. Call Todd at 104-6244 8-124 Kenwood receiver. KR 4070, 40 watts/channel 8118 "Bill" 841.49269-9-29 SURGICAL PANTS - THE REAL THING, no more trying to steal them from the hospital or cause damage. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, and very comforting Need to sell KU. student team football offer. Call 843-326 and for Brad. 1927 VW Bus—Rebuilt engine, new tires, just inspected Call 748-9845. Keep track. 9-29/25 Raleigh International frame set. Reqnoxns of keyboard, mouse and seat post. button bracket and seat post. Phil at a desk. 21". Wait, the colon is before "10". The text is: "11", "10-speed Motobecane. Good condition. 210", "842-8330". Keep trying. Let's re-read the instructions carefully. "Maintain the original document structure and content." The list is in a vertical format with each item on a separate line. The numbers are in the first row. The words are in the second row. The instructions say: "Maintain the original document structure and content." I will use the Markdown format as it is clearer to read. 11", "10-speed Motobecane. Good condition. 210", "842-8330". Keep trying. '66 VW Bug. Runs good. Call Borys 664- 3086. 9-30 1906 Olds. 88-2oor, 1 owner, 66,000 miles. 1907 Olds. 89-2oor, $30 or more, call Offer. Call 841-8697 after 6. 76 WV Rabbit. AM-FM, 4 speed, economy 76.99 million miles. Call 843-2381. 9-26 1973 Triumph Spitfire, low miles, good condition. $1500. 841-1790. 9-26 Black and white Zenith T.V. $45. Brown upholstered chair, good condition. $54. White and black upholstered chair. $69. FOUND Found a pair of keys near Parrott Athletic Center Tuesday evening. Call and identify. 841-8072. 9-24 HELP WANTED Director of Instrumentation and Electronics of the AEE; responsible for research available on or after January 1, 1981. Creative ability required in design of anaerobic systems; knowledge of micro- and micro-computer hardware and software applied to chemistry and related applications. Supervisory ability are required and supervision ability is required. Experience and qualifications. Send resume, e ORGANIC CHEMIST. Immediate opening in industry with experience as a doctoral Research fellow with interest in cancer drug development. QualifiedIndustry training in the synthesis of new compounds with training in the synthesis of new compounds. Should be familiar with all types of laboratory equipment and instrumentation including Salary may be subject to annual return. Develop skills and use research skills.Develop Cancer Center, University of Kansas, America Cancer Center, University of Kansas City, Ks. k6103, (913) 584-780. An equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. E-925 CONSTRUCTION INSPECTOR ASSISTANT AGEMENT. The University of Kansas Medical Center requires a top notch person knowledge to represent the University's in- spired QuadrIPlicate needs life in attendant. Room 442-8150. Faculty of Business Equal Opportunity Employer. Call 643-281-1 585. BECOME A COLLEGE CAMPUS DEALER COMPONENTS, LOW PRICES, HIGH PROFITS. NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY. FOR COMPONENTS WITH TRONICS DISTRIBUTORS . INC. 2125 MOUNTAIN INDUSTRIAL BLVD. TUCK-ER-COUNTY. 800-241-6270 for Mr. Blairwalt. 9-22 Office secretary wanted for AURH. Have have general typing skills and type at least 10 pages per day. Study average 12' hours per week. Con- clude with a Bachelor's degree or a Bremby 844-5733. Please obtain an application at the Financial Aid office and sub- mit it by mail to 210 McKinney Hall by 5 p.m. Sept. 20th. 9-26 Need temporary help due to i. Ig. volume change in the skin. Repeat from 4 m, to 10 p.m. daily. M.F. during room temperature changes preferred apply in warm room. Overland Photo, 1741 Mass. Lawrence Black and silver puppy. White paws and nose. Yellow eyes. Black ears and $10kuckle. Babies tag no. 1668. Reward name. Bags tag no. 1668. LOST Lost-Brown Leather Purse between Naim-Smith and Pat Seid, HWARD 254. Call 813-9248 for Dyneke Hall. Sentimental reward. Reward offered. Call 843-9248 after 4 p.m. 9-29 Brown cobra skin wallet lost in front of an old library. Reward if found T-9- 2007 REWARD-Our 10 wk, old male yellow lab. Last seen following a man south on Miss. Sat. Mort from our house at 10th and Illi- tiam we return him to us. As he friend. We 9-26 DRINK AND DROGWEN every Monday night FOR GIRLS AND GRADES 8th to 12th -- $3 McDonalds on 8th) $4 -- $6 girls $7 for McDonald's on 9th) $8 PERSONAL NOTICE NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MERCHANDISE BOUTIQUE membership card gets you $1.00 highiball all night long. Only at your place, THE LOUISIE WHERE "partying is where" 9-30 Explore the Oriental Healing Arts in this new student organization. Informal class in SHIATSU (Japanese finger pressure treatment) now being scheduled for October. SHIATSU-KU 842-8965 FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL LOUISIE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR Everyday for 2 meals and $15.00 or $16.00 & $17.00. Tidy, tidy. Partying with friends. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions HIT 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Control, Counseling, Tubal Ligation, For- mation. Consult with Dr. M. Shapiro. 4400 W. 11th St. Overland Park, Kansas HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUSE. Every 7-10 p.m. enjoy $10 highrise (75 on Thursday, 90 on Friday) at the atmosphere. Club Lounge, Club House, 824-894-4299 "Parking is our business." 824-894-4299 LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights). Drinks are provided, and there's no cover charge. Only at the Club Lounge, 584 Locust 923-897, 9-30 WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS SUN TRAVEL KANSAS CITY ROYALS MINNESOTA TWINS October 5 $10.00 Come see the playoff bound Royals in their last home game and see it George Brett can bat .400. Price includes transportation and tickets! Reservation deadline: Friday, Oct. 3 For more information drop by the SUA office or call 864-3477. SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOUISE. 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. tf PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY If you are undecided about a career, but are interested in sales and management in a large eastern based company our part-time information, call Perry Westlind. Collect M/F/1-1411. Equal Opportunity Employer 9-29 In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more games, she brings us SUNDAY NIGHT DRIVER AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the girls wear a black dress only $2, but only $2 girls; only $2 drink and drown at a club THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 Locust. Our club offers available: "Farm is our business." - 9-30 TGIF AT LOUSES BAR with 1.52 price schools and 62 drawers. Every Friday from 2 till 6. Be there-Aloha! Looking for the perfect perch Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 814-619-769 HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANN LOWRY!!! You Are Brilliant, Nice. Beautiful And A Pretty Good Kid! Take a break after classes at LOUSES! Afternoon session every day until 6 Singing messages for all occauses. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTING Singing Telegraphs. 841-6169. tf Green's Liquor has 1976 German Piersporters and 1749 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs and excellent tapping equipment. 9-26 PSYCHIC SELF- AWARENESS CLASS Learn about the auras, chakras, spirit guides, self-healing. Starts very soon. Coni 401 week session, for 10 weeks. Eve Lester 9-24 Hey Paul Donlan - The Grim are getting only one who can help! WOMAN wants you to help them. Is copying driving you BATTY? Don't KAT around. Come to Copy Repairs and let us take the KINKS out of your copies! Encore Copy Corp. 5th, Iowa & Iowa. 8240-930-30 CHROPIACRITE—Investigate the natural history of Johnson mice. Do chicken Johnson mice develop Chropiacrite Clinicin 8th and 10th months? Do they die from it? www.johnsonmice.org What's it all about? For answers, attend the informational meeting for Campus Safety to be held at 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 25th in a Conference Room at the Satellite University 9-25 Tired of the all store closing at 5-200 Store at Footlights, imaginative cards and gifts. 9 p.m. M-F, Holiday Pizza, and lowes. In it for 18%, off any gift item. 9-26 Payche Personality Readings, $25-50, 843- 9414, 1·9 p.m. Head Start needs you to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher-aid for two hours, one morning a carriage ride to college. Call Amy J455 for information. Volunteers needed for Campus Safety Services Work. To Volunteer, Call KU Info at 834-506 or attend the meeting at 7 p.m., Sept. 12 at the Conference Room of the University Huy Dian, Ed. & Killer, Loved seeing you Way to run! Love your Alpha Pli coach. Way to run! Love your Alpha Pli coach. Tired of cleaning and jerking 50 lb. Kegs G. P. Lloyd's West now has their party dress. Tap out of the side, and in the city. Call in your reservations 841-848. 9-24 12's Wedding—and GNO. AT THE HARBOR LITES, all single Women receive $15 bill prizes; 60 men cash/buffets from $300 for Harbor LITES, your 1031 Massachusetts. 9-24 FRESHMEN—Tired of do-noting class offers? Vote for a dedicated ticket. Imagine . . . Action! 9-25 Wednesday is Ladies Night at The Billy Spare Country Playhouse with free adm. and drink coupons for Ladies featuring the Billy Spare Band. 84 W. 24th. 843-200-768. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP IN THE Fireplace Room of Lewis Hall 850-726-9340 THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP IN THE Fireplace Room of Lewis Hall 850-726-9340 Off the Wall Hall presents the Worm ticket for Dan Walke, Democratic candidate for the 2014 Democratic nomination for Kanaka at 9:30 AM Friday. September 26 Minimum donation $5. Advance payment to the Park Plaza Shopping Center in the Holiday Plaza Shopping中心 or by calling 81-922. Tickets also available at www.wormfest.org. THE BHE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage speciality. "Tune-ups" and "Total Overhauls." Bake 411-781-281. For the Intel Xeon processors (Xeon 7400, 7600, 8200, 8300, 8400), ARBOW OS requires the OERIV- C Osx Server 7.40. Experimentally, OERIV-C OERIV-C does not require the OERIV-C. SERVICES OFFERED COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN COPIES Instant color passport photos. Immigration. 1D. portraiture, resume, portfolios, slides: color & B.W. Tom 841-7294 9-30 Tutoring service for all lower level math courses up to Call 115. Call Curt at 9-244 2½ c EACH HOUSE OF USHE: 326 MANHATTAN ST 175 LAMBERTON KANSAS ABDON & 913-382-2010 Chau provides a frame of reference for the other client to talk if you are confused about where your services lie. If you have a lengthy more clearly identified this could make a difference for you Call 413-1986 for assistance. FENSTEIN TUTORS Expert assistance CS, math. Dave 811-763, English grammar, composition, research, typing Randy 832- 7040. Steno wants to do typing in her home. $1 per page, Lucille West. 843-0706. 9-30 TYPING Experienced typist -term paper, papers. ttf Experienced proofreading -481-9544. Mrs. Wright, ff spelling corrected 481-9544. Mrs. Wright, ff I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-1476. tf Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Solectric Call Donna 8242-2144. tf Experienced K.I.T. typist IBM Correcting Keyboarding Skills for Sandy, evening and weekend. 74h Style Sandy, evening and weekend. 74h Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Ellen or Jeannam 811-2712. 12-8 Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Elec. Quality Work, reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan. 842- 9127. Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with the computer. Batty, 842-6697 after 5 and weeks off. If you want to make a reservation, please call. Experienced typet -thesis, dissertations, term papers, misc. IBM correcting selecte- bar. Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-3210. ff IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- turning evening to 11:00 and weekends. M2-825F www.m2-825f.com ORPH 042-2001 VIP HOUSE TWINNEMBER COMPANY ENCORE COPY CORPS 238 S. 6th Street. Photo Number 843 2001 For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-4380. tt Exp. typist would like to do term paper, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-3203. 10-3 My old typewriter doesn't correct mistakes or type . or spell . but I do! Kay 749-1331. 9-26 WANTED BabySitting-Have own transportation. Can come to home or have apt call 749-1415 afternoons - evenings . 9-24 Drummer for working rock band. No punk. 81-246-7090 Keep trying. 81-246-7090 Keep trying. - avashkov Buying gold PAYING $300-$150 for men's 210 W. 5th Street, Planet Plaza 9-809-345-3000 210 W. 5th Street, Planet Plaza 9-809-345-3000 GOLD- SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings, Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Stering ee. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-7414 or 842-2686. Female roommate to share 2 bdmr. furnished. Jayhawker Towers Apt. All utilities paid. Call 843-4602. 9-25 Upperclass person or graduate student for a roommate. Nice 2 bdram. $125/month; + 1/2 utilities. Must be able to tolerate room and pet. Write or call 2422 BADU8. WANTED Person to enter cooperative child care center and find someone to help them and find want to person with similarly aged siblings willing to trade child care a 4 morning job. An excellent fit as to mornings, afternoon or evening. Please refer to job description for details. Non smoking roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. non smoking camp. 11251 mmon. utilities kill. -3425. -3425. Semi-Vegtable non-smoker wanted to lease residence near Hill $10.10 to 110 6335 9-26 Librarian, easy-going roommate wanted for roommate to house. Buck or Jeff, 10-25, 841, 210-799 9-26 Studioside, liberal male to share fully fur- ried suits, gas and electric. Call 814-6957 after 8 Roommate at the Jayhawker Towers as soon as all utilities call Call 911-800-4230 Anytime 9:30 Female Roommate wanted to share 2 bdmr. Female Roommate $12.50 * 1 units. 3933 Bldg 3933 Bldg Roommate Wanted. 2 bdmr. ap, in old apartment. Must have good computer skills, large windows. Completely furnished in antique. Prefer female, upperclass or college graduate. Send resume to Referee payments paid. Custodian number 843-328 and 842-790. ORDERFORM KANSAN ORDERFORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! 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: Dates to Run:___ To RATES: 15 words or less additional words 1 time 2 time 3 time 4 time 8.25 sec 8.35 sec 8.75 sec 8.30 sec 8.25 sec 8.35 sec 8.75 sec 8.30 sec CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 AD DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY...Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY...Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: __ ADDRESS: __ PHONE: __ --- Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 24, 1980 PARKER DREW TORRES/Kansan staff Bucky Scribner's foot unleashes a booming punt in Saturday's game against Pittsburgh. Scribner's 10 punts against Pitt made him, statistically, the second best punt in the nation. Bucky's boots place second on national punting charts By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Bucky Scrubber certainly doesn't have two left feet, but by the end of the season he may wish he did. Scribner, KU's standout southpaw punter, has boott the ball 17 times in two games for a 47.0 average. The Lawrence High product leads the Bie Alight in distance and is second in the nation. Scribner's gifted t吞 to follow those of Mike Hubach, who, in his four years in a Jayhawk jersey, was the only bright spot in Memorial Stadium on many dismal Saturday afternoons. Scribner may also be called upon to fill that roll, and as was in last Saturday's 184 loss to Pittsburgh. Head Coach Don Fambrough calls Scribner a good long-range investment for the Jayhawks. "Bucky's as good a kicker as I've seen anywhere," Fambrigh said. "He's done an exceptional job already. I'm confident about our kicking program for the next three years." SCRIBENER THE EARLY-SEASON success has not made him amphibious. "The national ranking would make me nervous if I thought about it," he said. "I faced at my juco. I kick for the team first. Everything else falls in place." After graduating from Lawrence High, Scribner punted for Pratt Community College for one semester, then punted Pratt over Christmas break. He talked with Fambrough and offensive coordinator John Hadl about moving back to Lawrence. "Bucky was the first player we offered a scholarship to after my appointment as coach," Furchner said. "I didn't like the KU coaching staff there at the time, so I considered leaving Pratt and going to another school," Scriffer said. "I like warm weather and I had an aid from the University of Miami." high school, the KU coaching staff suggested he be trained for a year and a half to prepare for Bue Equal ball. "But Fambrouch and Hadi are big reasons I came to KU. I've always wanted to play Big Eagle." Scribner said that after he had graduated from FLORIDA'S LOSS is Kansas' gain. Scribner was a junior college All-American at Pratt with a 43.4 punting average. He spent his first season as a Javakh in a red shirt. "I didn't like being redhatted, but it was the best thing for me at the time," Scribner said. "It was a great experience." "I practiced everyday, but during the game I wore civilian clothes and stood on the sideline. It was impossible to stay motivated. I just put in my time." Scribner's patience paid off for both him and the Jayhawks as he easily slid into the starting punter's position when last year's star kicker, senior Mike Hubach, was drafted by the New England Patriots. Scribner doesn't mind kicking on the heels of Hubach. "Hubach is a good kicker. His is more of a technique. I rely on leg power. I'm trying to get technique down. I used to kick as hard as I could. I use a strong leg, and I utilize it. He utilizes force." "Following Mike is not my major concern. I've never felt I had to prove myself in comparison to Mike," he said. "I have to live up to my-and my coaches' exections." "I can't compare them until Bucky's spend three more years kicking," he said. "I have to go back." FAMBROUGH SAID he couldn't compare the two punters this early in Scribner's career. "But if he keeps扑unting like he did in our first two games, he'll be in the NFL. "He's a perfectionist," Fambroh said. "He studies well and phase of it. It's more than he knows." "I'd say I kick about 50-75 balls a day." "Punting the ball takes a lot of time and practice. That's all I do in practice," Scribner said. "Early in the week I kick a lot, then toward game day I paper off." Fambaugh said Scritter worked on two things to improve his painting. "He tries to keep the ball fairly low and hit an open spot on the field," he said. "He also works on kicking it out-of-bounds, into the wind and to the sideline." PUNTING WITH and against the wind is one trick Scribler will have ample opportunity to practice. He kicked in winds of up to 45 mph last week in Kansas it's safe to assume he'll have to again. "Against the wind I try to keep the ball low and kick it to an area," Scribner said, who was pleased with that aspect of his performance. "I used the wind to move with the way he used the wind to his advantage. "In the strong wind, I had kicks of 61, 50 and 49 yards," he said. "I should have kicked them all for at least 60," he said. "It would have bottled them (Pit) up more." SCRINNER 5AID that KU could buy up the campus Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium. "If we're not mentally prepared for them, we could be." said. "But if we have the right mindset," he added. "My goal is to have better kicking game than the team. I be perfectly content not to kick at them." Mitchell brings more than muscle to Jayhawks "But in any close game, the outcome hinges on the kicking game." By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer For top high school athletes, the recruiting grind can be tough. Making the decision on which coach will be lucky and which school will be blessed can one of the most difficult tasks of a mother's job. r some or, that decision is even tougher the second time around. Victor Mitchell, a 6-foot-10, 250-pound center, the latest in a series of huge Texas junior college players to transfer to Kansas, was one of the athletes in the latter category. Out of Amarillo, Texas, High School, Mitchell was mildly recruited. At Amarillo Junior College, Mitchell matured into a very valuable commodity. As a freshman, he averaged 23 points and 14 rebounds a game. "I guess you could say I was recruited medium," Mitchell said. "I signed with North Texas State, but my father got sick, so I stayed around Amarillo." AS A RESULT, Mitchell was named secondteam juc All-America and became one of the most heavily-recruited juco players in the country. With dozens of colleges offering scholarships, Mitchell narrowed the list to two, Texas and Kansas. As a sophomore, he raised that to 28 points and 10 rebounds a game while playing with an injury. He had made up his mind to attend Texas when officials there announced the signing of a high-regarded high school center to go with the team. But three's a crowd, so Mitchell switched to KU. "I had to change my mind about Texas," he said. "They already had two big men. What's the sense of going to where they already have two big men? This is a good opportunity right here." it certainly is, if a good opportunity means a shortage of centers. In last season's search for a center, KU head coach Ted Owens played three games in the first three weeks. At times, Housey was effective. Knight was too small and more suited to a forward position and Snow has since transferred. "Starting is what I'm working at," he said. "I can't say I'll be starting. The coaches don't even know that. I'll be working hard. Everybody wants to start." MITCHEL SHOULD be able to immediately start, start spot, but he is cautious about saying so. He will probably battle Housey, last year's mammoth juco transfer from Texas, for a starting spot and KU will certainly sport the intimidating 12-center punch in the Bie Uetf. Housey is 6-foot-10 and weighs 252. Mitchell said that the two would complement each other "Art's quicker than I am, and on the outside around the free-throw line and the top of the key he'll be really effective," Mitchell said. "I can be too, too, but for the last three years, I've been inside." "Playing inside, my weight is a definite advantage. As far as my physical size, one no one I've met can compare to." Old-timers don crimson and blue again The players are more gray and white than crimson and blue. But they will don the Jahawk uniform again. They will play in KU's first baseball old-timers. Floyd Temple, KU's baseball coach for 28 years, has rounded up some of KU's best from the past 30 years. Their waistlines have expanded and their old skills have vanished, but Temple is expecting an exciting meeting of KU's baseball pasts. "I HAVE INSTRUCTED the training room to have an ample supply of ice and heat packets," Temple said, "I expect a lot of out-of-shape bodies. bring coolers, but we can't allow that. I expect some thunderplayers." "Some of the players have asked if they could Temple also expects the game to unite former baseball lettermen. "I hope that the publicity from this game will reach all our old-timers," he said. "We don't know where a lot of them are. But I hope they know we can get them organized and off the ground." THE OLD-TIMERS game is the start of the K-Club weekend. The K-Club, an organization for former lettermen, is having a banquet Friday and attending the KU-Louisville football game Temple has assembled most of KU's baseball greats. Many of the 38 players played on KU's last championship team, the 1949 Big Seven champs. "I THINK WE'VE got the teams divided up evenly between the older guys and the ones who haven't been out of school too long," Temple said. Temple played on that team. He has played with or coached everyone in the game except George Trombold, who last played for KU in 1932. Trombold is one of the honorary coaches. If the game is a success, Temple hopes to find a more affair. He would like two games instead of one. "I would like it so that our recent grads would come back and play a game with the varsity," he said. "In the other game, the old-timers would play each other." against centers as tall as and taller than me and handled it. "There are big players everywhere now. What it will bow down to is me playing heads-up ball." My size makes a difference, but not much. I intend to make it a big difference." Valentine and shooters like Ricky Ross and Booty Neal, he said that the team had all the weapons. MITCHELL SAID that the KU team had more talent than any team he had been associated with on any level. With a ball handler like Darnell "When the pressure comes down, those guys are really hardy," he said. "Booty and Ricky are what you call pure shooters. When the pressure is on the center, they will get shots and you can bet they will ring it. We'll be clicking like a watch, a fine watch." Royals drop fourth straight; Brett's average falls to .391 By United Press International SEATTLE—An 11-hit attack, bolstered by three home runs, sent the Seattle Mariners to a 7-9 victory over the Kansas City Royals last night. Jerry Narron, Wiley Horton and Dave Eddler hit home runs and Jim Beatty pitched his third complete game in 27 starts. The victory was Beatty's first since July 3. The loss was the fourth straight for the American League West last Wednesday. Seattle scored five runs in the first inning on a two-run single by Dane Meyer and a three-run homer by Narron, his third of the season. Horton hit his seventh home run of the year in the third and Edler added a solo shot in the fourth. GEORGE BRETT managed only a first-inning singles game, his batting hitting a batting average of .304. Kansas City got runs in the first and third innings but Wisconsin won. Wilson stealing second and fifth runs. Wilson first and Hal McRae drove him home in the third. Wilson's two stools boosted his season total, extended his consecutive stolen base record to 152. Willie Akers hit a solo home run, his 20th of 19 games, in sixth to account for the other Kansas City run. In the American League East, the New York Yankees pulled another miracle finish to keep second-place Baltimore five games behind. They won the season. The Yank's magic number is seven. RENIE MARTIN, 9-10, pitched the first 31% innings and gave up all the Mariner runs. New York, trailing Cleveland 4-1 in the ninth, rallied for four runs off Indian starter Wayne Garland and relievers Mike Staten and Robbie Harper. The Arlington Holder drove in the wringing and tying runs. Martin was put into the starting rotation in place of Rich Gale, who is nursing a sore "THE GROILES have been playing like hell and haven't picked up a game." Yankee manager Dick Howser said. "We're not folding." Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE - ESCORED TOURS CALL TODAY! 843-1211 Attention: KU MEMBERS AND YOUR GUESTS! Get in FREE with your ID and enjoy $1.00 drinks ALL NIGHT LONG TONIGHT! GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center Imagine...Action! For a Change I am grateful to you. Dave Morrison President Frank A. Seurer Vice President Keith Cutler Treasurer Missy Taylor Secretary IMAGINE ACTION COALITION for Freshman Class Officers Paid for by Imagine Action Coalition Attention: PRE-DENTAL STUDENTS The K.U. Pre-Dental Club is sponsoring a panel discussion When: Thurs. Sept. 25 Where: The Big Eight Room of the Union Time: 8:00 pm. ON "Dentistry as a Career' Featuring... Diane Beard—Admissions Secretary, UMKC Dental School Lynn Oreskovich—KU pre-med/pre dental Secretary Dean Robert Adams—LA and S. Advisor Dr. Mike McBride—prominent area dentist and Students from UMKC Dental School 1 Funded by Student Senate Thursday, September 25, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 24 USPS 650-640 The University Daily KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas THE LITTLE PIANIST A saxophone serenade by Sean Santoro, 533 Walnut, does not seem to keep 2-year-old Myka Vlach, 1105 Pennsylvania, from reading a book on a benel outside Wescow. 14 more groups seek Senate funds By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate finance and auditing committee voted last night to examine four more student organizations to determine possible funding sources, before making supplementary funding decisions. Tuesday night the committee voted to investigate the Latin American Solidarity Club in connection with a 2010 alpinia attack. According to Senate rules and regulations, the Senate should not allocate funds for projects and operations. The groups to be investigated are the KU Formosan Club, the Chinese Student Association, the Undergraduate Business Council and the KU Accounting Club. THE KU FORMOSAN Club presented its request for $788.66 to cover costs of supplies and expenses, capital equipment, rent and personnel services. According to the club president, Martin Min-Tang, the club is open to everyone but is composed mainly of native Taiwanese. The finance and auditing committee questioned the Formosan Club's similarity with the KU Chinese Student Association, an organization Min-Tang said served students from mainland China. The Chinese Student Association Monday night presented its request for $440. Neither group received spring allocations. The Undergraduate Business Council missed its scheduled presentation Tuesday night but was allowed time yesterday to present its $41.40 cost of visiting speakers. THE COMMITTEE voted to look into whether the Business Council duplicated services offered by the RU Accounting Club, which presented its $8 Breathe Tuesday night. Neither group received allocations for the spring semester. The committee also voted to ask a representative from the University Daily Kansan to return for further questioning about its budget. The Kanans presented its request for $2,200 Tuesday night. The Kanans received a $2 per student activity fee for a total $73,260, but is requesting supplementary funding to pay for another news service. The Associated Press wire service raised the Kanans's rates from a $70 a week educational rate to a $300 a week commercial rate. Carol Beier, editor, said the Kansan had discontinued AP service and needed additional funding to pay for the Los Angeles Times/Washington Post News Service. The committee said it did not have enough information to make a preliminary decision on its request, however, and voted to talk with club members for a clearer explanation of what the committee thought. According to Robert John, treasurer, the organization is composed mainly of professors and graduate students in the sociology department. This provides an important perspective on political and economic issues. BREN ABEOTT, Senate treasurer, said he wanted more explanation of the Kansan budget before making a funding decision. All three other organizations considered in preliminary discussion last night received a response. The Kansas Telos Club presented its request for newsletter and con- ference production certs. DAN CUNNINGHAM, All Scholarship Hall Council senator, said it was time for the committee to stop "nickle and dimine." "The committee has so little money available for funding this year, it would be better to make a substantial contribution to a few groups than to give only a little to a lot of groups," he said. However, Jim Borelli, Senate student rights and responsibilities co-chairman, said that to fund only a few groups was not fair to a majority of the KU students. Other preliminary decisions cut the Music Therapy Club from $2,223.10 to $128.39. The cuts were made because of Senate rules prohibiting the funding of unauthorized expenses, travel funding of delegates to convention or money for speaking engagements. The KU Water Ski Club was cut from $1,416.02 to $22.80. All money requested for a proposed trip to Florida to compete with other skiers was cut. Money was allocated for postage, printing and advertising. The club received no funding from Senate for the spring semester. The nine remaining groups that presented requests last night were: Fencing Club, $294; Friends of Headquarters, $3,715.78; KU Crew Club, $1,549.34; KU Friose Club, $1,066; Orcadian Friendship, $1,000; Macrotrash Friendship, $738.50; KU Shotokahn Kargate Club, $265.80; KU X. 706.89. LE CERCLE FRANÇAISE, the French Club, had their $44 request cut to $50 to pay publicity costs. Money for proposed play productions was cut. Tomorrow night is the fourth and final night for supplementary budget request presentations to the finance and auditing committee. Fourteen groups are scheduled. KU officials preparing for Title IX investigation The decisions are preliminary, Abbot said, and final decisions to present to the Senate would be made. By ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter The wheels are starting to turn as the University of Kansas prepares for a Department of Education investigation into alleged sex discrimination in KU's athletic program. Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, has called a meeting of athletic department officials and coaches for Monday morning to inform them of what a Title IX investigation is. Title IX is the 1972 federal law that is intended to prohibit sex discrimination in education. Thomas has said she expects the on-site investigation to begin the week of Oct. 13, but the department of Education office in Kansas City, where he was conducting the investigation, would not confirm the date. "We will write the University a letter and appraise them of the date," I.J. Thomas of the department's Kansas City office said Monday. "It is still under discussion." MILTON BRDGEWATER, also of the Kansas state, said that Oct. 13 probably was the previsitable date. KU was one of eight universities picked by the Department of Education for the first round of investigations into possible sex discrimination in the department. The department named a total of 80 institution. The investigation stems from discrimination complaints filed against KU in 1978 by Elizbaeth Banks, associate professor of classes, and Anne Levinson, a 1980 KU graduate. In October 1978, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare conducted an on-site investigation at KU. According to Banks, HEW in Kansas City thought there was some justification for the charges, because after the study report on their findings was sent in Washington. "They conducted a very thorough in- ference into the situation, and there was a lack of outlines and nothing came of it." ALTHOUGH TITLE IX took effect in 1975, HEW did not issue its final interpretation of the rules until last December. Title IX uridication捷至 the new Department of Education in May. Since the 1978 investigation, the athletic department has steadily increased scholarship money for women's sports, but other changes have been minimal, said Sandy Buban, assistant women's basketball coach and assistant academic adviser. "Improvements have been pretty cosmetic." it said, like putting a new squirrel machine in the saffron. Bahan also said several women athlete had complained about not receiving equal treatment. The lawyer said there was no evidence. men's and women's athletic departments in 1979, the same tutoring sessions were open to both Banks, a former member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, said she would like to see women's basketball get better practice times and women on athletic scholarships get a training table as in some men's sports. BOB MARCUM, athletic director, said he was satisfied with the athletic department's progress. "I think we have done everything we can with the resources available," he said. "I think we need to do more." "We are making somewhat similar strides as other schools," Stancliff said. "I'm trying to stay competitive at a national level. If I couldn't, I wouldn't still be here." Bob Stancilff, softball coach, said he had no real complaints with KU's handling of women's "It is unfortunate that the University of Kansas was one of the ones singled out," he said. "You can find inequities at just about every school." Improvements have been made in the amount of scholarship money available to women's sports. According to Susan Wachter, athletic business manager, this is the last year of a five-year plan to put women's scholarships on the same level as men's non-revenue sports. Bahan also acknowledged that progress had been steady with respect to scholarships. When the Department of Education arrives at KU for the investigation, it is not certain whom they will talk to. They will meet with Mariana and other staff members to discuss what has been as women's athletic directors before the merger. WASHINGTON SAID she did not want to comment on the investigation after later she had spoken to the police. Banks, who filled the original complaint two weeks ago, she had not been contacted about the investigation. She said she would try to get in touch with the Department of Education, however. "I'm interested in seeing that they talk to the right people," she said. "I hope the woman get a fair opportunity to compete. That's all I ever wanted." If KU is found to be in violation of Title IX, and the federal aid, which last year totaled about $27 million, it was Marcum said he was not sure where funding would come from if violations were found by the police. "If they ask for more money, I don't know what we'll do," he said. "They may tell us we need to change our priorities in which case we would make adjustments." By United Press International Iraqi forces advance in Iran; oil refineries bombed, burned BAGHADAD, Iraq—Iraqi forces moved up to 10 miles into Iran on three fronts yesterday and claimed the capture of a major town on the road to Tehran. Ferice fighting escalated on land and sea and added to the number of planes to attack the other's installations. Both sides spoke of heavy casualties on this; the troops of the underdeclared war between the two. Iraq continued to claim military victories and Iranian radio stations repeatedly broadcast appeals for blood and for volunteers to fight the fires. Iranian radio reports said fires were destroying its oil refineries and pipelines around the sprawling Persan Gulf refinery at Abadan, which was bombed for the second day by Iraqilets. AN IRANIAN REPORT said four Americans were captured by Iranian forces meeting an attack near Shalamsharai. Earlier, unconfirmed reports had said four Americans were feared Tehran Radio said Iraqi planes had bombed and set fire to the oil installations on Kharg Island, at one time the world's largest oil exporting terminal, in the Shatt-Al-Arab Waterway. Iraq said it had captured 351 Iranian soldiers. ON LAND, Iraqi forces claimed to have captured the Iranian trading center of Qasr-e-Shirin, on the border about 300 miles west of Tehran, and to have pushed 10 miles down the highway to Sardil Zahab in an advance on one of three fronts. killed in an Iranian air strike Tuesday against the Iraqi trench of Basra. Iran for the first time admitted to losing some ground in a military communique that said "a few Iranian border posts have come under the control of the Iraqi army." It said the Iranian forces in the Qasr-e-Shirin area were "fighting hard to stop the enemy penetration." The U.N. Security Council appealed for an end to the fighting, and President Carter summoned Secretary of State Edmund Muskie to the White House for an urgent meeting. See CONFLICT page 5 Off-campus courses often duplicated, report says Rv CINDI CURRIE Although a recently released legislative report says more than 40 percent of KU's off-campus courses are duplicated by other area schools, the University will not change its course offerings. Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said yesterday. The report, written by the Legislative Division of Post Audit, was presented to the Educational Planning Committee of the Kansas Legislature earlier this week. Staff Reporter The post audit division examined off-campus courses offered by regents schools and community colleges in Kansas to determine whether courses were duplicated. However, Hutchison said, the courses offered by KU were not duplications of courses offered elsewhere because more than one course was required for a full program or accommodate high student interest. The report said that 18 of the 231 off-campus courses offered by KU were duplicated by parity inquiry. HE SAID THAT KU and the post audit report had different definitions of course duplication. Hutchison said that duplication of courses often occurred when off-campus offerings were so popular that two classes were needed to handle the high enrollment. Duplication of courses also could occur if their requirements were similar and they were being offered in either two off-campus courses or an on-campus course and an off-campus course. A course is considered duplicated if an identification offered by another institution within 30 days. Jeff Brewer, director of performance audits, said the report defined duplication in several Brewer said that KU had only two identical duplications, both Western Civilization courses. He said that enrollment for off-campus institutions of the Regents Center in Overland Park, Pa. More than 2,000 students now are enrolled in off-campus courses, Hutchison said, and the number has increased by 10 to 15 percent each year. BREWER SAID THAT any action on the The report also will be sent to the House and Senate Ways and Means committees, he said. report would have to wait until the full Legislature convened in January. Brewer said that the Ways and Means committees allocated money to Kansas universities and colleges and that the Legislature had funded $73,000 for 634 courses offered by state schools. "They're potential money makers," he said. The money taken in is two to two-and-a-half milions. Cutting funds to determine whether any course changes could be made by schools was suggested. The committee also proposed stricter definitions of lawsuits against a school with a history of suspension in course of an indictment in course of an Hutchison said that the boundaries designated by the Regents had not resulted in changes in THE BOARD OF REGENTS last week appeared specific boundaries in which each Regent was to be appointed. KU's course offerings, and that neither would any boundaries designated by the Legislature. Brewer said the post audit report recommended that a central legislative body be created that would coordinate and control offences. Brewer said he planned to coordinate programs for small communities. However, the committee was told that the Board of Regents Extension Officer, Gene Kasper, reviewed all off-campus courses offered by the universities before they began. Hutchison said that the University was careful about scheduling courses and that it made good use of them. Brewer said that universities and colleges would redesign their programs if the legislature found it necessary. *"They (the off-campus courses) are serving a* *large number of students. I just have to* *decide the best way to serve the need.* Hutchison said that the courses available at the off-campus areas served adults who were interested in being "recertified, rejuvenated, recycled, or whatever." THE COURSES OFFERED by KU are mostly See AUDITS page 5 Weather AUTUMNY There is a slight chance for rain this moon with variable winds of 10 to 18 mph. Today's high temperature should be around 72. Tonight should be clear and cold with a low near 42, according to the KU Weather Report. Friday should be mostly sunny and mild with highs in the low to mid 70's. The forecast for Saturday and Sunday will be in the low 89's and mostly sunny skies. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Carter will not testify on Libya, Billy WASHINGTON—Senate investigators decided yesterday not to question President Carter directly but instead to go through his lawyers for any more answers the White House can give on Billy Carter's Libya dealings. The special Senate subcommittee investigating the president's brother met secretly at the Capitol for about 75 minutes and agreed, without taking a vote, not to seek a personal appearance by the president, panel members void. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind, sub-s committee chairman, said there were no major questions to be answered that "demanded an eyeball-to-eyeball relationship." Instead, he said, the panel will submit questions to the White House legal office. office. Bayh and special counsel Philip Tone said White House lawyers would be asked to provide answers that could "fill in gaps" in the panel's records and clear up contradictions that may exist in previous testimony. Tone said he did not expect the responses to be of "earthshaking consequence." sequence: Meanwhile, Billy Carter met with lawyers for the Senate Judiciary panel to give a second deposition on his relationship with the Libyans, from whom he accepted a $220,000 loan. Senate allows India to purchase fuel WASHINGTON -President Carter won a major foreign policy victory yesterday when the Senate, which he had lobbed intensely over the past few days, narrowly rejected a House-passed resolution to block the sale of nuclear fuels to India. Because disapproval by both houses was needed to prevent the controversial sale, the Senate's 44-6 vote against the resolution cleared the way. The House last Thursday voted against the sale 298-98. The close vote in the Senate reflected deep differences on the issue, centering partly on India's stormy relations with the United States. Carter had made calls to senators during his two-day campaign swing urewing rejection of the resolution against the sale. The fight against the sale was led by Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, whose argument was based on legal issues concerning U.S.-Indian nuclear agreements and on grounds that it would undermine America's nuclear non-proliferation policies. Glenn charged that Carter had gone back on his 1976 campaign promise and his later stance as president on nuclear non-proliferation. Venting of Titan's fuel fumes delayed WASHINGTON—The Air Force accepted a contractor's suggestion to "do nothing" to vent fuel fumes from the damaged Titan missile immediately after it blew up in Arkansas last weekend, Air Force Secretary Hans Mark said yesterday. Testifying before the House Armed Services Committee, Mark defended the safety record of the 17-year-old missiles, and said the S2 remaining "The accident is unrelated to the age or state of this missile." Mark said. "The accident could have happened on the first day after deployment." Mark started committee members when he disclosed that the Air Force emergency team had differed with the contractors on how to deal with the situation. He said that the team was not all right. The Air Force team recommended venting fuel fumes into the atmosphere to avoid the buildup of a spontaneously combustible mixture of gaseous fuel and air in a confined space. The missile contractor urged that nothing be done immediately in the hope that the situation would stabilize by itself, Mark said. He said it still was unclear whether it was feasible to vent the fumes as suggested by the Air Force team, because the silo complex had filled rapidly. In Kansas, a team of Air Force technicians will be checking the Titan II weapons system, according to Rep. Dan Glickman. The 18 airbases sites near Wichita are expected to be checked before the Air Force completes maintenance of its airports Committee. Glickman said his group will come up with ideas about maintaining these sites. He said he was reassured during briefings with Air Force officials there that there was no immediate danger with the aging Titan II weapons system. Hazardous waste monitoring criticized WICHTA - Attorney General Robert Stephen says a state agency's plans for monitor operations at the hazardous waste disposal site near Furry Are is under investigation. Stephan said Tuesday that the Kansas Department of Health and Environment's efforts to improve air monitoring, improve security, certify independent laboratories and reduce discrepancies were not enough. He added that he more specific answers from the agency than those outlined in a letter to him. Stephan had notified the agency that an investigation indicated that the operation of the waste site was violating state regulations. Stephan said the landfill, operated by Kansas Industrial Environmental Stephan, could not be completed until KDHE had stronger control of operations. Chicago schools agree to busing plan WASHINGTON - The Justice Department and the Chicago School Board avered a massive court fight yesterday with an agreement under which the nation's third largest school system will be desegregated with minimal busing by 1981-42. The school board voted to accept the settlement at a closed meeting in Cayman after more than four months of secret negotiation with government lawyers. Instead, it outlined general principles to guide the school board in developing a constitutionally acceptable de Segregation plan. The agreement, which will carry the force of law once it is approved by a federal judge, states that racial and ethnic balance in Chicago schools is achieved through equal opportunity. It directs the school board to complete work by March 11, 1881, on a deregistration plan that meets the basic objectives of establishing the school district. Simpson expects his popularity to rise It also sets a goal of providing special educational programs at black and Hispanic schools that remain segregated. TOPEKA-John Simpson, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, said yesterday that he was not discouraged by his low standing in a recent statewide poll and that he expected his support to rise as the Nov. 4 election approaches. The poll, taken by the Topka Capital Journal between Sept. 13 and 18, showed that U.S. Sen. Bob Dole slid Simpson 61 percent to 29 percent. The poll, conducted by the newspaper by Central Research Corp. of Topeka, showed 10 percent of the 997 persons surveyed were undecided. To help boost his standing with Kansas voters, Simpson wants more joint appearances with Dole. Simpson also said he wanted to appear with Dole during the final weeks before the competition because that would help them win. Simpson and Dole have scheduled debates Oct. 12 and Oct. 14, but Simpson criticized Dole for refusing to schedule debates beyond Oct. 20. Dole's schedule is full after Oct. 20, his campaign manager, Kim Wells, said. Dole is not ruling out another joint appearance between then and the election, but he is trying to make up for the campaign time he lost while working in Washington, Wells said. Carter pledges no U.S. action in Mideast WASHINGTON—President Carter said yesterday that it was "imperative" that oil-bearing ships be allowed to pass through the Persian Gulf to the United Iran and Iraq that the United States would not interfere in their war. He said that the conflict did not change America's concern for the 52 hostages being held in Iran and that the U.S. would continue to hold the government of Iran responsible for the safety and well-being of the hostages. He also called for all nations not to interfere in the war. Carter, speaking to reporters at the White House after a meeting with his top national security advisers, said Americans need not worry about another gasoline shortage or another round price hike as a result of the oil spill. Carter said, "The world's margin of oil supply security is much better today than in the winter of 1978 and 1979 when the Iranian revolution reduced oil supplies at a time when reserve oil supplies were very low. CARTER SAID the West could get along without any oil from Iraq and there was no threat. It was warned that if either nation tried to stop ships from other major oil-producing "Hence there is no reason for the price escalation or for the price escalation that resulted in it." countries passing through the Persian Gulf, it would be a different story. The war has forced the two oil powers to suspend more than 2.5 million exported barrels a day. The industrialized world has enough oil stockpiled to avert shortages for at least six months, energy specialists said yesterday. In Paris, International Energy Agency officials said oil tankers still were loading in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates and were being brought through the strategic Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf. William Randolph, senior oil analyst at Salomon Brothers in New York, said, "With record high petroleum stocks and a world oil surplus estimated at 2.5 to 3 million barrels a day, the industrialized nations could live with a long-term cutoff from Iran and Iraq for least six months. "The war will not throw the free world into a shortage situation if the other Persian Gulf oil producers are able to export." The West and Japan have boycotted Iranian oil since April, but Iraq is a major supplier to France, Brazil, Italy and Spain. from its members indicated that the two major Iraqi oil terminals at Basra and Fao on the embattled Shatt Al-Arab waterway were still operating. The 22-nation IEA said information Iraq, the world's fourth largest oil exporter, had been loaded about 2 million barrels a day from the Shatt Al-Arab terminals. Iraq also ships up to 1 million barrels of oil to pipelines to the West, which still were operating normally, the IEA said. the IEA also said that Iran's crude experts of about 700,000 barrels a day were on the verge of extinction. ANALYSTS WARNED that a prolonged Iraqi-Iranian conflict could trigger panic buying on the spot market, where petroleum is sold to the highest bidder, and induce the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to launch a new round of price hikes. ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 U. S. oil traders said sellers were holding crude oil off the international spot market, expecting that the Persian gulf would be open again, the world oil glut and drive up prices. perialists" were working behind the scenes. Carter stressed repeatedly that the United States was not involved in the conflict despite the support of Russia, collaboration with Iraq, and Soviet allegations that 'I'm- Carter sent word to Iran privately to Pakistan Department to deny the allegations. Many of the Americans fled from the Basra region of Iraq, where Iranian warplanes have attacked a major refinery. The State Department said yesterday that many of the 700 Americans in Iraq were fleeing, but that there were no plans to order a general evacuation. Kuwait officials estimated that 1,200 refugees had arrived from Iraq by nightfall, including Americans, Britons, French, Italians, West Germans and Brazilians. About 150 were Americans. U. S. Embassy spokesman Ray Peppers said the 150 Americans who had come through and gone to College were from all the official flights arranged by their employers. He said the Americans fled Bassar south to Kuwait by all available means. None were injured, he said. He also said he had no word on four Americans reported to have been captured by Iranian forces. footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 From Grasshopper's Deli (across from Greenbriar's Del) Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTELRESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL SES SUURANCE D TOURS 900 MASS. KANSAS UNION 843-1211 TODAY! For better grades, spend less time studying. We'll show you how...free. Would you like to: Raise your grade average without long hours over texts. End all-night cramming sessions. Breeze through all your studying in as little as 1/3 the time. Have more free time to enjoy yourself. 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The 1950s were a time of Tuesday Weld and Senator Joe McCarthy, the stroll and the leather jacket. A time when everyone loved Lucy, like Keee communists, and a time of shoebe doo wop wop and do-yeh-me fallout shelters. However, today through Saturday four KU faculty members will help resurrect the decade in a conference called "America in the 50s." Most KU seniors were born in 1959, the year the 50s vanished along with Studehubs and pogo sticks. They only second-hand memories of the decade. THE CONFERENCE, which is free and open to the public, will be at the Dwight E. Elsenhower Library in Northampton where it presents the late president's 90th birthday. At the three-day conference nationally known figures including Allen Ginsberg, poet Arthur Fleming, chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and General Andrew Goodpaster, Eisenhower's White House secretary, will join panel discussions on the 50s. James Gunn, professor of English, and Robert Deksoy, assistant professor of history, will discuss science and technology in the 6s4, and journalism in the 7s3. In journalism, will join a discussion of the decade's film, music and drama. THE 1950s have been labeled falsely as irrelevant and uneventful, said Don Burt, instructor of English who helped teach the course. He also will take part in panel discussions. The title of a discussion Friday will be the *Schizophrenic Fitties: Affluence and Stress*. "For one thing, people were afraid in the 1860's." Burt said. "On college campuses, there was the fear of conformity. They had heard about suburbs where all the houses were gray flannel suits." DURING THE 50s, there was also a widespread fear of the "Red Menace," After communist takeovers in China after Korea, the fear of communism can harm China. "People were afraid there were and lurking in every closet." Burt said. One casualty of the 50s communist investigations, organized by the late Senator Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis. John Henry Pauline, a former New York radio star who will deliver a keynote on McCarthyism at the conference. "Faulk got caught in the red scare and was blacklisted," Burt said. "He lost his job and didn't return to show business until the '70s." FAULK, WHO NOW performs on the television series "Hee Haw," described his experience on McCarthy's blacklist in a book called "Fear on Trial." In the 1950s, there seemed to be a sense of never-ending plenty, said Gunn, a professor and science fiction writer. Most people who were not scientists or science fiction novelists were not interested in the genre. "The general public didn't have to deal with problems like pollution," he said. "And nuclear power was simply considered to be a cheap, safe form of energy." The social problems that were to explode during the 1960s already were simmering in the 50s. Burt said. "Both in the 50s and in the 70s," Burt said, "the atmosphere was tranquil—but unessy." THE ENGINEERING CAREER FAIR will be open to all engineering students from 1 to 4 p.m. in Allen Field. Students who are seniors meet from a. 9 to p. 1, only. TODAY William Warfield will discuss "MY LIFE IN MUSIC" at the Graduate School Tea and Talk Lecture, 3:30 p.m. in the Kansas University Jawkway hawk. Dean Collins will speak on GERMAN OPERA at the meeting of the German Club, 4:30 p.m. in 4965 Wescoe Hall. "THE ART OF THE JAPANESE SCREEN" is the subject of Yoshihiro Takahashi's *East Asian Studies Lecture,* 4.p.m. at the Spencer Museum of Art. TONIGHT A RAPE PREVENTION AND LEGALRIGHTS SEMINAR, sponsored by Phi Delta Sigma and the KU Police will be presented at 7 p.m. in Iawai. SCROMEEME will hold its regular meeting at 6.n. in 2007 Learned Hall. John Rodrick, Associated Press Bureau Chief for Peking and Tokyo, and William R. Perry, East Asian Studies Lecture, at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas University Forum Room. The "ASCENT OF MAN," sponsored by the Western Civilization Department, continues with "Hidden Structure," 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescourt Hall. The LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SEXUALITY, discussing contemporary theories of sex, will meet at the Christian Ministries center 7:48 p.m. THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Council Room. Barbara Ballard will speak. The KU Pre-Dental Club will present a seminar on "DENTISTRY AS A PROFESSION" at 8 p.m. in Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. TOMORROW The ENGINEERING CAREER FAIR will be open to all KU students from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Allen Field House. The BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 in the Sunflower Room in the Kansas Union. The KU Dance Club offers beginning INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING lessons at 7:30 p.m. and request dancing from 9 p.m. in Robinson Gymnastics. The INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN THE KAPPA UNION's Regionalist p.m. in the Kapappa Union's Regionalist SATURDAY The OBSERVATORY at 500 Lindley Hall will provide an open house at 7 p.m. SUNDAY The Association for Experiential Education will sponsor a mini-conference on "EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION IN THE ARTS" from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in Robinson Dance Studio, Room 242. Larry Day of the School of Journalism will speak on "THE CHURCH IN LATIN AMERICA: CRUCIBLE OF CHANGE," at the Fellowship Supper at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 5:30 p.m. KINKO'S CIRCLE K's weekly meeting will be in 401 Murphy Hall at 7 p.m. That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. And for dissertation copying, binding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. No braq just fact. 904 Vermont 8-8 Mon-Thur 8-6 Fri 843-8019 10-5 Sat 12-5 Sun Attention: PRE-DENTAL STUDENTS The K.U. Pre-Dental Club is sponsoring a panel discussion When: Thurs. Sept. 25 Where: The Big Eight Room of the Union Time: 8:00 pm. ON "Dentistry as a Career" Featuring... Diane Beard—Admissions Secretary, UMKC Dental School Lynn Oreskovich—KU pre-med/pre-dental Secretary Dean Robert Adams—LA and S. Advisor Dr. Mike McBride—prominent area dentist and Students from UMKC Dental School Funded by Student Song Funded by Student Senate Can't Do A Thing With Your Hair? It's Time To Consult Our Professionals! Trembling Face hair lords styling for men and women REDKEN 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 M-Sat 9-9 Sun. 12:5:30 BERNICE TODD YOUR CO. TREAS. REP. Todd for Treasurer Bill Halvorsen, Treas. Pol Ad. RETAIL LIQUOR EAGAN BARRAND ROCK!AL! WHICH WAY TO THE STADIUM? You'll find the right directions and an excellent selection of beverages for your post-game party needs at Southwest Plaza Shopping Center Located behind Hardie's and next to Safeway Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor A New Concept That's Long Overdue JANE MILLE FRESH ACTION CLASS OF 1984 P.J. McGOVERN President DAVE COPELAND Vice-President LIBBY SIMPSON Secretary DEBBIE HETTWER Treasurer VOTE SEPT. 24&25 PHOTO COUPONS IN THE LAWRENCE COUPON BOOK AND THE PEOPLE BOOK ARE ACCEPTED USE THEM 1741 Massachusetts OVERLAND PHOTO phone 811-0720 OVERLAND PHOTO phone 811-0720 OVERLAND PHOTO phone 811-0730 UNTRADITIONAL TRADITION Freshman Class Officers Treasurer: President: Vice President: Secretary: Mike Dankwerth Kim Parker Randy Sands Striving To Enhance The K.U. Traditions Karen Matthews VOTE Paid for by Untraditional Tradition Sept. 24-25 LADIES NIGHT TONIGHT is ($1.00 cover for male "non-member" guests.) Get in Free and get a coupon for TWO FREE DRINKS! GAMMONS SNOWMENS 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center FRIDAY 28th Flying Fish Recording Art JOHN HARTFORD with ALLEN WEISS Save A Buck, Last Day To Get Advanced Tickets $5.50 Still Available BAND MONDAY 29th Chrysalis Recording Artists ULTRAVOX Opening Act BROWN & LANGREHR Advanced Tickets $4.00 SATURDAY 27th Daisy Hill Dorms Night Free Adm. With Your Dorm ID Precision Rock by ALCHEMY Drink Species 8-9 $2.50 Gm. Adm. $2.00 Club Members September 30 ALLEN GINSBERG — $4.90 Tickets Avail. At Door Only October 2 ELVIN BISHOP BAND 3 & 4 THE SECRETS 29 JOHN COUAGR November Coming Events ULTRAVOX 2 SPLIT ENZ Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House Flight House Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Opinion The Kansas Board of Regents wants an extra month to consider changing its banner policy. In the meantime, the display of banners at University public events still will be a no-no. KU wants blue ribbon The KU Blue Ribbon Committee on Freedom of Speech has recommended that the Regents change the wording of the policy. The banner policy, as it is now, has been used to prohibit banners from being displayed at University public events—and it certainly has generated plenty of controversy. The Blue Ribbon committee recommended that the policy say, "Freedom of political expression on the campus should be protected subject only to the rights of the University to maintain order, assure the safety of individuals and protect property and the continuity of the educational process." On a few occasions, protesters displaying banners have been carted off to jail. Ugly confrontations between students and the KU police have marred Commencement the last two years. The Blue Ribbon committee's recommendations will go to the Council of Presidents, the chief administrators of the state's universities. COPS then will make some kind of recommendation to the Regents Legislative, By-Laws and Policy Committee. The Blue Ribbon report leaves little room for criticism, and the Regents realize that most of the University is united against the current banner policy. Acting Chancellor Del Shankel has gone on the record as saying the banner policy needs to be changed, and E. Bernard Franklin, chairman of the Board of Regents, has said the policy needs serious discussion. The Blue Ribbon report represents four months of hard work by faculty members and students. The committee's report needs prompt attention especially because people have been arrested because of the banner policy. The Regents are entitled to a month's extra time to scrutinize the Blue Ribbon Committee's recommendations. Yet the Board should not delay the matter any further. The vague banner policy has been a problem for too long. Spelling, editing blunders hurt integrity of Kansan To the editor: I can't take it anymore. Day after day, I open the Kansan, hoping to find in it some semblance of a major college newspaper. Day after day, I open the Kansan, hoping to sample of the load that KU journalism has to offer. I tell myself that the editors and reporters are under pressure, with classes to attend and tests to study for, as well as deadlines to meet. I tell myself that anyone can make a grammatical error or misspeel a word occasionally. However, you must know 18 Kansan, well, I just can't take it anymore. The front page hit me with two blatant errors, errors that anyone fancying himself or herself an editor should never have allowed to go to print. The would “doues” (as with the champagne referred to in the caption) was spelled “duces”. Common phonetic usage would seem to make that an obvious mistake. As if this weren't flagrant enough, in a headline on the same page, lawn* as in 'gunsmoke. Don't they make journalism students take English anymore? The back page of the paper gave me "hord" instead of "horde" and "anti-climatic" instead of "anti-climactic". In addition, the Royals had "four stole bases" in last night's game. What happened to these pages? The pages was scarcely better, and the editorial cartoons never warrant passing comment. Colin C. Gage Student funds support the Kansan, and rightly so. Students write and edit the Kansan, and that, too, is as it should be. But let us not forget that when people other than students read the Kansan, the impression that the paper makes can lead to many conclusions about the education provided at the Kansan. It can be taken as typical, one can hardly be faulted for concluding that someone, somewhere along the line, has not been doing the job. Lawrence graduate student An endorsement The Student Senate's recent inability to attain a quorum underpins a growing problem at KU-apathy. To help conquer this problem, students should elect representatives that truly represent the entire student body. Apathy begins in the freshman class. Because KU is a school comprised of students of many different interests and backgrounds, we feel that its student representatives ought to reflect this. Accordingly, we wish to endorse the Imagine Action Coalition for freshman class officers. Appropriately, at the head of the Imagine Action Coalition is Dave Morrison, an independent. Morrison, an Eagle Scout, is a dedicated, hard-working student who really cares about the future of student government at KU. His three years of service in student council To the editor: and expertise in government will be quite an asset to the ticket. In the Imagine Action vice-presidential slot is prep All-American Frank A. Seurer, who, in addition to being a gifted athlete, gives direction off the field as well. Keith Culter, recently elected secretary- treasurer of his pledge class, is a relative newcomer to the political scene, and represents the Greek community. Roundout out the Imagine Action Coalition is Missy Taylor, secretary, another independent. Active in debate, student council, the student newspaper and president of her city-wide youth group, Taylor is the kind of person who can get the job done. If elected, they have promised to do their best to represent the interests of the entire freshman class along with maintaining a friendly, open atmosphere conducive to student participation. Excellent tickets like this one are rare and indeed vital to breaking the cycle of apathy: You have no chance to get vaccinated cohesive coalition the chance it deserves to represent the entire freshman class at KU. Dan Pishny Wichita freshman Preachers galore To the editor: This Monday morning was much like any other. I had just finished my morning classes and was heading home to have lunch. Shortly after passing Wescoe Beach, I noticed the crowd on the lawn in front of Flint Hall. Had Jed Smok returned? No, he had been replaced by another puerveur of the Word of God. Oh well nothing else, and let her talk - freedom of speech you know. Let's talk about freedom of speech. I do not begrudge the religious zealots their right to preach, but I do wonder what the situation would be like if these people had the power to stand on the lawn of Flint Hall and air my views on drugs or -married-sex? I doubt it. Looking back on the noble achievements of the Spanish Inquisition, the Salem witch trials and the temperance movement (still a powerful force in this part of the country), I have no doubt that many of "the Reborn" who open proclaim the Love of God" would have我 stripped of many of my freedoms. These people believe in one liberty; the freedom to obey God's Word. The preachers have the right to preach, but that doesn't mean you have to listen. You can argue with them, but that is futile. You won't change their minds. You can laugh at them, but that's pretty pathetic entertainment. The most effective weapon you have is your absence. If the preachers don't have an audience, perhaps they will go a way. The next time you see one of these religious zealots, exercise your freedom to walk on by. Henry May Henry May Thermopolis, Wyo., senior The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 689-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except at Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 68585. Mail are hll for six months or $7 a year. To receive a copy of the $8 a year coupon, contact the university at (312) 764-8400 or visit the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes address to the University Duly弘昆, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Editor Career Ruler Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Market Manager Wire Editors Real Estate Manager National Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Claudien Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Tearneets Manager General Manager and News Adviser General Manager and News Adviser Cynthia Hughes David Lewis Judy Woodburn Jeff Serven Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Whitcorn Mark Spencer, Matti Arnaud Pattii Arnaud Kevin Milla Ellen Iwanato, Bob Schaad, Jennifer Robles Ellen Iwanato, Bob Schaad, Tim Treuholz Kevin Koster Nancy Clauon Bray Light Treuholz Tracey Coon Jane Wendertblom Julie Sister Brian Waskina Hank Spahr Rick Muske Chuck Winners Boalton KANSAN '80 Hurry! Hurry! We need the edge over the other guy! Life's merry-go-round spins at fair When I returned home several weekends ago, I was looking forward to getting away for a while. After all, I was returning to Hutchison—home of the state fair. Many people may wonder how a person confined to a wheelchair could enjoy such an event as the state fair. After my visit, I began to have doubts myself. If you haven't been to a fair while riding in a wheelchair, then you simply haven't lived. When my family arrived at the fair, we had to shell out about $10 just to enter the gate. The adventure had just begun. I had to be pushed about a mile just to get to the entrance. Fairground officials don't seem to believe in sidewalls. Gravel and dirt are less expensive and bummier. By the time we made it to the paved midway, I felt as if I had already been on the world's largest roller coaster. And the ride was only beginning. "Oh boy," I thought to myself. "It's time for a cool, refreshing drink." For what seemed days of traveling all over the fairgrounds viewing exhibits and displays, we finally approached a concession stand. I have difficulty drinking, so I use a straw to help slip down the drink. "We need a straw for him," my sister told the waiter. the tely eny clay raq no the dan jor 200 bys, erre ay iy toi irais, tsn nsby by "Sorry man," the waiter said. "We don't carry straws." My sister said something to the effect that we could take care of the problem. I knew what was coming. She would try to pour the drink into my mouth. My sister should have known better. I knew I should have refused, for the drink would soon be flying all over the fairgrounds. FRED MARKHAM I because I would choke. But being so thirsty, I couldn't refuse. I took the risk. Sure enough, I started choking. It was be as if Mount St. Helens had to be警觉, it attracted about as much attention as he was. Now it was time for us to try our luck at a few games. We walked up to some game where the object is to pitch a basketball into a net. My team won several times, but only last several half dollars. The fair workers felt sorry for me and handed me a large stuffed animal. I quickly turned down the offer. looking. I have always felt uneasy when I heard she offered me only because 'I am handicapped.' Then the children wanted a spin on the fair's rides. This is where I quickly stepped aside. I was never enjoyed amusement ride. This is one of them. I'm going on most of them when I was at a tender age. "This ride is much too dangerous for hand- cuffs," the workers told me "why. Why don't you try to climb." Well, one can ride the merry-go-round just so many times until he gets sick of it. The more enjoyable part of the fair for me has always been watching the people. People are by far the most interesting creatures to observe. And especially at an event such as a fair. They come from all corners of life and do the funniest things when they don't notice they are there. By the time we made it home, my brother-in-law had blisters from pushing me about 15 miles. And I had a blister on my body for riding 15 miles. By the time the children had run out of tickets, we all were ready to make the long walk, *er* in. To say the least, we all came back with empty pockets and tired bodies. But you can bet that by the time the next fair rolls around, we will be foolish enough to go again. Presidential hopefuls use debates as stage Independent candidate John Anderson garnered a little more credibility for himself. Republican Ronald Reagan avoided social blunders and further tempered his image as a conservative. Playoffs, he laying out of the "Republican Playoffs," lost no blood from his thick political skin. The generate left unanswered the question of how useful the forums are if all the candidate is required to do is recall his rehearsed answers to panel members' questions. The League of Women Voters' Sunday night at the Debates gave the three major presidential candidates a chance they ordinarily would not have had to strengthen their campaigns. Neither Anderson nor Reagan revealed any new plans to solve the nation's problems. The TED LICKTEIG MATHELY WEIRDOCK FOR LADY ONLY GOOD TIME THIS CHAIR IS NOT EMPTY. IT ONLY LOOKS THAT WAY. forum did provide an opportunity for some voters to consider Anderson's and Reagan's proposals for the first time side-by-side. For that reason, the candidates would do voters a favor by debating at least two more times, with Carter on stage beside them. Viewers of the debate should not try to determine who won. There could be no losers when each candidate was coached as thoroughly as they were before the debate. The only valid measure of the debate was the judging by a group of forensics experts that included the Kansas director of desserts Denny Parson. The game scored Anderson a arrow winner. But the matter of hearing the candidates merely repeat what they have said on the campaign trail still remains an obstacle to an open debate. Perhaps the candidates should be asked hypothetical questions that would require instantaneous responses. What would candidate Anderson do if he were president and to whom would he respond as President Reagan do if the Iraqis MIG'ed the hostages? What will President Carter do if Alaska votes to secede from the union? Decide on the union. This would enable the voters to witness the --candidates' minds in action. This format would allow candidates to plan that the candidates may have planned. As the debates are now, a pristine media image of the candidate is conveyed on the screen. Reagan has "Power Politics" and inerness black mothers baking apples and visiting their local free market businessmen in the afterworks. Anderson has a vision of a "Realistic America" with determined bureaucrats doggedly searching for the right answers to problems. Both of these images were conveyed Sunday night, and their result was Debaters 2, Viewers 0. In this sense, the debate was a one-hour advertisement for both candidates. Carter's no-show decision means that he lost an opportunity to again flaunt his factual recall ability, something he has been doing in "town meetings." To appear at the debate would have crossed his strategy of belittling Anderson and of trying to put Reagan in circumstances in which his brain would revert to a Neanderthalian stage. It would be to Carter's advantage to appear with Reagan in as many debates as possible. The percentage of Reagan bumbleballs would only increase with each debate. He could refute most, if not all, of Anderson's major propositions with a barrage of facts. Anderson's 50-cent a gallon gasoline tax could be said to be unnecessary after a series of gasoline usage figures were given by Carter, and the results were most of what Anderson favors regarding taxes. After all, if President Gerald Ford could say in debate in 1976 that Poland is an autonomous nation, who knows what Ronald Reagan might save? Carter's "meek, humble Jimmy" image also would be restored after the president's outcrawl 1 By now, it should be clear to the League that its debates are being exploited by the candidates for their political gain. The debates' purpose of informing the public results in redundancies of the candidate for the League should seriously consider dropping the debates or drastically changing their format. the tely eny day na the an gor 200 bs. ier- ere ay ho toi ira sid ns by in e s I i s n n e. so e r s t y the he is, in s. 15 ity be University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Page 5 From page one Audits upper-division courses for students interested in obtaining masters degrees, he said. Gary Thompson, assistant registrar, said that degrees in business administration, social welfare, chemical engineering, education, urban planning and computer science were available through off-campus programs. Most of KU's off-campus courses are taught at the Regents Center, Hutchison said, but there are also specialty courses taught in Topeka and Wichita. He said courses also were taught at Leavenworth Penitentiary and at the Command and General Staff College at Ft. Leavenworth. The courses available are wide-ranging. Hutchison said, from architecture to engineering, social welfare to education. Besides duplication of courses, the report examined facilities for off-campus students and staff. Hutchison said that KU was aware of the needs of the off-campus students and was trying to satisfy those needs by building a library at the Regeens Center. The report also was concerned with insuring the quality of education off-campus as was good. All faculty members who teach off-campus courses also teach at the Lawrence campus, he He said that the library was in the planning stages and that a proposal would be ready early next month. Conflict From page one THE SOVET UNION. Iraq's major supplier of arms, said it would remain neutral in the conflict and urged both sides to show "restraint and common sense." But a commentary in the Communist Party daily newspaper, Pravda, took a swipe at the United States. "Imperialism . . . is doing its utmost to regain its positions in the Persian Gulf. It is not by chance that the U.S.A. is stepping up military preparations in the area." Pravda said. departments in the area. Flavio said. In Tehran, the Iranian Parliament, which on Tuesday said it was freezing its debate on the 52 American hostages for the duration of the crisis, met in secret session to hear the latest battle recoats. President Abolassan Bani-Sadr also met with the Libyan and Syrian ambassadors, creating speculation that Iran, hampered by a Western arms boycott, would seek their military help. Syria and Libya recently announced a merger which diplomats at the time took to be directed against Iraq. Syria's arch-rival for leadership in the Arab world. New pipe organ lends chapel musical appeal By REBECCA CHANEY Staff Reporter Complementing the traditional atmosphere and rich woodwork of Danforth Chapel, an oak pipe organ is filling the tiny chapel on Lilac Lake with baroque music. The organ was installed last last spring, replacing a small, obsolete, electric Hammer. FUNDS FOR THE organ were donated two years ago by Arthur R. and Eileen Burkhardt Malty, Lee's Summit, Mo., to the KU Endowment Association. The unrestricted gift of $10,000 was the largest contribution ever made to the university's annual General University Fund malting. Modeled after early barque instruments, the new organ was called a "terrific investment" for the University by Robert J. Pipe and for Reuter Pipe Organ Company of Lawrence. The Maltyby gift was designated for the organ in 1979. "This organ will probably last in excess of three hours," she said. "The only thatps that can wear out is the blower's." The blower is the only electrical part of the organ. Its function is to supply air to the pipe. Vaughan designed the organ and Reuter custom-built it for the chapel for $10,000. THE ORGAN IS operated by "tracker action," which means the sound is manually and mechanically controlled by the organist rather than by electrical means. "Organists like the feel of opening pipes directly," explained Vaughan, "just like race car drivers like the power of rack-and-pinion systems in the feel steering where they can't feel the road. "There is more opportunity for nuances of expression in the attack and release of Vaughan said there was historical significance in the construction of the instrument. The colors of the keys, unlike modern pianos, are reversed like those of a harpschorst in the European tradition, with white keys on black and red keys in wood. The organ box and pipes are enclosed in a case similar to a bandshell to direct the sound. The organ has only two sets of pipes, each of which yields a different quality of sound. Thus, for 56 keys there are a total of 112 pipes and the set may be used singly or blended together. By comparison, the organ in Swarthout Recital Hall has 72 sets of pipes. Car dealer to fight city complaint A Lawrence automobile dealer says he will fight a city complaint filed against him in Municipal Court for failing to remove an extra sign. The complaint was filed Wednesday. In January, commissioners denied a variance request from Hopkins and ordered him to Bob Hopkins, owner of Bob Hopkins Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, said the city ordinance limiting the size and number of outdoor signs was unconstitutional. "I feel that the sign ordinance is arbitrary," Hopkins said. "It does not really accomplish that much from an esthetic standpoint." Tuesday night, Hopkins asked for city approval of a site plan for a Subaru dealership next to his business. Commissioner Barkley Clark and other commissioners said they considered voting against the site plan because Hopkins had been charged with the sign ordinance, which was passed in 1975. "I think it was extremely manic to use the insults, partly to try to tie it with the mission," Hope said. Hopkins is the first person to be taken to court over the sign ordinance. The case will be heard in Municipal Court on Oct. 9. THURSDAY SPECIAL Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $1.70 $5.40 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.50 $6.65 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery!! Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) We Pile It On! ILLUSION Tonight only - Dorm Night free beer to all dorm I.D. and class card holders 7:00-9:00 PM MISTER GUY Tonight, Friday and Saturday G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa, Below J. Watson's PLAIN JANE Next Week . . . Johny & Janet Jamison ROCK ROLL fall '80 in clothes from Mister Guy for him and her ... perfect for those football weekends... free beer on all home football games... hours: M-T-W-F-Sat.-10-6 Th.-10-9 Sun.-1-5 MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts Thank You Student Season Ticket Holders For Supporting Your Jayhawks In 1980! KU Gives You Four Super Remaining Home Games! Coach Don Fambrough and the 1980 Football Squad express their grateful appreciation TO YOU for your vital support Sept. 27 Louisville Oct. 11 Nebraska Oct. 18 Iowa State Nov. 8 Oklahoma IT'S THE SHORT BURST FOR SIX AND THE LONG, LONG PASS. ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK! YOU ARE WANTED IN MEMORIAL STADIUM: Student Season Tickets are still available THIS WEEK at the following: KU SUA—Kansas Union Satellite Union SUA-KU Med Center Athletic Ticket Office-Allen Field House Page 6 University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Professors criticize 'Shogun' ByJENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter the five-part TV series "Shogun" may have drawn 75 million viewers, but some KU professors were not enthusiastic about the series, calling it an *objection*. Four KU professors held an informal discussion of the program last night at the Kansas Union. The story, about the fictional John Blackthorne, an Englishman who is shipwrecked and rescued off the coast of Japan in the 1600's, perpetuates Western stereotypes about Japan, said Stephen Bracken, a specialist and professor of history. "I have not read the book," Goodman said, "and after seeing the TV program, I never intend to." Goodman also complained that the film portrayed Asians as wise and inscrutable, spouting Confucius-like saxiness. syings. Andrew Tsubaki, a professor of Theater and East Asian Languages and a native of Japan, said he didn't know why everyone was so upset about the movie. "Things come and things go," Tsubaki said. "Life is too short to get upset about it." Kimiko Yamamoto, East Asian Languages professor, complained that blackthorne's Japanese girlfriend has been the live bear of the freedom she enjoyed in the movie. She was especially upset by a scence where the woman enters the room and she looks at her. "I kept expecting her to say, 'Don't worry about the travelers' checks,' " she said. Several of the professors complained about the film's excessive violence, including a scene in which a man commits ritual suicide. One professor thought the movie was an unrealistic portrayal of Japanese One man in the audience suggested that although there were stereotypes in the film, most Westerners needed to be shown the differences between the cultures. "I think it was an entertainment event and I am more to be than that," Taakai said. "I'm thankful that the Japanese side was fairly carefully treated," he said. Lawrence shops have not been overwhelmed by requests for kimonos, oriental tea or Japanese foods as a result of the movie. But one businessman is trying to capitalize on the movie's popularity by advertising a "Shogun Special" ebl, Japanese for tiger prawns. Claiming the prawns are typical of the period portrayed in "Shogun," Michael Caron, owner of a seafood market on Iowa Street, has been offering the prawns for about 95 cents a piece. Caron also sells tempura mix and suggests dried seaweed or dried barracuda for a genuine Japanese flavor. Two juveniles, one 16 and one 17, were being detained yesterday in connection with the Tuesday attack on 101 W. Sixth St., Lawrence police said. The two were being held in the juvenile detention area of the Douglas County Jail and will have their initial court appearances today, Dennis McFall, Douglas County juvenile prosecutor, said yesterday. The two were apprehended by Lawrence police yesterday at 12:05 a.m. near 12th and Tennessee streets, five minutes after they allegedly took $260 in cash from Taco John's, police said. According to police, the two waited in the restaurant until they and two employees were the only people left in the building. Police said the youths then jumped over the restaurant's counter, one of them brandishing a knife, and entered the money from the cash register. On the Record One of the employees ran to the back of the restaurant but was grabbed and brought back to the counter by one of the youths, police said. The other employee opened the cash register and the youths took all of the paper money, police said. According to police, the two youths then took the employees to a back room and told them to stay there. Police said the employees called police immediately after they heard the youths leave. TWO STATE fire inspectors investigated alleged fire code violations yesterday on the fourth floor of Bailey House, where a fire fire inspection officer, said yesterday. The investigation was prompted by a letter that was sent last week to Lawrence Fire Department Chief Jim McSoulin. The writer asked not to be. McSwain said he sent a copy of the letter to the state fire marshall's office in Topeka because Bailey Hall is a university building and is inspected by the state office. The letter alleges that fourth floor closets "are filled with old papers and wooden frames with naphthalarm manner on wooden floors and nests next to exposed wood framing." It also said that "at least two of the fire exits are partially blocked with office equipment," and that "fire escapes are located in rooms that are often locked during posted occupancy hours." The two inspectors told Markley that they found the allegations in the letter to be mostly correct and that they file a report on Monday, Markley said. According to Ed Redmond, state fire marshall, an order could be issued demanding that the violations be corrected. If they are not, he said, Bailey could be issued a cease and desist order prohibiting the use of the building until it meets fire safety standards. شاهراق شاه ریختی و SVA FILMS (1972) Thursday, Sept. 25 Sambizanga Friday, Sept. 26 Alien Filmed during actual histories in Angola, Sambizenga overcomes obstacles and realism. The story of a black woman searching or her husband lost in a maze of problems in a fine film... a revolutionary picture." Nina Sayre, the New York Times, (102 The crew of a commercial ship, the Nostromo, are awakened by a distress signal ... by the time they realize it was an attack on their creature has invaded them, it is too late. Ridley Scott's film is a masterpiece of horror. With Sigourney Weaver. Toskent Plus: "Birth of a Nation; notorious," (1247 m.) Color: 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 (1979) Saturday, Sept. 27 Alien 3:30,7:00,9:30. Sunday, Sept. 28 Interiors Woody Allen's foray into serious filmmaking is the story of three sisters (Margaret Griffith) who are shocked when their father announces he is leaving them embrassed mother for a lively, wivacious new life. He then becomes by inger Bergman, Allen's film is nevertheless a very personal, insightful work. 2:00. (79 min.) 9:15 min. Color. Zoon. Monday, Sept. 29 Ryan's Daughter A lavish love story set in Ireland. A young married woman (Sarah Miles) wants to leave her quiet school teacher hush-hush, to become a Christopher Jones). John Mills and cinematographer Freddie Woley won Ocares; director David Lean (192 min). Color: 7:30. Unless otherwise noted, all film will be shown at Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Weekday films are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $2.00; weekly films available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th level. Information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. The true story that has captivated over 8,000,000 readers. LIMITED ENGAGE THE HIDING PLACE PG Starring JULIE HARRISE EILEEN HECKART ARTHUR O' CONNELL Introducing JEANNETTE CLIFT A World War II Memorial in Tonite, 7 pm Kansas Union Jayhawk Room Admission Free Maranatha Ministries KU Football Mum Corsages $3.75 Flower Shoppe Open 9:30 Mon Sat 1101 Mass. 841 0800 العالم الأجنبي = الله تخفيض التكلفة العادية - - من خلال الميزان - النفقات غير المكتوبة، تخفيض التكلفة العادية - الإيرادات غير مكتوبة، تخفيض التكلفة العادية - بين المجموعة النقدية المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي الجميع من المجموعة النقدية المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضو Council Room البند الرابع المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند الخامس المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند السادس المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند 第八م المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison بين المجموعة النقدية المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوية البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضوي البنك العمري للنقد والدفعات المالية المحددة في النظام الاجتماعي - عضو Council Room البند 第九م المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند 第十م المطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند 第十一م Mطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند الث十二م Mطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند الث十三م Mطلوب لاستكمال التطبيق Ulison البند الث十四م Mطلوب لاستimmung الطرح ! يُرجى إضافة القيمة المطلوبة على السطر 1. القانون النظري - - بالصفة september savings spree! UP TO 30° OFF FOR 10 DAYS ONLY DENIMS reg. to 31.00...19.99 PANTS reg. to 30.00...19.99 SWEATERS reg. to 35.00...13.99 - 25.99 DRESSES reg. to 60.00...19.99 - 39.99 SKIRTS reg. to 30.00...19.99 - 29.99 SAVE UNTIL SEPT.28 then items return to regular price carouse 10-6 30 Mon - Thurs 10.6 00 Fri - Sat 1-5 Sun Malls Shopping Center 711 W. 23rd 842-7409 CAROUSEL CHARGE VISA master charge master charge no charge and We style to fit yo We style your hair... to fit your fashion GO At Gentleman's Quarers we offer personalized service to assure each of our customers a hair style that will complement their own "fashion." Call for your appointment soon. GENTLEMAN'S QUARTERS 611 W. 9th IN A BENEFIT FOR DanWatkins CANDIDATE FOR 3RD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT 843-2138 Off the Wall Hall PRESENTS the Rockabilly & Country Sounds of Worm Branch Warlons IN A BENEFIT FOR DanWatkins CANDIDATE FOR 3RD CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26 • 8:30pm MINIMUM DONATION: $15.00 TICKETS AT THE DOOR OR AT WARNINS HEADQUARTERS, HOLIDAY PLAZA OR CALL 841-9292 737 New Hampshire BARBARA BALLARD New coordinator for ETWRCC will speak to the COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN at 7:30, Sept. 25, 1980 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. All are welcome to attend. Funded by Student Activity Fee. University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Page 7 MCI offers lower long-distance rates By STEVE BASKA Staff Reporter A long-distance telephone service operated by the MCI Telecommunications Corporation, which advertises lower rates than telephone and telegraph Co., could be available in Lawrence next year. The service now is operating in the Kansas City area and in Wichita and its suburbs. Topeka will be added to the MCI system within six months and Lawrence will be considered for addition after that, said Gary Tobin, director of marketing, advertising and public relations for the company, which is based in Washington, D.C. "We've had a lot of requests from Lawrence," Tobin said. "Extension of the service (to Lawrence) will be studied beginning in April." THE MCI SERVICE is extended only to towns that have enough long-distance calling for MCI to make a call. The coverage will be evaluated on that basis. MCI advertises substantial savings for its customers compared with the rates charged by Southwestern Bell for long-distance calls. Nancy Smith, MCI sales representative in Kansas City, Mo.'s said lower rates were possible because MCI charged by the half-price rate for a minimum on each call, offered direct dealings and did not employ operators. "Our rates are lower by 20 to 40 percent during the day and 40 to 60 percent at night," Smith said. "The system is used on any push button phone." To complete long distance calls, Southwestern Bell uses AT&T long distance cables and MCI uses long distance Boat companies charge rates based on the distance. Calls over shorter distances cost less than longer distances. MCI bills to the closest half-minute. Bell bills to the closest minute on direct dialed calls, and on extended dialed calls after the first three minutes. Comparing evening rates, a one minute call from Kansas City, Mo. to Columbus, Ohio, costs 34 cents on the Bell system and 13 cents on the MCI system. A 13 minute call from Kansas City to Los Angeles costs $17.99 for the Bell rate, $1.79 at the MCI rate. PAULI KNIGHT, manager of Southwestern Bell's Resident Service Center in Lawrence, said that Bell's business probably would not be hurt if MCI services come to Lawrence "We offer the lowest rates possible," she said. "The percent increase in recent years has been very minimal for long distance calling, and we are committed to serve all the people." Bell serves city and rural areas. It averages long distance charges so that city and rural customers pay an equal rate based on distance. MCI serves a high metropolitan areas with a high number of calls are made. The MCI service is available to residences and businesses. Customers pay a monthly fee and a charge for each call. Residents can get a $1 a month service that allows evening, weekend and holiday calling, or a $10 per month service that offers calling 24 hours a day. MARLYN ESHELMAN, MCI sales supervisor in Kansas City, Mo., said that there was no charge for starting or stopping the service. He added that customers were billed for their time and that a system for 5 to 10 days on a trial basis. MCI's only business is the long-distance service. It is available in 75 metropolitan areas and 2,000 cities in the United States. The company continues to add cities to its system and builds microwave towers about 30 miles apart to extend the service from one city to the next. Tobin said that because Lawrence was close to Kansas City and Topahe, the existing tower paths were added to add the service to Lawrence. MCI began operating in 1969. It uses local Bell systems for its customers to call out to MCI companies on some areas, uses AT&T cables, and MCI pays Bell $4 million annually for use of its systems. Med Center to receive health sciences library Plans to build a $5 million health sciences library at the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., were announced Friday by the Kansas Board of Regents. Designed by the Wichita architectural firm of Thomas, Harris, Ash and Mason, the two-story, redbrick building will contain all of the college's library books except the ones of college and education resources collections. Those books will remain in the cramped facilities in Robinson Hall on the Kansas City, Kan., campus. Three floors of the hall are library space and other areas containing the University of Kansas Medical Center's surgical area for children. "We've needed more space for the library for a long time," said Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning. "What really held us up was the funding for such a large project." Most of the money for the project was appropriated by the 1979 Kansas Legislature, which stipulated that $1 million be covered by revenue bonds. An additional $250,000 will come from private, anonymous sources. The plan's approval Friday enabled architects to prepare construction drawings needed to offer the project for bids. Wiederhled said the bidding and sale of revenue bonds to finance part of the project would be completed next spring. The building will be ready for occupancy by early 1983. The new library will be on University property on the northwest of campus. City campus Wiechecht said the new library would be an "open concept." Using this concept, book stacks are mingled with study areas to allow students studying to be near the books. A similar concept was followed by the designers of the KU library and in the renovation of Watson Library on the Lawrence campus. The health sciences library will have seating for more than 700 people in small group study areas, reading lounges and study carvers. The design provides for three additional floors if expansion becomes necessary. State Senator ARNOLD BERMAN During this election year we candidates will ask for votes and from us will be demanded our vision. Your votes is precious and you have every right to demand from those seeking public office a legislator who is not isolated from his constituents, but who feels their pain and shares their dreams, and from them takes his strength and wisdom and courage. ALFREDO D'ORIENTO A Record...Not A Promise PBL AXV. Paid for by Committee to Reselect Arnold Berman, Marcia C. Foster, Treasure 749-1615 FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICER ELECTIONS September 24, 25, 1980 Vote Today (8:30-4:30) - Wescoe 4th Floor West End - Jayhawk Blvd. Information Booth - Satellite Union-Second Level - Kansas Union-Fourth Level, Lobby Vote Tonight (5:00-7:30) - Delta Chi Fraternity - Corbin - Naismith Hall - Sigma Chi Fraternity Paid for by Activity Fee September 22-25 10:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. VOTER REGISTRATION In front of Wescoe and in the Student Senate Office, B105, Kansas Union This advertisement funded in part by Student Activity Fee Registration sponsored by A.S.K. and BALSA Professionals + $ = energy There's only one equation that will solve the nation's energy crisis . . . and that's to combine talented and concerned people, provide capital to get the job done and then set demand but realistic goals. and that's to combine tater concerned people, provide ca get the job done and then set demanding but realistic goals That's what we're trying to do at Cities Service, a diversified natural resources company. Our professional requirements include most disciplines applied from discovery to market, computing to research. We have opportunities, not only in this country but abroad If this sounds like your kind of challenge, learn more by making an appointment with our college representa tive through your placement office. talented and de capital to nen set c goals g to do Our events es y to y in ad. ur nrn p- or write: College Relations Manager Cities Service Company Box 300 Tulsa. OK. 74102 October 7,8,9,14 & 15 We will interview on your campus... October 7.8.9.14 & 15 Cities Service Company an equal opportunity employer Basic and Refreshing Wrap yourself in style. Crazy Horse gives you a front wrap skirt in navy or khaki. 100% cotton for comfort and easy care. $25.00 Clothes Encounter Holiday Plaza 843-5335 25th & lows Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 AEC adapts to new director, location By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter After 16 years of helping foreign students adjust to language and cultural differences in the United States, KU's Applied English Center is making some adoptions of its own this semester. The center, which is run as a department of the College of Liberal Arts or as a faculty department. English to foreign students and others whose first language is not English. It also is responsible for screening all foreign students to make sure they are proficient in English before they enroll in regular KU courses. THIS SEMESTER, the AEC is going through a period of transition with a new director and a new office location. Elizabeth Soppele, professor of English and sociology, became director in August. She came to KU from Ohio State University, where she had been a graduate school student since 1980, a program designed to teach English to foreign students. Before that, Soppela worked in an adult education program in New York. She also has taught English near the Gulf of Guinea on Africa's Ivory Coast as a member of the Peace Corps. The AEC's offices have been moved off campus to a house at 1400 Louisiana St. Last semester, the center was in Blake Hall Annex, but that building is occupied by architecture students who are moving the renovation of Marvin Hall. According to Soppeils, all AEC courses are being taught in Fraser Hall, Blake Anne or Wescoe Hall, and the location has not posed a big problem. "However, our foreign students don't drop in as much as we'd like them to," she said. "They only contact is with their teachers on campus." According to University rules, the AEC must determine the level of English proficiency of all foreign students and specify what, if any, courses they are required to take at the center. STUDENTS WHO SCORE 500 or above on the AEC's standardized English test, may bypass the AEC and enroll in regular classes. Their scores below 500 are placed at an appropriate level in the AEC, she said. AEC courses are divided into four levels, she said. Students at the first two levels must be enrolled full-time at the center, while those in the upper two levels may take a combination of AEC and KU courses, she said. This semester, the center has about 270 students, 60 percent of whom are foreigners. The center is one of five colleges with a Although she has heard no specific complaints about the AEC since she arrived, Sopplea said she was aware of the issues and was informed with the way the center was operated. One of the major objections heard during the past few years was that students received no college credit for the courses they took at the AEC. More often, some students considered their AEC classes a waste of time, she said. Some universities offer college credit for the highest level of English proficiency courses, Soppsela said. However, if a student at the lower levels of the AEC received credit for the courses, the number of electives he would need for graduation would be greatly reduced. Also, a university is perfectly justified in expecting a student to be proficient in English before he begins earning credit for college courses, she said. One alternative is to allow AEC students to substitute their English hours for required hours of a foreign language, she said. "Some schools here at KU may remove the foreign language requirement for a foreign student whose native language is not English," Soppelsa said. "In other words, they will never be already known a foreign language." Foreign students also have said that some teachers at the AEC are SMIT VAJARANANT, president of the Thai Students Association, said he had heard many foreign students complain about AEC teachers who "can't really communicate with the students." According to a Japanese student who has been taking AEC courses for three semesters, "Some of the teachers are good, and others are bad. I get the feeling that some of them don't have a willingness to teach." The instructors at the AEC are teaching assistants who are hired for a training position. The TA's may be graduate students in any subject, but most of them are undergraduates. education or a foreign language, she said. Instructors are hired on the basis of their previous experience in teaching English as a second language, and many of them have had contact with foreign students and cultures, she said. They also are required to take an upward course of study in foreign methods of teaching English to foreign speakers, she said. AEC administrators observe the center's classes and evaluate the TA's at the end of each semester, Soppelsa said. Students also should be able to evaluate their teachers, but in the case of the AEC, student evaluations need to be professional, not professional professional teacher-trainers, she said. "I think we do need to take into account what the foreign students think a teacher should be," Soppela said. "On the other hand, their cultural attitudes about teaching methods often are very different from our own, and they may criticize things that Americans wouldn't even notice." Soppelsa said she wanted all students to feel comfortable in coming to the AEC. Only new foreign students are sent to the AEC, while there may be other students on campus who need more work in English, she said. BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COIN Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm 731 New Hampshire STOP RAPE! Protect Yourself Attend the Rape Prevention & Legal Rights Seminar Presented by: KU Police Dept. Thurs., Sept. 25th 7:00 p.m. in the Lewis Hall cafeteria Sponsored by Sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. MIDNITE DELITE Fri. & Sat. at Midnite THE HOTTEST UNCUT GAME IN TOWN BALL GAME MUST BE 18 OR OLDER Varsity Downtown 843-1085 ViN Meisner Milstead Liquor Featureting one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you' 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza EX-PETTY OFFICER CHOOSES AFROTC As a Navy enlisted man, I came to like the unique benefits of military life, I decided, after 4 years active duty, to continue my association with the armed services. My ultimate choice of Air Force BOTC allowed me to maximize the benefits, get a commission, be guaranteed a job, get on-the-job training and experience, and retire in 16 years. All this and more. Oh yeah, while I'm working on my degree, I'm getting an extra $100 per month in addition to my G.I. benefits. I think Air Force ROTC is a very good deal. Robert Colburn, KU Senior FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: AFROTC 108 Military Science Phone 864-4676 ROTC AIR FORCE Gateway to a great way of life TURKISH TRUMPET MUSIC Jazz Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club Friday Saturday The Jim Stringer Band Henry Cuesta $3.00 Cover for your entire group, bring 1 or 100 After Midnight—the Straight Note Chasers Henry Cuesta from the Lawrence Welk Show Don't Miss It!! After Midnight—Jim Stringer Come Hungry!!! Pursue the sea as a Surface Warfare Officer, Aircraft Carrier Pilot, Submarine Diving Officer, Nuclear Power Officer, Aviation Maintenance Officer, or a U.S. Marine Corps Officer. You will get a world tour. Take advantage of 2 years of paid tuition and a global voyage. If you are a sophomore at The University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Chief of Naval Education and Training will even include $100.00 a month Spending Money that's TAX FREE. When you graduate, you will have a job in the Fleet. Could the Navy interest you in 2 years of paid tuition and a world tour? Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC). Take paid tuition, spending money, and a job that gives you a world cruise. That is Navy ROTC. AZUKI MOTOBECANE FRANCE SR Mick's Bicycle Shop 1339 Massachusetts ZP More than Just a Hair Salon Prime Cut Hair Co. This coupon entitles you to a **free** dry wind with haircut, now through September 30. We honor coupons from other Lawrence salons. Offering superior hair care and products. Where a haircut is only $8.00. Shampoo **free** with all services. Call or come by. 14th and Massachusetts M-Thurs, 8-8 Friday 8-5 841-4488 Saturday 9:30 Holiday Flights Are Filling Fast! Make Your Reservations TODAY! "There is no extra charge when you buy your airline tickets at Maupintour." Maupintour travel service K. U. Union or 900 Massachusetts 843-1211 A Different Kind of Store KRAZY KARL'S INTRODUCING ★ ORIGINAL SILK SCREEN T-SHIRTS ★ FREE LOGO T-SHIRT WITH EVERY PURCHASE (opening week only) - PLUS MACRAME HANGING TABLES, PLANT HANGERS, SUSPENDERS, AND GLASS MOBILES OPEN 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Located at 15 east 8 st. OPENING SEPT. 29 Daredevils to perform in concert The Ozark Mountain Daredevil, a pop-rock group with a country and bluegrass sound, will present this year's homecoming concert Saturay. Oct. 10. The special guest star for the 7 p.m. show in Hoch Auditorium will be David Frue, political satirist. All tickets for the show will go on sale at 9 a.m. Oct. 1 in the SUA ticket office. Reserved tickets will cost $7 and $$. Students with KU IDs can buy tickets for $5.00 and $7.50. The Daredevils are natives of the Missouri Ozarks. The group is known for the songs, "If You Want To Get to Heaven" and "Jackie Blue." "I think they will be received well here." Divine said. The SUA Special Events committee has been trying to schedule the group for the past two years, according to the past year. The SUA Special Events chairman. In a survey by the committee two years ago, students were asked which groups they would like to come to campus, and the Ozark Mountain Daredevils ranked 20th of 195 groups listed. Frye is a comedian and is well known for his impressions of Jimmy and Billy Carter, former President Richard M. Nixon and other personalities. LSAT CPA • MCAT • GRE GRE PSCH • GREDIO GMAT • DAT • OCAT • PCAT VAT • MAT • SAT NAT'L MED BDS ECFGM • FLEX • VQE NDB • NPB I • NLE Stanley-H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information, Please Call: 913-341-1220 ...ing PAT BOONE as David Wilkerson the CROSS and SWITCHBLADE Never has a motion picture been more timely! GP Directed by Produced by DON MURRAY DICK ROSS Friday, Sep 26 7 p.m. Kansas Union Jayhawk Room Admission free Maranatha Ministries P THE BEST FARM FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 Smokey and The Bandit Part II 7:30 & 9:30 PE Varsity Downtown 843-1065 The Big Red One 7:30 & 9:35 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 special edition Close Encounters 7 15 & 9 25 2 Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 3 Fame 7:20 & 9:20 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400 1 Being There 7:20 & 9:30 2 Gone with the wind 7:39 only Scorecard University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Page 9 Sports Calendar 25 — Women's golf team at Iowa State Invitational in Ames, Iowa. — Men's basketball teams at Beaverfield game at Guelph Field 26 — Women's golf at Iowa State Invitational in Ames, Iowa m. a. = Volleyball at fourier b. m. a. = Soccer at fourier c. m. a. = Men's cross-country at Lafayette Country Out Rolls-Royce at Roles-Royce d. m. a. = Military at Roles-Royce 27 Sports Quiz 10 a.m.—Women's cross-country at Lawrence Country Club 10 a.m. — Rugby vs. Kansas City immortals RFC at 23rd and Iowa 1:30 p.m.—Kansas football vs. Louisville Cardinals at Memorial Stadium (KANU- Q in the past three seasons, the Kansas football team has won a total of seven games. Three of those victories have come in the third game of the 1977, 1978 and 1979 seasons. Who have won these games in each season, the season, been against? Where have the games been played? Ferney's anecdies is the second KU football captain of the 20th Dr. Ferry Academy to assume the head coaching reins for his alma mater. The other was Ad Lindsey who captained the 1916 team and later coached for seven years during the depression. A | | W | L | Pct. | Pet. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | x-Kansas City | 92 | 61 | 581 | .601 | -- | | Oakland | 78 | 71 | 510 | .430 | -- | | Chicago | 71 | 81 | 460 | .404 | 20¹ | | Minnesota | 61 | 82 | 467 | .404 | 20¹ | | California | 64 | 92 | 434 | .403 | -- | | Boston | 62 | 98 | 434 | .403 | 20¹ | | Seattle | 57 | 96 | 433 | .402 | 20¹ | | | W | L | Pct. | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 86 | 54 | .645 | - | Baltimore | 98 | 54 | .612 | - | Milwaukee | 82 | 72 | .532 | 17 | | Boston | 72 | 72 | .530 | 17 | | Detroit | 79 | 70 | .538 | 17 | | Cleveland | 74 | 77 | .531 | 20 | | Toronto | 74 | 77 | .490 | 23 | | Toronto | 64 | 88 | .421 | 34 | Major-league Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore 12, Boston 9 Baltimore 13, San Diego 6 Dortmund 8, Toronto 7, 10 innings Milwaukee, California 0 Washington 6, Philadelphia 0 Oakland 7, Chicago 1 London 6, New York 1 Cleveland (Walts 14-12) at New York (Perry Chicago (Baskett 21-11) at Oakland (Kough 16-13), 9:30 p.m. Texas (Kauer 6-10) at Seattle (Dressler 3-1), 9:35 W W L Pct. GB Montreal 88 68 561 Philadelphia 88 68 561 Pittsburgh 80 73 548 St. Louis 80 73 548 New York 62 85 414 New York 62 85 414 W 8 L Fcct GB Houston W 62 566 Los Angeles W 62 366 Cincinnati 84 73 349 Chicago 79 61 349 San Francisco 79 83 407 Denver 71 61 47 New York 71 61 47 Pittsburgh 6, St Louis 1 Philadelphia 1, New York 0, 10 innings Atlanta 4, Houston 7 California 6, San Francisco 6, 10 innings Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 4, 12 innings NATIONAL LEAGUE Montreal (Gullickson 9-4) at Chicago (McGillion 10/13) 1:30 p.m. .400 season in jeopardy as Brett's swing fades Cincinnati (Moskau 9-7) at San Diego (Wise 6-8). San Francisco (Whitson 10-11) at Los Angeles (Houston 13.2) 3 p.m. St. Louis (Kaat 7-7) at Pittsburgh (Robinson 6-9), 6-35 n.m SEATTLE—George Brett's hopes for a 401 season fell last night when Seattle pitcher Rick Honeycutt led the Kansas City Royals to a victory over the Kansas City Royals. New York (Zachry 6-10) at Philadelphia (Bystrom 3-0) 6:35 p.m. Brett was 4-for-3 with a walk to drop in the game to .389 with nine games left in the league. Houston (Ryan 9-9) at Atlanta (Boggs 10-9), 6:35 He was 2-for-11 in the three-game Seattle series, swent by the Mariners. If Brett can average four at-bats a game, he will have to hit 19-for-36 to reach 400. The final games are six against Minnesota and three against Seattle. Brett, however, is well on his way to winning the American League batting title. KANAS CITY manager Jim Frey had little to say. He sherged off the entire Suiteware team, and the Royals were not playing as well as they did last month. The Royals were 20 ahead of the pack in the AL West late in August. By United Press International Mike Parrer pitched the ninth inning to record his third save. Kansas City starter Paul Splittorff, 13-11, was the loser. "It must be hard for them to win the A West test so early and keep their minds sharp." Honeycutt, 10-17, said what Frey probably preferred only to think. KANSAS CITY is now 2-4 since closed. The Braves have dropped six games. The Royals have dropped five. 2. bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. 3. home office. Seasonally required. Call 866-745-7011 or www.usamart.com. New and contemporary. 2-level duplex. kitchen, dining room. living room. 2 full bath, garage. central air. No pets. For more information call 492-445-8. 8 a.m.-5 p. 9-10. 8 bdm townhouse, on KU bus route, across from swimming pool and tennis court. The lastplace Mariners, however, have won four straight. That has elated nationals and the Cats. 3. bdm, townhouse with burning fireplaces Will take 3 students 2500 ft 849-733-233 849-733-234 bdmr carpet, carpet, parking, appliances Beautiful housing, landscaping. $100,000. Payment: $200,000, $200,000, a month, all balances paid; $100 deposit, no pets. 800 Ohio. Call 843-244-908, 8-5 ask for In the American League East, first-place New York and second-place Baltimore both won. The Yankees beat the Rangers 10-9 in the Orioles beat the Boston Red Sox 12-9. KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished • KUMC built-in housing • beautiful housing! C13-938-257-10 5 The University Daily New York leads by five games with nine games to play. KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten three four five six seven eight nine ten 1 word fewer 2 word fewer 3 word fewer 4 word fewer 5 word fewer 6 word fewer 7 word fewer 8 word fewer 9 word fewer additional words AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanansa will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or electronically by calling the Kansas Business office at 843-6588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT Want to learn more about the Bible of fellow Christians? Study, listen, eat. Tues. 7:30 p.m. Parlors Bible Study, etc. Tonight is the CLUB LOUSE SPECIAL HAPPY HOUR From 7-10 p.m. highballs In The Club Store. Since no reservations, The Club Store, $88 Locust. "Partying to our business." 75e schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUSEEN'S BAR, 1009 Mass. tt These all new and contemporary townhomes are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeted, carpeting, coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4855.8 a 5-pm. THE DEAL--8 men playin' to win—coming in October 9-26 Looking for something new on Sunday? TRY THE CLIUB LOISE. 508 LOUIS. M62. Open from 2 p.m. till 3 a.m. Membership available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 Outdoor Rollerblading 1012 Mass. Tues- Thurs, 6:30 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m. Friday, 6:30 p.m. to 12:00 p.m. Sat. and Sun, 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Deposit-attendance 9-25 Outdoor Roofer Skates. Mick's Bicycle Shop offers all of the outdoor-roofer skates at $20. Rocer indoor-roofer outdoor skates at $25. You would be surprised if you couldn't afford quality skates. Though you could afford sizeable skates, supply won't be long. FOR RENT on the "Bringin' It All Back Home" It's blues with Lynch Melchee a plus of a clip Jamison Bum. Wednesdays and Friday's Saturday 10 p.m. On Mau, Catch 6-12 Watch Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4158. 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 951-826-4800. You'll like our looks, Southern Highway and the town square. Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. digital, excelent air conditioning, all appli- cations. Great value. For fall or spring, Naimalsh Hall offers you the bestormed apartments. Good food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room, laundry, kitchen, food and much more. If you're looking for home or if an apartment isn't what you want, Naimalsh Hall, 1800 Milwaukee Drive, 843-8559. fax 843-8559. For rent to students. 1 bdm. apt., aft. room with kitchen and laundry. $150 + sutility + at 1419 Aloh. Also, 2 bdm. basement with lots of windows at 1423 Aloh. $175 + electricity at 673-735 or their own. $250/month. Utilities paid 3 large, attractive fees; $45/month for campus and downtown. Leave runs mid May 13, 2011. 611 W. Ninth, upstairs. See www.library.edu p.m. weekdays. Weekends 9-26 844-8185 Nice 2 bdm. basement asl. furnished - blocks from campus=$250 month. 841-923- 678. 841-923-678. Roommate Wanted—Nice apt, adjoining area Call Tom 749-177-1281 heat and water Graduate student needs person to share two broms. House $150 + 15 cents. No deposit. Near campus 2 Bdm. apt, Comfortable for walking down to driveway for 841-5215, 841-5070 after 6 p.m. 9-30 Sublease nice, clean one bdm. apt. Willing one month rent. security deposit: 443118 One mile from Clinton Lake Marina and a big yard—trees etc. one EB tree with full wood bridges, two log barns and wood heat. 748-0933 and 748-0856 10-8 New campus 2 berm trees. Also large trees. 748-0933 FOR SALE to need to sell KU. student season football to make offer. Call 843-538-2170 for Brend. 9-25 Alternator, starter and speculator specialties. AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-969-9088, SUNYAN AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. WATERBED MATTRESSES $38.98, 3 year WATERBED MATTRESSES, WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 859 sq. ft. MATTRESSTEES, Orthopedic sets from $29. FURNITURE, One bed block of 9th and 10th Furniture, one block west of 9th and 10th Furniture. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them 1. As study makes sense to use them 2. As study makes sense to use them 3. As study preparation. "New Analysis of West-Eastern Civilization Criters, Malls Bookstore and Oread Book Store." Raleigh International frame set, Reynolds backpack, seat belt, set of bottom bracket and seat post. Pillow is included. New excellent quality bedding -orthopedic bedding. New York, NY. Leduc's Furniture. 1200 New York St. 841- 367. SURGICAL PANTS—THE REAL THING, no more moving than a button and a reversible, the string and very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, yellow and orange, cause the pants vary. 30 day unconditional warranty for a full refund. COST: 8.95, Kansas residents add 4% sales tax. Send check money to M.A.I.C. for raised letters, to M.M.A.I.C. Book 13503, MEDIATE delivery. 8-30 For sale now -1978 Rally Sport, fully sale price, 240-350, new lease 19-29, or 842-923. Runs well, but needs work. $300 call. Call 814-6857 after 6. 9-26 '76 VW Rabbit, AM-FM 4, speed, econom- ical, 39,000 miles. Call 843-2831. 9-26 Black and white Zenith T. $45. Brow- unished chair, good condition $45, 843-2831. MOPED: New 180 Motobecane M-50B-Trav over $600 new (aeroflite) at 924-894-9846 at 926-894-9846 Kenwood receiver. KR 4070, 40 watts/channel. 110. $B11. 841-926-0920 --is PRICE LUNCH at Hawk's Crossing. We're in line for lunch, so if your sandwich is not ready within 5 minutes, you half your money back. Each of our 12 we bake daily. New open Sunday. One block over the corner. 8:30am-6pm. 21", 10- Speeded Motobike. Good condition. 842, 043- 8303. Keeping. 9-29 Must. self-Quality. Openica loudspeakers bass. Fine condition. Listen to them.袋装. bass. Fine condition. Listen to them. 1927 VW Bus—Rebuilt engine, new tires, just inspected. Call 748-9845. Keep trying. 66 VW Bug. Runs good. Call Borys 862- 9-30 1973 Triumph Spifire, low miles, good condition 850, 141-1790. 9-26 Gibson Firebird elec. guitar, excellent condition 815-1900 or 843-9737. 9-30 Moving Sale: Furniture Clores, kitchen Moving Sale: Furniture 27, 8:30am - 9:30am 3-96 Indiana St. 72 Chevy Station Wagon $400 or best offer. Work Call 814-441-641 or 401 ill. jl 10-8 Bang and Olufsen Beovox S-72 speakers. Mini condition mint. condition A10. 10-1 p.m. Free to good homes 2 male kittens -12 wk old. Call 841-0281 after 5 p.m. 10-1 FOUND Found prescription glazing in Blue plaid case new Hawk's Crossing. Call Kevin 9-29 Small blight female dog wearing brown col- lared home from Wescah Iron, 842-1728 9-29 Director of Instrumentation and Electronics Design Laboratory: Faculty equipment required for design and digital circuitry, and B. Creative ability required in design of analog and digital circuits, and hardware and software applied to chemistry and research. Research and supervisory abilities are required. Salary, $180,000 plus benefits and qualifications. Send resume, summary of previous design experience and training, and D. J. DeFraser, Chemistry Department, Kanada Building, 4750 East 6th Street, November 14, 1980, A/AE/EOE Employer - 9-28 HELP WANTED ORGANIC CHEMIST. Immediate opening in career of a doctoral Research fellow with interest in cancer drug development. Quizify organic chemistry with training in the synthesis of new compounds. Be familiar with all types of laboratory equipment and instrumentation including Salary negotiable. Offer the same resumé as for PhD candidate in American Cancer Center, University of Kansas Medical City, Ks. 66103, (913) 588-4700. An equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. CONSTRUCTION INSPECTOR ASSISTANT MEDICAL CENTRE CONSTRUCTION experience and knowledge to represent the University of Kansas Medical Center in construction Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must have general typing skills and apt at computer work. Study average of 121½ hours per week. Conduct a course in the financial services. Brentney 864-5733. Please obtain an application at the Financial Aid Office and submit to the McCook Hall by 5 p.m. Sept. 20th. Need temporary help to aid lh. volume of water from a 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily M-F during the next wkj. $250. His son, M-F during period. Overland Photo, 1741 Mass. Lawrence Qualifying needs live in attendance. Request Equal Opportunity Employer. Call 843-217-6950. Noon hours, Monday; Wednesday, Friday Friday, January 31, Mary's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri State Park. Sirlin Stockade is looking for permanent, applicant. Apply 1015 Iowa Street between S-9 and 34. REWARD—Our 10 wk old male yellow lab. Last seen following a man's south bear from our house at 11 p.m. Bear him return to it. He's our best friend. Please return him to us. He's our best friend. Black and silver puppy. White paws and back. Silver ears. Black eyes. Red hind. And black tail. Shag tag no. 168. Reward with candy bar. Reward for a lost black lab puppy. 13 wks. old, male. white spot on cheese. Lost at the vicinity of york and Iowa, 9/22. Please: nights. 86-348-358, 842-328-454, 841-107- 181. NOTICE LOST Left 181 Concordia High School Class Left 182 Concordia High School Class Reward upon return. Please phone 864-527- 3090 Reward upon return. Please phone 864-527- 3090 Sapphire and diamond necklace near Dyneb Reward offer. Call 843-925-124 for 4 p.m. 8-29 Brown cobalt skin wallet lost in front of Library Library. Reward if found T-9-25 2037 Old female colleen, brown with white collar, Village valles. Call 424-6891. 10-1 DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night hit the mic MCDONALD you - "...and it all happens on MCDONALD" you can唱 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE membership card gets you $1.00 highballs all right long. Only at your place. THE LOUISE where "partying" is located. 9-30 The Wheel Breakfast Special: 9-12 Daily Eggs, Bacon, Ham, Toast and Hash-Browns 10-19 PERSONAL PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth care. Physician consult. App call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (913) 621-3100. 4401 W. 10th St., Overland Park, Kansas. if HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUSE. Every day 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 highs (75 for a Thursday, backgammon and the almorza, 84 for a Friday, backgammon and the almorza, 9429 "Partying is our business." If you don't plan to party, LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louse on Wednesday nights). Drinks are only $1.90 for ladies even if you're a girl. Only At the Club Louse, 508 Louct. 842-9429. 9-30 SUPER TOGIF at THE CLUB LUOUSE. 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday. PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY If you are undecided about a career, but want to work in sales and management, able in sales and sales management with a large eastern based company, call for more information. Call terry Westend. Collect 816-421-1411. Equal Opportunity Employer In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for less cash, Louse Browns are known for their DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the house liquor highballs you can drink-guys & girls are here on a club THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 Locust, 943-8429 Membership available. "Partying with friends." TGIF AT LOUBES BAR with $125 pitch- back from Friday 2 to 6. He -There -About- Able- Friday from 2 to 6. Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singin Telegraphs, 81-619-769. Take a break after classes at LOUSE a breakfast. Afternoon lessons every day until 6. Singing messages for all locations. Deliv- ling from Lawrence. ASTA Singa- telegram #41-6010. Green's Liquor has 1976 German Pleasers and 1974 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons. Is copying driving your BATTY2 Don't KAT use this KAT to take the KINES out of your four-wheel set. CHIROPRACTIC - Inveighlate the natural environment of Johnson Woods. Chiropractic therapy, 9th and 10th edn. Reward for information leading to return—While Royal Administrator typewriter, black trim and ink from Wesley night of the week 81-8428, weekly day evening during day, weeksends. 9-25 Tired of all the stores closing at 5:30 Shop them up! Imagine the vinaigrette cards and gift open until 9:14. Buy them online and lowes. Find our ad in this paper and buy from us at www.marques.com/Drives. Draughts to Readings: $95.00, $84.99 Volunteers needed for Campus Safety Serv- Work. To Volunteer, call KU Info at 864-3506 or attend the meeting at 7 p.m., Suit- line Conference Room of a local lite Union. Psychic Personality Readings, $25-50, 8 9414, 1-9 p.m. 1 Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs and excellent tanning equipment. 10-3 What's it all about? For answers, attend the informational meeting for Campus Safety Services that will be at 7 p.m. Thursday, at the Conference Room 25-28, Sigma Delta Union. Head Start needs you to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher aid for two hours, one morning a call to campus. Call 10-62515 for information. FRESHMEN—For a dedicated ticker imagines Action! The BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP In the Fireplace Room of Lewis Hall, ky. and near the old School House. Off the Wall Hall presents the Worm Wrangler Chance, a fundraiser for Women Dekimbe. Demonstrate candidate for U.S. Representative in the third leg of the 2016 Presidential tomber 26. Minimum donation $5. Advance funds to the American Red Cross or the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center or by calling 814-9292. Tickets also available at It's the Commodore's CRAZY QUART NIGHT at THE HARBOUR LITES ... cold quartz, a dark blue hue. Hi, the deck with the crazes at the HARBOUR LITES. 1031 Massachusetts. 9-25 Miss your Winnie T-shirt this year? Ninth National fast-piecing shirt, only 89.00, includes postage, Write Ed's Shirts, 3740 Marathon, FI. 33000, indicate color and size, 10-8 Want to learn to play SCANBLE cross- teams? Call Emily 843-657-100 843-657-347 10-10 Thursday 12$ for 1 night at the Billy Sparee and Saturday 12$ for 1 night at the Billy Sparee for the price of one. The Billy Sparee and the Billy Sparee are sold by the hour. I AM CURIOUS GECKO. 9-29 Gay Services of Kansas holding general room. Room, Union. Everyone welcome 9-25 GREEN"—"The selection of award winning wines"—forest and domestic. 10-3 BEGGARS BANQUET Please allow 10 minutes to dry all supplies. Do not microwave banquet, prepare banquet, or quiche; lauage, vegetables, as宴会区域 located on block north of the Union, at the atrium, T-9-26 It's late, and you've been partying. Get a seat in one of our rooms. Some friends, you're having a good time, but not sure what to do. "Vege! What in this Vegie, you ask, Call the sub shop, order one or any of your 12 Vege's from Wendy's, take three there. Yello Sub, Bail 3-1328, or 23rd airs from Wendy's We're open real late 6 nights." SERVICES OFFERED Instant color passport photos. Immigration I.D. portraiture, rename, portfolios, slides: color & B.W. Born 841-7254. 9-30 HOUSE OF USHER THE BKE GARAGE -Complete professional garage for all your storage needs. specially designed Garage specimencs...Fun! www.bkegarages.com COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-9:00 SAT 12:00-12:00 SUN 2 ½¢ EACH For the Datalink module, MIBDRAW MIBWB AUTO AUTO SERV In Overt, Hidden, Hidden, Hidden, 842424 13074599341586452424 EINSTEIN'S TUTORS Expert assistance CS. instructor, typing. Randy 842, composition research, typing. Randy 842, composition research, typing. 6 EAST 9TH 841-6221 KOP4 KAT COPIES $ 2^{c} $ TYPING-EDITING BINDING-PRINTING HOURS 8 AM—8 PM MON-SAT Steno wants to do typing in her home. 1 per page. Lucille West. 843-706-607. 9-30 Have you had trouble weighing weight or breaking the neck in areas such as school or job? You can change this and hypnosis can help. Call 843-1955 for more information TYPING I do damned好 typing. Pyggy 842-446, tf. Accurate experimented typing. IBM correct. No errors in formatting. Experienced typist -term paper, thesis. Experienced copywriter -term paper, spelling corrected. 843-9544. Mrs. Wright. Typical Editing *File/Exec/Quality* *Editing layout* *welcome* *editoring/layout* *Call Johnson, 842* Typing prices discounted. Excellent work typing. Betty 432-697 after 5 and weeks. Betty 432-697 after 5 and weeks. Experienced typed-thesis, dissertations, electronic communications, select barb, after 5 p.m. 843-210-3967 OPAL 2001 FOR YOUR MONEY ENCORREO COPY CORPS 1754 830-2100 1754 830-2100 FOR PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4890. tt IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Past re- learning evenings to 11 am and weekends. 482-257 Exp. typhist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Eagle 42-38 10-3 My old typewriter does not correct mistakes *or* type or spell, but I do not. *a.* 19:34 *9-26* Wait, the image shows "9-26" on the right. I'll just use it as a placeholder. If it's a question, I'll provide the text. If it's a response, I'll include the text. But since it's a placeholder, I'll just use it. The text is: My old typewriter does not correct mistakes *or* type or spell, but I do not. *a.* 19:34 *9-26* Roommate for 2 bdm. apt. -Jayhawk West. $120 + utilities. Call Bret. 749-3586, 5-3586. Buying gold Paying $80-$110 for men's gift cards Buying silver Paying $95-$120 2120 W. 22th, Holiday Plaza 8426-9635-950 www.holidayplaza.com GOLD- SILVER- DIAMONDES. Class rings. 10-piece sets. Free pick-up. 841-744-6760, more. Free pick-up. 841-744-6760, more. WANTED Female roommate to share 2 bdm. furnished. Jayhawker Towers Apt. All utilities paid. Call 843-4602 9-25 Upperclass person or graduate student needed for a roommate. Nice 2 Dnm; $125 monthly rent. Must be able to tolerate smoking and pet. Write or call 24228 Gudahd WANTED: Person to enter cooperative child care and want to and need to find person with similarly aged children to meet morning hours for a 4 afternoon hour, days afternoons, or combinations. Call 861-329-5870. Semi-Vegitable non-smoker wanted to furnished residence near Hill. $110. 84- 26-26 Non smoking roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. 846-3425 1125 mon. utilities Jenie, 684-3425 Libral. easy-going roommate wanted for house. House. Buck or Jef, 10-21. 841, 141-290. 9-26 Studious, liberal male to male to fully fury husband. Call 814-6957 after 5 gas and electric. Call 814-6957 after 5 Roommate at the Jayhawk Tower as soon as possible. All utilities paid. Call 9-390- Anytime. Female Roommate will to share 2 bdmr. Female Roommate will to pay $12/mo. 5 utilities 9 3833 Beech Roommate Wanted. 2 bdmr. apt. in old building with basement. $50,000. larges windows. Completely furnished in antique. Prefer female, upperclass or female. Send resume to Utilities paid Cm- 843-308, 843-790. Male Roommate to share 2 bdrm, ant- furnished $100 + 1% utilities, 8419-04-18. LAWRENCE ENROLLMENT: 23,280 PLUS SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T. SELL IT! SELL IT! AD DREADNES tout Monday Thursday 5 pm Wednesday Friday 5 pm Wednesday Monday 5 pm Thursday Tuesday 5 pm Friday Wednesdays Write ad here: ___ CLASSIFIED HEADING: ___ RATES: 15 words or less Write ad here:___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ 3 times $2.75 04 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch - $3.75 NAME: ___ ADDRESS: ___ PHONE: ___ KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS-EVERYTHING THEY TOUCH TURNS TO SOLD. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 25, 1980 Sports Briefs Volleyball team spikes Benedictine While the KU volleyball team may not be No. 1, a lot of the things that happened in its victory over Benedictine last night in Atchison were firsts. Lorie Erickson, a freshman from Perry-Leptonm High School, started her first game of the season. She was the top scorer for Bob Lockwood said, made her the first freshman captain. Shelly Fox, a senior center, was able to play in her first game of the season despite injury problems. It all totaled up to 15-14, 16-14, 11-15, 15-13 victory to raise the Jahawhys' record to 8-3-1. Lockwood said that he was particularly pleased with the play of Deanna Busch and Erickson. "Buchd was an outstanding job of blocking and in the back court, and Erickson had an outstanding series of games." Lockwood said. "They really led us to victory." The team plays again this weekend in the eight-season Husker Invitational in Lincoln, Nep. The first match is 1:30 p.m. Friday. "It was a really good tune-up for this weekend," Lockwood said. "Our team did an exceptional job of blocking and we have some success in doing everything we've been working on all week long." "It will be nice to challenge Nebraska again now that we're in better condition," Lock- KU's first match in the Husker Invitational will be against Nebraska, the defending Big Eight champions. The Cornhuskens defeated the Jayhawks in Lincoln earlier this season. one other competitors in the tournament are regional champions Southwest Missouri, Big Eight runner-up Oldham, Minnesota, Michigan, Kansas State and Iowa State. "Aside from the regional championships in "November, this will be the top tournament of the season for us. We woodsaid." "There we'll learn a lot from these two days." Old-timers suit up one more time Kansas has its first old-timers baseball game at 2:3m. today at Quigley Field. The best KU players from the past 30 years will again wear the crimson and the blue. The teams will be evenly divided with recent players and old-timers. Some of the former standouts are Floyd Temple, KU's present baseball coach; John Riggins, former NLP running back; Franklin Burns, former NLP running back; and Biff Tempo, the coach's son. Bob Allison, star outfitter with the Minnesota Twins for a dozen years, is a possible player. He would have to come from the Twin Cities. Because of other commitments, three of KU's best won't be able to attend. They are Steve Renko, who is finishing the season with the Boston Red Sox; Dave Robie, who is at NBA camp with the Cleveland Cavaliers; and Skin James, who is playing baseball in Japan. There will be bleachers for spectators. Haskell Indian Junior College is lending the baseball team bleachers because its team is in Memorial Stadium for football season. Cross-country teams sponsor meets KU's men and women's cross-country teams have meets this weekend. The men will run a dual against Southern Illinois tomorrow at Lawrence Country Club. The women will sponsor the KU Invitational Saturday at the country club. Both teams will be hoping to improve on second-place finishes last weekend. the men also finished second to Kansas State in the KSU Invitational in Manhattan. KUl lost by only five points. The women finished second to Kansas State in Manhattan. Cards need confidence boost BY JEREMY MCKENZIE Louisville Cardinal Sports Editor LOUISVILLE, KY.—With expectations to the University of Miami, Fla., and Florida State, Louisville hosted Murray State at Fairgrounds Stadium last week expecting to break into the By TIM JAMIOLKOWSKI Instead, the Cardinals were dealt both a 13-9 defeat and a blow to their confidence. "Our problem is doubt right now," first-year head coach Bob Weber said. "Our problem is to get the players to bounce emotionally, convince them that they will get a taste of success." USING A PRO-TO set offence this season, the Cardinals will rely heavily on the talents of quarterbacks Pat Patterson and Scott Gannon, flanker Kenny Robinson and wide receiver Mark Kannan. in three games, Louisville has been held to just 356 total offensive yards. Starting running backs Be Haden and Greg Hickman have combined for 160 rushing yards. "The offense has taken a lot longer than we hooped for, a lot longer than I promised," Weher THE DEFENSE IS anchored by 6-foot-2, 128-pound linebacker Eddie Johnson. The All-America candidate already has 43 tackles, and, to Weber, "is the hub of the Louvainville defense." said, "We've got something going on defense, we just need to get it going on offense." Also a factor on the Louisville defense in 6-5, 232 pound linebacker Jay Trautwein. It was his 55-yard run of a Miami interception that needed Louisville's lone touchdown this season. It's been a season of frustration thus far for Louville. Going into the locker room with a 10-lead in the opener against Miami, the Cardinals had to win on the road. They did so by the door open for Miami to record a 24-10 victory. The following week saw the Cardinals traveling to Tallahassee to face Florida State. Before they knew what was happening, the team headed to a 7-2 lead on their way to a 5-20 thrashing. FACING THE DEFINING Ohio Valley Conference champion Murray State, Louisville may have to play against the MVP. Murray ran the ball in the 1-yard line giving it a 13-9 final cushion. Although Louisville produced a spirited final drive, it ended short of the goal line and the Cardinals' first season victory. Heading into Saturday's match with Kansas, Weber is optimistic. for Louisville, it may come down to which team is the hungriest to break into the win. weber is spatial, his physionome is very similar to Miami both physically and defensively," Weber said. "I believe we have a good chance against them. Kenny Robinson was injured on the first play of the season and his injury was the key which hurt our start. But Kenny is better now." JAYHAWKS NOTES | Freshman linebacker Arbina Martens will start in Saturday's of Kyle Tucker. Arbans is the son of former All-Pro light and Fred Arbans of the Kansas City Chiefs. McNorton. McNorton is out with a mild concussion. He also suffered heat exhaustion in last Saturday's 18-3 loss to Pittsburgh. In this week's NCAA statistics, puncher Bucky Scribner is second. Kansas is also third in net punting, which is punting 48.2 yards per net average, 41.4 yard net average, Arkansas has a 50.5 average. Winn whiffs with sports violence bill Larry Winn wants to become an umpire for baseball and he will be a referee for basketball and lineman for hockey. The unanswered question is why a Republican congressman running for re-election wants to wear the uniforms of professional sports' officials. Ninn, who represents the 3rd District, which includes Lawrence, is a coponsider of the Sports Violence Act of 1980. The bill would make it a felony for a person to commit an assault in excessive violence during a sporting event. with another law, and it will be a hard one to enforce. Even Winn says the bill is vague. At the end of August, Winn became the first cosponsor for the Sports Violence Act. He not only jumped on the election-year bandwagon of proposing needless legislation, he led the way. MAYBE WINN pictures himself as a legislative good guy保护pro athletes from themselves. But he is actually a Big Brother who can arena free from government over-kill control. "Admittedly, the distinction between natural contact and excessive contact in a rugged sport is difficult to ascertain," Winn said in a prepared Winn's proposal simply burdens the country Pro sports do not need a national law to limit excessive violence. If the players' unions and club owners cannot do it, then local and state criminal laws are more than sufficient to handle GENE MYERS statement when he cohesion the bill. "This law is not designed to take away any of the qualities that make professional sports attractive. When the contact becomes expressively violent." IT DOES SEEM strange, however, that Winn is cosponsoring a sports violence bill. Kansas only has two professional teams, an indoor soccer team in Wichita and a minor league baseball team in Wichita. Neither are in Winn's district. County, whose many residents attend Kansas City Chiefs' games. The only other football team in his district is the Kansas Jayhawks Neither team is known for its violent nature. Congressmen from the state of wheat and sunflowers show their parity and parity of punches and stuff arms. Winn's district includes affluent Johnson WNN'S BILL should come under fire because it is a hazy piece of bad legislation that interferes unnecessarily with pro sports, its athletes and its fans. It is worse than the last time one of Kansas' public servants tried to legislate sports. Two years ago in the Kansas legislature, Rep. Mike Meacham, R-Wichita, proposed that KU and Kansas State be forced to play Wichita State in football and basketball. That bill, like several others that preceded it, was defeated. Meacham's bill received the "canine award," a can of dog food and a dog leash, from several of his colleagues. WINN SHOULDN'T BE given a can of dog food or a leash. A collar would be better, the same collar that he wants to chain on pro sports. The collar should keep him and his Big Brother brethren from sticking their necks where they are not needed. EXILE SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 SHOES Pass, Punt and Kick Contest Additional info? Call Rec Info 864-3546. Recreation Services Saturday, Sept. 27 at 10:00 a.m., field south of Watkins Hospital. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 9R 4 p.m. Allen Field House Contact: Coach Washington or Coach Bahan KU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TRYOUTS Begin COME Juniper Course $50.00. Groups of 5 more or only $4.00 per person for each course, all in one training, all equipment, first jump. Students required to show proof of age. Located a miles west of West Virginia. (Please contact further information call) 2449-D Iowa HOLIDAY PLAZA $500 OFF any pair of Fall Shoes in our entire stock. Refreshments, too. Thursday, September 25,1980 from 5 PM til 9 PM SKY DIVING Come Fly With Us KCCCPC 7m 50' ← KCCCPC BKC KC FOR LADIES ONLY! J.J. Angela's Greene County Sport Parachute Center Wellsville, Kansas Student Training Classes 10 a.m. Tuesday-Sun. 883-4210 or 883-2535 invites you to a "SPECIAL" showing of our new Fall Shoes. Bocky's Bucky's Special FREE French Fries order of French Fries with purchase of Roast Beef Sandwich. Good Through Friday, Sept. 26, 1980. Bucky's 2120 W.9th Pladium THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND Liquid Fire ! The Pladium Still Has The Finest Game Room In Town And Cold Coors Beer 901 Mississippi 841-4600 901 Mississippi 841-4600 Shorter Hair can be . . . GAIL HARRIS . Soft, feathery, full and very feminine. OPEN MOST EVENINGS TILL 8 headmasters 809 VERMONT + 843-8808 Kansas full team Neither because interferes and its Kansas' its. Two ep. Mike KU and State in eded it, loved the d a dog dog food same col- Brother were they University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN The University Daily Friday, September 26, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 25 USPS 650-640 Glover to be named new city prosecutor today By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Writer Former Lawrence state representative Mike Glover, who stepped down in December after four terms to join a private law practice in the city, was named Lawrence city prosecutor this morning. City Manager Buford Watson refused to confirm the announcement, but said that a 10 a.m. press conference had been scheduled for today to name a new city prosecutor. Glover, in an interview yesterday, would only say that he was "under serious consideration" for the position and that he was scheduled to talk to city officials for a second time yesterday afterpon. He said that if the job were offered, he would accept it. COLT KNUTSON, LAWRENCE city prosecutor since January 1978, submitted his resignation Sept. 12 with the intention of entering private practice in Lawrence. Glover, 33, a 27-year Lawrence resident and KU graduate, was best known as a liberal Democrat in Logan, Utah, for his efforts to get him hired in deep nationalized, earning him the nickname 'Miamian Mike'. He said that rumors of an opening for a city prosecutor had nothing to do with his decision to return. He applied for the job after seeing a newspaper advertisement two weeks ago. He left Lawrence in January to join the Fordia, prefers to leave Lawrence last month. poly to return to Lawrence last month. a commitment to spend a long time there. We just weren't ready to make that commitment." GLOVER SHIELD THE DEICTION to return was fingered by the desire of his wife, Bonnie, to reinstate him. She had been employed previously as a teacher at Lawrence High School and Baldwin High School and most recently as a state purchasing supervisor in Topeka. "Her only opportunity in Fredonia was in teaching," he said. "She decided she didn't want to be a teacher, and she was offered her old job in Topeka. really only have your job and your family life there. It's hard to start any outside interests." Glover's colorful political career began in 1898 when he was 22. He unsuccessfully forged the presidential campaign. After a two-year Army stint, he returned to Lawrence to run for the House in a new district created after 18-year-olds were given the right to vote. The state's 44th District included most of the city's student population. Glover's ideas, particularly his drive to change the drug laws, helped elect him in 1972 at age 25. Republican challengers failed in three succeeding elections to drive him from office. KU fall enrollment tops 1979 record By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter When declining national enrollment trends caused KU administrators to least expect an increase, enrollment at the University of Kansas rose again. There are 26,745 students enrolled at KU this semester, an increase of 518 compared to last fall, Gilbert Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said yesterday. On the Lawrence campus 24,466 students are Enrollment figures honors, grants for schools Graduate School Collegia of Lateral Arts 5,750 and Sciences 10,419 School of Architecture and Urban Design 419 School of Business 1,027 School of Education 1,280 School of Engineering 1,983 School of Fine Arts 1,225 School of Journalism 615 School of Law 549 School of Pharmacy 260 School of Social Welfare 495 School of Medicine 1,300 School of Nursing 320 School of Allied Health 555 enrolled, 414 more than last fall. At the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan.' enrollment increased by 177 students, from 2,102 to 2,279 Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said he was pleased with the enrollment figures because they showed an increase greater than he had anticipated. "It indicates that parents and students still have a lot of confidence in the quality of their school." Shankel said a large portion of the enrollment increases came from the Regents Center in Overland Park, whose students were included in the Lawrence campus count. THE REGENTS CENTER provides off-campus upper-level courses for students in the Kansai region. "The program over there is meeting a real need," he said. Despite the increases this year, Shankel said despite the University was at its peak engagement. He said enrollment probably would stabilize for at least the next ten years until the current increase in the birth rate could reflect a growth in enrollment. That growth in enrollment could help the University financially because budget requests to the Kansas Legislature are based on fall enrollment figures. Shankle said the formula budgeting system approved by the Board of Regents allowed the University to request funds based on the student enrollment instead of on a protected figure. THE ENEROLLMOTT TOTAL this year will be used to remount funds for next year, he said. The funding requests are based on full-time equivalent enrollment, the measure of student Full-time equivalent enrollment totaled 23,189 this fall, an increase of 196 from last year. Foreign student enrollment in Lawrence also increased by 82 students over last year's total of 1,500. There are also 71 foreign students enrolled in Kansas City, bringing the total to 1,653. Clark Coan, director of Foreign Student Academics and an expert on decrease in foreign student enrollment this year. He said he was surprised that the number of Iranian students did not decrease dramatically. Last year there were 269 Iranian students, compared to 243 students this year. See ENROLLMENT page 5 Brutality charge unsupported by KBI evidence, Malone says Citing insufficient evidence, Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday that he would not file police烬障 charges against him for their action at Commissionment May 19. Malone concluded that a report he commissioned from the Kansas Bureau of investigation failed to support allegations by Ron Kuby, 1979 KU graduate, that police used unnecessary force when they removed a banner displayed at the ceremony. "I don't believe the evidence would sustain any charge." Malone said. Jim Denney, director of KU police department, said he was very pleased with the decision. Kuby, who currently is attending law school at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., said Malone's decision was typical of one office protecting another. "These people work together," he said. "What other decision could you expect?" Kuby was with 11 protesters who were arrested during the ceremony after they scuffled with KU police on the top of the Memorial Stone. She was charged with criminal trespassing, disorderly conduct or both. Cult Knitten, city prosecutor, dropped the charges against the protesters Aug. 29, after KU officials took no action against protesters in the area. A commencement binder at Concession on Aug. 25. Kuby, who was not arrested in the incident, suffered a hairline fracture of his left wrist when police wrested a banner reading, "Protect First Amendment Rights at KU." from the demon- Kuby said the logical conclusion to his not being arrested with the others was that he didn't do anything wrong. He also said a double stampe was in effect when it came to police and the public. "The guy's a politician," he said. "Maybe I'm to expect him to transcribe his political limits." Kuby called Malone's explanation of his non- rationalization "and said it increased more questions." Malone said Kuby was not arrested at the incident because the police knew who he was. "If five demonstrators had jumped a cop they would still be in jail," he said. "The police had limited numbers and could always back for him." Malone said. An old tire sits on the dried-out bed of Lone Star Lake. The lake has been drained to allow workers to repair a control tower in the lake's dam. 2 student organizations get preliminary funding By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter For the first time in four nights of supplementary budget request hearings, the Student Senate finance and auditing committee voted to provide funding for a give full funding to two student organizations. Two organizations also were denied preliminary funding. The People's Yellow Pages, a KU information directory, presented in the first request last September, is the primary e-mail resource. Stouffer Neighborhood Association also presented its $174.01 request last night and was given full funding with a rider requiring that the group not seek further Senate funding until checking out all other funding possibilities, including other campus living organizations. THE HILLTOP CHILD Development Center's pre-school program was built to zero, preparing kids and scholars for a future of learning. The Kansas Telos Group, a sociology organization, also had its $638.60 request for newsletter and conference production costs cut to zero. Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, said he could not justify Senate funding for the upkeep of state property. The Senate rules and regulations also keep Senate from funding scholarships, he said. the group had an international reputation, it taught them how to fund better inform KU students of its activities. The committee decided, however, that because the group previously had been self-sufficient and because funds were tight this year, the group could continue to be self-supporting. Some committee members said that although TAU SIGMA DANCE Ensemble and the Sailing Club both withdrew their requests. Tau Sigma had requested $877.66, and the Sailing Club did not present its request. The Pre-Nursing Club did not present its request. The nine other groups presenting their requests last night were Minority Business Students Council, $187.62; Engineering Council, $20.40; Polish Club, $41.30; KJHK-FM, $11.31; MECHA, $356.50; Turkish Club, $552; Graduate Students in Urban Planning, $1220; Thai Association, $50; and Women's Coalition, $1,040.05. The finance and auditing committee will meet at 4 p.m. today to investigate duplication of services between the Latin American Club and the Latin American Solidity Club. No arrangements had been made yesterday for planned investigations of the Formosan Club, the Chinese Student Association, the Undergraduate Business Council and the KU Accounting Club. The committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union International Room to determine final recommendations to present to the Senate. Same coalition sweeps races for freshmen The Grand New Party coalition swept the grand nominee offers elections yesterday by suburban districts. The new officers are president, Mark D. McKee, Overland Park, 152 votes; vice president, Larry Cook, Silver Lake, 114 votes; treasurer, Jennifer Reber, Andover, 150 votes; and secretary, Amy Benson, Overland Park, 138 votes. The winners were announced last night by the Student Senate elections committee coehrairmen, John Knightly and Octavio Viveros. Knightly said it was a "good clean race," despite four complaints filed alleging campaign violations. Knightly said the complaints were not against the winning coalition and would be reviewed by the committee next week. THE OTHER presidential candidates and their votes were P.J. McGovern, Hutchinson, Fresh Action, 105 votes; David Welch, Topeka The Force, 101 votes; Jill Eisenkramer, St. Louis, Enterprise, 56 votes; Mike Wagoner, Kirkwood, Mo., Momentum, 47 votes; Dave Morrison, Shawne Mission, Imagine Action, 38 votes; Alice Everett, Manhattan, Excalibur, 33 votes; Bill Odie, Hutchinson, Party Independent, 31 votes; and Mike See FRESHMEN page 5 JOEY Weather It should be mostly fair today with a high around 70, according to the National Weather Service. It should be partly cloudy tonight with a low in the low to mid 40s. Winds should be southeasterly at 5 to 10 mph. Modernization challenge to China, journalist says By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter China faces a challenge if it expects to reach its goal of becoming a modern nation by the 21st century, said John Roderick, Associated Press febreaker chief. "The balance between feeding a billion people and making a profit is very fine." Riederick told us that "the cost of feeding a billion people is too high." CHINA'S ECONOMIC system could collapse if it has a series of bad harvests and if its oil production keeps declining, Roderick said. "China could be in deep trouble," he said. nalists in China after the 1949 Communist Party takeover when he toured the country in 1971 with the American pingpong team. He returned to Washington to establish the Associated Press bureau there. China could be in deep water. It was the Roderick was one of the first Western jour- Roderick said much had changed since his first visit to China. For instance, Roderick said, the Chinese no longer stand and stare at him. "The Chinese now talk to you frankly," kid says. "They are unassabased on about any subject." "They're an attractive, intelligent race that has been burned very badly." Roderick said that China had a "lost generation" of 22: to 30-year-olds who dropped CHINA HAS 630 million people under 30 years of ae. he said. Those young people now are flocking to the cities, and some are being allowed to start their own businesses. RODERICK EXPRESSED relief that the years of the Cultural Revolution, when the out of school to help with the Cultural Revolution of a decade ago "They're calling them 'one-man collectives,' " he said. "There isn't a single university in China on the level of KU." he said. China is trying to make up for its deficiency in education by sending exchange students to other countries, he said, but the country lacks the facilities and teachers to catch up. Chinese Communist Party returned to Marxist ideals, were over. In the 1960s revolution, publication of literature, drama and the arts were stopped. "Chinese intellectual life became a barren desert." he said. Roderick said that although China's People's congress is a step forward, it met only once a year. "It is still, in effect, a rubber stamp body," he said. Roderick said he was pleased by the recent change of leadership when Premier Hua Guofeng resigned and Zhao Zhiyang took his place. "This change is encouraging because it hasn't happened in 30 years," he said. University Dally Kansan, September 26, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Judge tells bureau to correct census DETROIT—The U.S. Census Bureau ignored millions of minority Americans in the 1980 census—mostly blacks and Hispanics—and must correct its figures for the second time in its 190-year history, a federal judge ruled yesterday. rourt custody. The court ruling came in a lawsuit filed by Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young. Young. U.S. District Judge Horace W. Gilmore said that the Census Bureau failed to count accurately the residents in the sixth-largest U.S. city and that the error was paralleled nationwide. Mayors of the country's large cities, who had claimed angrily that the census figures would cheat them of government aid and congressional representation, were elated with the ruling. representation, we're dealt with the rulings. Gilmore ordered the bureau to adjust the figures at all levels and barred the delivery of any population counts to the president or the states until census officials complied with his ruling. In his ruling, Gilmore cited Census Bureau estimates that 8 percent of America's minorities and 1.9 percent of its whites were not counted in the 1970 census. The Census Bureau has miscounted only once since the first census in 1790 a voluntary addition of 5 million people in 1970. 1970 census. That made blacks and Hispanics four times as likely as whites to be miscounted, a factor he said adversely affected cities with large minority populations. League proposes one-on-one debate The League of Women Voters, faced with the collapse of its 1980 presidential debate schedule, changed its previous position yesterday and invited President Carter and Republican presidential nominee Ronald Reagan to participate in a one-on-one debate the week of Oct. 12. According to the League's new proposal, that debate would be followed by a three-way debate during the week of Oct. 28 that would include in There was no immediate assurance from either Carter or Reagan that the debates would materialize. The Carter campaign had no comment, and Reagan, in California, would not answer one way or the other. His senior adviser, James Baker, said that the GOP campaign strategists were "learning against" the wrong approach to the war by adhering to "principles" by succeeding to White House pressure for a one-on-one debate. Baker said that the new proposal was what Carter had proposed all along and that there was no guarantee the president would show up for the three-way confrontation. Reagan learned of the League's new proposal when he landed at the airport in San Jose, Calif. When told of the proposal, Reagan said, "These were the very kinds of proposals that we ourselves have made and Carter turned down." Search for fugitives covers six states LINCOLN, Neb. -A massive sixstate manhunt for two "extremely dangerous" federal fugitives, one a former Illinois policeman, was being conducted last night in a search for a Lincoln police officer abducted by the suspects. Police Capt. Don Bruckner said the suspects, Donald Reynolds, 29, and Edward Miller, 20, were wanted on a variety of felony charges and were believed to be fugitives from the Peoria County Jail in Illinois. Bruckner said officer Sydney Yardley, 24, was abducted while checking on a suspicious car in a northeast Lincoln neighborhood about 6 p.m. An intense search was conducted in the Raymond area using dogs, a search light and a helicopter to comb county roads. A command post was set up at the Raymond Volunteer Fire Department. Bruckner said all available off-duty Lincoln police officers were called in, and the FBI, the State Patrol and all sheffler's offices in eastern Nebraska were involved in the manhunt. The search was expanded to include Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Wyoming and South Dakota. Synfuels nomination bargain rejected WASHINGTON—Republicans, accusing the White House of election year politics in its rejection of a compromise on nominations approved by Ronald Reagan, yesterday vowed a Senate floor fight over appointments to the top posts at the newly created U.S. Synthetic Fuels Corp. The president's nominations of John Sawhill as chairman and five others as directors were approved by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources The committee turned down the compromise offer that Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., said was backed by Republican presidential candidate Reagan and congressional Republicans. The nominations were approved, 12-6, with Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., joining the Democrats. joining the Democrats. Under the compromise, Republicans would have approved the nomination of Sawhill—now deputy energy secretary—as chairman and three other directors nicked by President Carter, including a Republican. The other directors would have been nominated after the November presidential election, "which may be won by a member of my party," Hatfield said. This, he said, would let the corporation start functioning with a working majority on the board. Actors wary about proposed terms "one proposal to end the 10-week-old strike, which has crippled the country, is movie industries, was reached at 3 a.m. CDT after an 18-hour bargaining session." HOLLYWOOD—Movie and television producers reached a tentative agreement with striking actors yesterday, but dissatisfaction with some of the terms and expanded picketing by striking musicians threatened to block a quick resumption of filming. The strike by the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, which began July 21, has cost the industry an estimated $40 million a week and has cancelled much of the 1980-81 television season. Edward Amer, star of the 'Lou Grant' series, said he would vote against him because the musicians expand their pickets to every studio in Hollywood. Only hours after the agreement was made, many of the industry's best known actors joined almost 700 striking musicians picking CBS Studio recordings. Official says move of Cubans illegal FORT CHAFFEE, Ark.-New Cuban refugees began arriving yesterday at Fort Chaffee from Florida as part of a federal operation to consolidate refugee housing, but the Arkansas attorney general said it was illegal to hold them in the camp because of their undetermined residency status. Clark said his opinion was based on the fact that the 114,000 Cubans had never been given any legal designation as immigrant refugees or legal aliens. autonomy General Steve Clark said that President Carter lacked authority to permit the refugees to enter the United States and that no law enforcement agency had jurisdiction. If they had legal status, federal authorities would have control, he said, adding that Fort Chaffee also had not been legally designated as a detention center. State Department officials at Fort Chaffee said they had not heard of Clark's opinion and referred all calls to the Cuban-Malaiti Task Force in New York. The state Department has no official contact with Mr. Clark. A flight carrying 114 refugees landed here yesterday from Florida as consolidation operations began. More than 8,600 Cubans, who have yet to spot sponsors in the United States, are scheduled to come to Fort Chaffee from camps in Florida, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. FDA cautions women against using Relv WASHINGTON (UPI)—The government yesterday urged men to stop using Rely tampons when contacting the sometimes-fatal toxic shock syndrome. The warning was issued to reinforce last week's Food and Drug Administration advice that women consider not using Rely. It came amid new reports of deaths blamed on toxic shock syndrome, which has killed 20 women since 1975. since 1972. "Now we are flatly telling them to stop using Rely," said FDA spokesman Bill Rados. THE AGENCIY IS MOVING to require a warning label on all tampon packages to alert women to the link between men and the bacterial disease, Rados said. Procter & Gamble, the manufacturer of Rely, asked stores this week to halt Women who have free samples of Rely tampons received in the mail should throw them away, the FDA said. sales of the tampon and offered refunds to purchasers. P&G, officials predicted that virtually all the tampons would be off store shelves by mid-October. The actions followed a report from the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta last week that said Rely tampons were associated more frequently with toxic shock syndrome than other brands. however, the FDA said women using other brands also had suffered the recently recognized illness. It said women could reduce the risk of their menstrual periods or by stopping tampon use altogether. TOXIC SHOCK syndrome only affects about three out of every 100,000 women of menstrual age. About nine-five percent of the victims are women, most under age 30. The symptoms of toxic shock syndrome are high fever, vomiting. VIN Meisner Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. L+r us serve you! Her father, Richard Glandon, filed a $15 million damage suit in Portland, Ore., Wednesday against Proctor and Gamble Corp. and PlayStation Corp. that the liars responsible they manufactured were responsible for her illness. One such victim was Vickie Glandon, 16, who suffered brain damage after she contracted the disease last fall and lapsed into a coma. diarrhea and a rapid drop in blood pressure. Pladlinn FRIDAY IS DRAUGHT CARD NIGHT WITH 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza Pladium FRIDAY IS DRAUGHT CARD NIGHT WITH Liquid Fire! The Pladium Still Has The Finest Game Room In Town And Cold Coors Beer 901 Mississippi 841-4600 The Bettmann Archive Liquid Fire ! 1 1980 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. Rembrandt Now comes Miller time. ime. P s] University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 3 Iraqis gain; offer peace terms By United Press International BAGHDAD, Iraq—Iraq, after claiming the capture of the Iranian oil port of Khramrushran yesterday, said it was ready to make "immediate peace" with Iran if four conditions were met. Elsewhere in the undeclared four-day-old war, Iraqi tanks and troops pushed further into Iran to claim control of 100 square miles of Iranian territory. Iraqi and Iranian warplanes bombed each other's oil installations, and thousands of foreigners fled the war zone. At the United Nations, Secretary of State Edmund Muskie discussed the crisis with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko for three-and-a-half hours. Muskie wearily emerged to say that he saw no hope for an immediate end to the war between the two OPEC countries. The fall of Khorramshahr, a city of 150,000 on the disputed Shatt-al-Arab Waterway, would mark the most significant military gain so far by Iraq. Iran did not mention Khorramshahr in its military bulletins, and there was no immediate confirmation of the capture claim. The city had been besieged and cut off from the rest of Iran for the past two days. Iraqi Vice Premier Tarik Aziz said in Paris that his country had accomplished its objectives in Iran and was ready to make "immediate peace" if Tehran complied with four conditions. Persian Gulf still open; shut-off a peril to U.S. By United Press International Giant oil tankers still moved slowly into the Persian Gulf yesterday on the fourth day of the Iran-Iraq war. But the United States has prolonged shutdown of gulf shipping lanes could drive the United States into the worst depression in its history. About 17.3 million barrels of oil pass through the Gulf's Strait of Hormuz each day. The United States imports 2 million barrels a day of Persian Gulf oil, or about 9 percent of total U.S. oil needs. Japan relies on the forbait on about 70 percent of its oil and Western Europe for 45 percent. Western observers expressed concern that Iran would attempt to blockade the Strait to put world The fighting has forced the two warring OPEC nations to halt oil exports totaling 2.7 million barrels a day. pressure on Iraq to withdraw from Iranian territory. Aziz said the conditions were: respect for Iraq's sovereignty over its territory and waterways—presumably including the Shatt-al-Arab Waterway, establishment of good relations with both Iraq and the Arab world, non-interference in Iraqi internal affairs and "cessation of all aggressive acts." A recent Library of Contress study estimated that the loss of 2 million barrels a day of Persian Gulf oil would reduce U.S. economic growth by 2.3 percent, add 2.5 percentage points to the U.S. inflation rate and raise pump prices by 98 cents a gallon over a two-year period. A sustained Gulf cutoff would exact a far heavier economic toll, however, because it would activate the International Energy Agency's emergency trigger mechanism under which the United States and 19 other nations have agreed to share oil supplies. Despite Iraq's offer, Iranian planes pressed rocket and bombing raids on Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, and on almost every major oil center in Iraq. Iraq admitted that a gas refinery at Ain Zalah—all the way across the country near the Syrian border—had been attacked and set fire. Iran now stands virtually isolated among its Middle East neighbors. Saudi Arabia's King Khaled yesterday gave Baghdad significant support by backing the Iraqi side in war. Two other moderate Arab states, Mauritania and Morocco, joined the Saudis in voicing support for Iraq. Jordan and North Yemen already have said that they stand behind Iraq, leaving Iran, which is a non-Arab state, with few friends in the conflict. Thousands of American workers who streamed from Iraq into Kuwait to flee the fighting arrived in the United States yesterday. Some were wounded, most were weary and a few—such as Briceson Cook, 31, of Houston —were angry. State Senator ARNOLD BERMAN During this election year we candidates will ask for votes and from us will be demanded our vision. Your vote is precious and you have every right to demand from those seeking public office a legislator who is not isolated from his constituents, but who feels their pain and shares their dreams, and from them takes his strength and wisdom and courage. A Record...Not A Promise Pol. Adv. PAD-ACT: Paid for by Committee to Re-elect Aarmid Berman, Marcia C. 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INTERNATIONAL GOLD BUYERS Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Opinion Teams may thumb ride If the KU women's softball and basketball teams earn trips to post-season tournaments this season, the players may find themselves hitchhiking to get there. The University's pathetic athletic budget once again is straining non-revenue sports, this time in the travel costs department. This season, KU's financial woes could put a damper on the women's basketball and softball teams' plans for post-season activity. Last season, the women's basketball team was given $23,000 for regular season travel costs. At season's end, the team was given an extra $11,000 for post-season travel. For the coming season, the women's basketball team will be allocated $27,434. But there's a catch. Athletic officials say that the $27,434 will have to cover both regular-season and post-season travel. Actually, the team will have about $4,500 less to work with for its travel. Add inflation to that and the team's travel problems are only compounded. The softball team will face similar problems. The team has a busy road schedule that includes spring-break trips to tournaments in Oklahoma and Texas. But the team has had to sacrifice much of its traveling because of a tight budget. The women's basketball team plans to travel this season to Plainview, Texas; Berkeley, Calif., Des Moines and other cities. The first round of the AIWA Region VI Tournament will be held in Minneapolis. The softball team has high-quality players, but the University doesn't have the money to send them anywhere. For several years, the women's basketball team consistently has been in the nation's top 20. It appears likely that the team once again will be eligible for post-season play. As tar as the women's teams' records go, KU could go a long way. As far as their post-season travel allowance is concerned, the teams could end up staying home. The women's basketball and softball teams' records may be thumbs up, but at season's end, when it's time to travel to those faraway post-season tournaments, the teams may be thumbs out—right down on the highway. Letters to the Editor Congress strives to assist students with financial help Beginning last Tuesday, selected members of the House and Senate met in conference to resolve conflicting positions on the Higher Education Reauthorization Bill. As this measure, which provides authority for a variety of student loans and grants, I am involved in the subject of some misunderstanding. I wanted the readership to know of my thinking about it. To the editor: I was strongly supportive of the Higher Education Bill passed by the Senate in June. It was a generous bill that took note of the escalating costs of a college education. Over a five-year period, the life of the bill would increase grant ceilings from $1,800 to $2,600. It protected students who were unable to get local bank loans, by providing federally funded backup programs to meet their educational credit needs. Unfortunately, the House-passed version and the proposal resulting from the first conference between the two houses abandoned any attempt at fiscal restraint. As such, the bill threatened the integrity of the congressional budget process. I am confident that the conferences will not fashion a bill that meets student financial needs without busting the budget. My optimism is based on subsequent House action on related budget matters and on their agreement to return to conference. It would have provided interest-free loans to families regardless of economic need. Although it provided no greater assistance to needy students, the conference bill would have cost $13 billion more than the Senate-passed version. For these reasons, I voted with a majority of my colleagues to insist upon returning the bill to conference. It is also important to note that even if this second conference is unsuccessful, student loan programs will not be allowed to expire. In the event that a five-year authorization program is not reached, Congress will provide for interim continuation of existing programs. Many students understandably were concerned when the Senate defeated the first conference proposal. When put into its role, it became known that the Senate action was the only justified course. Nancy Landon Kassebaum Program honorable To the editor: As a former participant in the KU Honors Program, I fully agree with Mark Hansen's excellent response to Brett Conley's Sept. 9 column. While the level of quality in instruction can vary from outstanding to tedious, the benefits and opportunities provided by the program far outweigh any of its weaker points. However, my concern is with a statement made by Conley that Hansen's letter did not mention the program's programs or program needs to dissociate itself with what it is that it is build an elite intellectual circle at the University. There is no doubt that honors students can benefit from interaction with each other, but honors students should also have access to their students and other University experiences." Howard Bauleke Lawrence senior A student still needs 100 other hours to graduate, which, unless he or she takes 100 hours of independent study, will be spent in non-honors classrooms with non-honors students. This doesn't even take into account the fact that dorms, scholarship halls, the Greek system and the rest of Lawrence are teeming with non-honors students and other people worth knowing. No matter how hard Conley may think the honors student is trying to, he or she simply cannot be isolated in some sort of intellectual bubble. In response to the September 12 article, "College cheating, plagiarism rampant, officials say," I would like to say that Cliffs Notes should not be considered cheating. In the article, James Gowen comments that English papers written in response to the 2013 exam were过载 but are plummeted with the use of Cliffs Notes is cheating. I tend to disagree. Conley apparently has been the victim of some sort of "inductivation" by an honors professor about the values of an elitist education. Fortunately, one professor does not an honors program make. The honors program does not exist to pount an elitist ideology into confused freshmen and sophomores; it is not so difficult to see how the better incoming students on campus and to give them a chance to interact while providing a more personalized alternative to mammoth lecture classes and inexperienced graduate student instructors. Conley was understandably confused after his summer in the Honors Institute. However, I hope he will someday regain his sense of perspective and stop writing incorrect articles about the honors program that do not address the problems at hand and serve merely as a reminder of what we can learn from the program and its participants in the eyes of the academic community and the student body. Monte's second incorrect assumption is in his concern about the "segregation" of honors students. The honors program requires 24 teachers which can be spread over four semesters. This is not to say that I am in favor of students cheating on papers, but I do feel that Cliffs Notes are beneficial when used along with the material. When used in this way, Cliffs Notes supplement the reader's ideas, introduce new perspectives, clarify points for better understanding and simply act as a study guide for the read material. If fail to see the difference between reference materials like published book critiques, and Cliffs Noes. Marla Beasley Lenexa sophomore Cliffs Notes okay The University Daily KANSAN (UPSBs 609-648) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday except when absent and except Tuesday. Summer, Saturday, Sunday and September. Secured-class postage payable during Kansas University subscription is $25 per month for a term of 8 months or $34 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity free. Postmaster's Seed changes address to the University Daily Klamath, Pilhit Hall. The University of Kansas, Laramie, Wichita Falls, Kansas. To the Editor: Bachelor Manager Carmine Beter Hugh Stebler Alan Strober Cyrid Hughes Managing Editor Edith Edison David Letters Retail Sales Manager... Kevin Koster National Sales Manager... Nancy Clonzer General Manager and News Adviser ... Rich Musser Kansas Adviser ... Chuck Chowins SHOP * TRENDS * FADS * FASHIONS SALE CLOSE OUT! NIKES 34.95 SALE NEW! PRE-FAB. "COLLEGE LOOK" KITS ACCESSORIES INCLUDED. SALE OPEN IZOD SHIRTS & PARAPHERNALIA SOLD HERE BE THE FIRST ON YOUR BLOCK TO LOOK AVERAGE The prep look occupies KU students A few years ago the most prominent fashion on college campuses was faded jeans, worn shirts and tattered tennis shoes. Unlike today, students spent much of the time discussing radical ideas about the political and economic systems of the United States. Today things have changed completely—being in fashion is now fashionable. It is interesting to see that the way students dress to a great extent reflects their views on life. Ten years ago, nonconformist ideas were accompanied by the nonconformist attitude of many students. Marxism, free love and communes were ideas frequently endorsed by students, who often wore sandals, tie-dyed jeans and who had long, slightly dirty hair. One look at the attire of today's students is enough to make one realize that they hold very different values than students did 10 years ago. What many people call the "preppie" look has taken over college campuses and it is even spreading to other places. The basic message seems to be that conformity is in, dressing nicely is proper and radicalism and non-conformity are completely unfashionable. The proper ideals that go along with the prepie look include wanting security, a good job and a part of the status quo. Looking back, it was the invasion of alligators that provided the first sign that more traditional values were coming back to campuses. However, rather than invading from the swamp, campus alligators invaded from the country clubs and golf courses of this country, at first appearing primarily in fraternities and sororites, number of college students and it comes in an ever-increasing amount of styles and colors. But As Izod become more prevalent they will begin to lose their fashionable image because mass media is bringing them together. In trying to understand today's college fashions, it is important to realize that students The Izod shirt now is popular with a great P BRETT CONLEY are not merely endorsing the preppie look of nice girls, nor because they want to allow statuses. Yet, the same thing prevailed when students dressed shabbily. The more radical and non-conformist a student wanted to appear, the more shabbiely he would dress. Today, the more conformist a student is, the more preppie fashions he would wear. Now, in many cases there must be deck shoes on the foots. Khaki pants, button-down oxford cloth shirts and long, plaid shorts all are proper preppie attire now. Even the clothes that used to be worn primarily by staid, older establishment types suddenly have been rediscovered by students who are familiar with what the radicals used to call the establishment. Wool tweed blazers, penny loafers and Ralph Lauren Polo shirts are, once again, new fashion. They are the status symbols with the most status. They also illustrate the two levels of fashion on the campus. The students who used to wear Izod shirts when they were not too prevalent now are probably putting them away in a closet. Most students are just beginning to wear Izodes because they are fashion followers and want to feel as if they fit in with the majority of well-dressed students. But the ones who are putting away their Izodes and beginning to wear items such as Polo shirts are more than conformists. In contrast, many students who want to be fashionable, ahead of the majority of students “>d thus gain even more status. A lot of students criticize, sneer at and make fun of today's preppie fashions because they either dislike their looks or because they cannot afford to be fashionable and are jealous. But it looks as if campus fashions will get even prepier in the future. The odd thing about today's fashions is that they do not have to be attractive. Maroon penny loafers and long plaid shorts probably are two of the worst-looking pieces of fashion to come along in years. But obviously, looks have little to do with their popularity because penny loafers and long shirts are more status symbols and thus are quite fashionable. Those people who are bothered by today's campus fashions should look beyond the clothes themselves. Fashion merely reflects many of the values students have. Judging by today's fashion, college students will conformists, and defenders of the status quo for some time to come. Oblivious to its own destructiveness, reckless feminism haunts us all. Reckless feminists hurt their own cause This does not include feminism that works to elevate women from a second-class citizenship to a position of total social equality. That feminism deserves the same respect and assistance as did the civil rights movement of Martin Luther King, Jr. I'm talking about the screaming senseless feminism that can turn the most intelligent, mature woman into a trivial, paranoid harpy. It is because she suffers from airline runners to show their unhappiness with this country destroyed much of the sympathy that their plight may have generated, the reckless feminists hurt their own cause with their constant cries of "sexist", even when sexism is not However, judging from their outbursts, these reckless feminists are not interested in securing a guarantee of equal pay for equal work, an end to sexual harassment on the job, equal opportunities in the job market or an end to archaic norms; all they appear to be impatient telling us that they can't be using much the same reasoning as our mothers once did. "Because I said so, that's why." These women, and a few men for that matter, raise their cries at any activity that: A. Does not satisfactorily promote the image of the independent, intelligent, attractive woman of today. You know the type, she is featured in Virginia Slims advertisements. B. Portrays women in a way that could be construed as embarrassing or degrading, i.e. beauty contests, pinups, skin magazines or, the horror of horrors, mud wrestling. I am a writer. How does this behavior help the feminist cause? It like ketone helps bears—it doesn't. Personal choice also is a big factor in some of the "degrading" things women do. Does posing in tight clothes make them feel more Yes, Virginia, there are women who like being housewives. But this is a fact the reckless females do not even consider when they protest against the government to protest when it is a matter of personal choice. In the first place, by some quirk of nature, there are many women, just as there are many men, who are hopelessly dependent upon their spouses. They are uneducated and downright unlaughable people, but yet, it does not bother them one bit. They are happy with their lifestyle, and downgrading it as sexist or chauvinistic without considering this fact is a gross insult. BILL MENEZES of women? Considering that few of them pose at gunpoint, I doubt it. If it is degraded, surely the likes of Suzanne Somers, Farrah Fawcett and a host of others can live with it. Women like these have parlayed a remarkable lack of talent into a remarkable amount of money in the past few years. They were exploited all the way to the bank, one might say. Why aren't the male sex symbols of limited talent, the likes of Sylvester Stallone and Erik Estrada, pictured as degrading themselves when they behave in the same manner? Are male strippers any less degraded than female strippers, despite the lack of a men's liberation movement? Why don't she the reckless feminists ask the same questions? F Until the outrageous double standard is dropped, the reckless feminists will continue to spew their garbage. They will continue to scream about the "degradation" of the women in the Miss America contest, all of whom are there by choice, instead of concentrating on its truly degrading aspects, such as its blatant racism, if they wish to eliminate the degradation of women on television, let them start by getting the Phyllis George-Jayne Kennedy mold off of the football telecasts. The performance of women like these is REALLY degrading for women. If the feminists who are truly interested in advancing women's rights were smart, then they would do well to tell the reckless feminists to shut up. By gross generalizing, the reckless feminists would hurt the hands of the Equal Rights Amendment ever could. They prolong the old stereotypes of themselves and those they criticize. If men and women are ever to consider each other as equals in society, it would help to treat them equally for equal behavior. This would also the same kind about "degradation" of male strippers as about female mud wrestlers. Sometimes a more vocal or active group, such as the Black Panthers, is necessary to awaken the country to the fact that things need to be changed. But the misguided squawking of the reckless feminists drones on and just puts the country to sleep. Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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. University Daliv Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 5 Freshmen From nage 1 Dankwerth, Overland Park, The Untraditional Tradition. 31 votes THE OTHER vice presidential candidates and their votes were David Cropell, Wichita, Fresh Action, 97 votes; Lisa Boady, Wichita, The Force, 87 votes; Frank A. Searer, Huntington Beach, Calif., Imagine Action, 76 votes; Scott Crenshaw, Ottawa, Enterprise, 40 votes; Roger Day, Rhi-lander, Wism, Momentum, 33 votes; Mike Sinnema, S., Salma, Party Independent, 33 votes; Miles O'Connor, State Representative, Tradition, 28 votes; C. Michell Answer, Parsons, The Freshman, 22 votes; Cindy Patton, Parsons, Independent, 15 votes; and Kim Bue, Wamego, Excalibur, 12 votes. OTHER TREASURER candidates and their votes were Daniel E. Taylor, Shawnee Mission, The Force, 100 votes; Debbie Heltzer, Lawrence, Fresh Action, 47 votes; Keith Cutler, Papillion, Neb, Imagine Action, 17 votes; Susan Hansen, Omaha, Neb, Obama, 17 votes; Marsha Reagan, Party Independent, 48 votes; Mattews, Overland Park, Untraditional Tradition, 37 votes; Kristy Grey, Librarian doubles as cider-seller THE OTHER secretary candidates and their votes were Lymne Brooks, Shawnee Mission, The Force, 107 votes; Libby Simpson, Lawrence, Fresh Action, 92 votes; Missy Taylor, Shawnee Mission, Imagine Action, 60 votes; Linda Knapperberg, Salma, PartyDEPENDENT, 45 votes; Jessica Wynn, Untraditional Tradition, 40 votes; Suzy Stevenson, Garcher, Momentum, 42 votes; Carole Boltman, Overland Park, Enterprise, 35 votes; and Sally Nibert, Manthann, Excailur, 26 votes. Manhattan, Excalibur, 23 votes; and Dennis Duont, Lawrence, write in candidate, 15 votes. By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Enrollment From page 1 At this weekend's Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs, lovers of a long-vanished time can stroll through green meadows, dance, and feast on roast turkey legs. They can wash it all down with cool apple cider from century-old presses. FEWER IRANIAN STUDENTS were expected at KU this year because of federal restrictions on alb wine Iranians into the country. Five days a week, Mary Burchill, who owns the presses, is a research librarian at the KU law "We found out that a lot of them transferred from other American universities." Cowan said. "We have to wear simple costumes—just loosely woven shirts and full skirts," she said. "The men will wear leggings and gaiters." library. But on the six weekends of the festival, she becomes a part-time peasant. student enrollment was an increase in Malaysian students. There are 34 Malaysian students enrolled at KU this year. There were nine in 1979. He said the only other surprise in foreign Authenticity is a must at the fourth annual Renaissance Festival, so Burchill, her family and five KU students force 75 bushels of apples a day to meet their presses, without the aid of electric or gas propellers. rd is aue toue to ue in there truly sm. If women g the of the women n. "That's going to be interesting," Burchill said. "We've done it before, but never all day." COUNTRIES WITH THE highest foreign student representation at KU are Iran, with 243; the Republic of China (Taiwan), 165; Venezuela, 118; Japan, 116; and India, 72. However, Burchell, who used to operate an antique store near Lake Perry, said she understood that the easy way was not always the best way. nied, in they uses to stock texts with equality Rights he old he they help to apply to At this the female such to such to be of the arts the *Modern apple presses are easy to come by, said, but for the past 15 years, Burchell and her parents have searched through bars, ditches andumps for the rotting remnants of vintage presses. After Burchell's 84-year-old father rebuilt the presses, the family used them to make cinder and paper newspapers. nthion, most used to too away city of lizods nt to well- titting items sts. In ant to students The reconstructed presses are valuable, Burchill said, but they are not for sale. "We have four presses, and we choose not to sell them," she said. "It used to be that every farmer had a eder press when they had to be careful when it's getting harder and harder to find them." She decided to take the presses to the festival and when she saw that vendors were selling store-bought. One of the presses has an 1866 patent date, Burchill said, and its design is similar to that of a fruit press Johann Gutenberg adapted into his printing press 500 years ago. The Burghills are among about 250 craftsmans and performers appearing at the festival, which is held in May. On the next four weekends, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., jugglers and jesters, mimes and musicians, witches and wizards will amuse and amaze passers-by on the six-acre fairgrounds. The center of activity will be a replica of a 18th century English village at the Agricultural Hall in York. --with MIDNITE DELITE Fri. & Sat. at Midnite THE HOTTEST UNCUT GAME IN TOWN BALL GAME MUST BE 18 OR OLDER Varsity Downtown 843-1065 THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 HOPSCOTCH JANOB EMBASSY PICTURES Release © 1980 JANOB EMBASSY PICTURES CORP. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-5788 HORSCOTH AVCO EMBASSY PICTURES Release © 1996 AVCO EMBASSY PICTURES COPY 7:30 & 9:30 Varsity Downtown 843-1085 SAMUEL FULLER'S THE BIG RED ONE 7:15 & 9:15 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 Resurrection 7:30 & 9:30 PG 2 SOME PEOPLE JUST DON'T BELOW. Caddyshack R 7:20 & 9:20 3 Fame 7:15 & 9:30 Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-8400 1 SAMUEL KUCKER'S 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY 7:15 & 9:45 2 Dressed to Kill 7:30 & 9:30 Sunset West 6th St 842-9171 SOHIZOID A UP FROM THE DEPTHS starts at dusk Varsity Downtown 843-1085 SAMUEL FULLER'S THE BIG RED ONE SAMUEL FULLER'S THE BIG RED ONE Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 Resurrection 7:30 & 9:30 PG 2 SOME PEOPLE JUST DON'T BELONG. Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 M 3 Fame Fame Cinema Twin 31st & Aims 842-6400 SHARE YOUR KIDS' FAVORITE 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY Cinema Twin 3141 & Iowa 842-6400 1 SANNEY KUENK IS 2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY 7.15 & 9.45 2 Dressed to Kill 7.30 & 9.30 Sunset Theater West 41th St. 842-6172 SCHIZOID & UP FROM THE DEPTHS starts at dusk Plaza TELFLEX 142-4850 10 Miles to Lawrence Ft. & St. Airport 7 (27 hr) 10 Miles to Lawrence THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW SWA FILMS Friday, Sept. 26 Alien The crew of a commercial ship, the Nostromo, are awakened by a distress signal .. by the time they realise that a creature has invaded them, it is too late. Ridley Scott's film is a masterpiece of horror. With Sigourney Weaver. Tom Skerritt Plus: "Bitch of a Nation"; with Kevin Reilly: "Mice." (color) M-20; 7:00; 9:30 Saturday, Sept. 27 Alien Sunday, Sept. 28 3:30, 7:00, 9:30. Interiors Woody Allen's foray into serious filmmaking is the story of three sisters (Rose Griffith) who are shocked when their late announces he is leaving their embassy (inimitable Stapleton), influenced by ingmar Bengel, Allen's film is nevertheless a very personal, insightful work. The '93 film, 15min 15min' Doctor: 2:00. (1978) Alanish lovey story set in Ireland. A young woman married (Sarah Mars) wishes to leave her quiet school teachings and move to the city (Christopher Jones). John Mills and cinematographer Freddie Wouk won Oscars for David Lewis (99 mins). Col 7-30. Monday, Sept. 29 Ryan's Daughter German stage director Max Reinhardt was brought over by Warner for a series of artistic pictures; as so often happens, the film. The result, this adaptation of the Shakespeare comedy is a visual delight, with its dazzling costumes and Mickey Roeley, Olivia deliahain, Dick Powell, Joe E. Brown, etc. A unique film, "Enter 'Hamlet'," (12 min.) & 8:30. Tuesday, September 30 A Midsummer Night's Dream 1935) Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be free on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Kick Off Union. Weekday tickets are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday tickets are $2.00. Tickets available at www.northeasternunion.com/NortheasternUnion. 4th level. Information 864-395-7000 or no smoking or retirements allowed. Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-121 CONVERSE Pass, Punt and Kick Contest Saturday, Sept. 27 at 10:OO a.m., field south of Watkins Hospital. Additional info? Call Rec Info 864-3546. Recreation Services 9R the VILLAGE SET 922 Massachusetts Come to the Village Set for FREE Monogramming with the purchase of any blouse or sweater. Special SALE thru Saturday: All Sachel and Velvet Blazers $49.99 (savings of $20-$40!) The Village Set has a limited number of Sachel's Designer Collection Wool Blazers in tweeds, plains and solids. You can also find Velvet Blazers in black, navy, burgundy, and chocolate brown. Shop The Village Set today! The Village Set has a limited number of Sachel's EXILE Guaranteed Used LPs $2:75 We Carry A large Selection of Rock T-Shirts, Posters, and Buttons. Also Smoking Accessories. We Buy and Sell LPs 15 West 9th 842-3059 4 p.m. Allen Field House KU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL TRYOUTS Begin Contact: Coach Washington or Coach Bahan MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 COUPON BOBBY BELL'S BAR-B-QUE COUPON SPECIAL! FREE BUY ANY FOOD ITEMS TOTALING *2.49...AND GET A FREE BOBBY BELL SPECIAL! CHOPPED BAT-B-QUIC BEEF AND GRATED SLAW PILED Expire 9/30/80. 2214 YALE ST. VALUABLE COUPON 842-6121 ALLEN WEISS $6.50 Day of Show BANJOER TONIGHT Flying Fish Recording Artist JOHN HARTFORD TOMORROW NIGHT Daisy Hill Dorms Night Free Adm. With Your Dorm ID Precision Rock by ALCHEMY Drink Specials 8-9 $2.50 Gen. Adm. $2.00 Club Members THE ROLLING STONES ULTRAVOX MONDAY 29th From England Chrysalis Recording Artists ULTRAVOX Opening Act BROWN & LANGREHR Advanced Tickets $4.00 Still Available POET ALLEN GINSBERG Tuesday Sept 30th !Rare Event! will read from their works WRITER WILLIAM BURROUGHS THE THUMBS Adm $4.00 At The Door Only Adm $4.00 At The Door Only THURSDAY OCT. 2nd THE ELVIN BISHOP BAND — with — LARRY RASPBERRY and the HIGHSTEPPERS $7.50 Advance Tickets Tickets Still Available At The SUA Box Office Coming Events NOVEMBER 2 SPLIT ENZ OCTOBER 10 LUTTLE JIMMY VALENTINE And The HEARTMURMUS 11 LYNCH & MCBEE BAND 16 CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN 17/18/19 BLUE RIDDUM BAND! 29 JOHN COUGAR 30 KU JAZZ "LAB BANDS" Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House SIR JOHN LENNON 2 SPLIT ENZ Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House Entertainment Page 6 University Dally Kansan, September 26, 1980 THE MAN AND THE Woman DAVE KRAUS/Kansan staff Berrie (Bart Ewing) nuts the move on Joan (Robin Manzano) in a scene from "Sexual Perversion in Chicago." 'Sexual Perversion' opens Inge series By JANE NEUFELD Staff reporter From its opening discussion on the merits of wearing World War II flak suits during sex to its closing anatomical rating of the female body by the two male characters, the one-action play "Xualis Perversity in Chicago" explores sexual mores. The play is one of three short plays by contemporary playwright David Marnet that will be presented for 9 p.m., Sept. 30 to Oct. 5, in the Performing Arts Building. The play is the first of the fall Ingle series. "Sexual Perversity" maps the relationship between four people, Bernie, Danny, Deborah and Joan. The two men are roommates and best friends; the two women, Danny and Deborah become lovers. "Danny and Deborah meet at a library, fall into bed, then fall into love, have a relationship that falls, and then go back to their friends," said Michael. Mich, senior and director of the three plays. Weaver said "Sexual Perversion" explores the problems everyone faces in dealing with sex. "Everyone has to go through the time when they want to get laid?" he said. The play is for anyone who's looking for and trying to figure out sex." The characters in the play have their problems figuring out sex. As Danny and Deborah drift apart, she tells him, "You're trying to uncover them and I'm confusing you with information." "We've got babies dying in Alaska, and Bernie says about the Equal Rights Amendment. "Nobody does it normally anymore," Danny says after Bernie's description of a night out with a girl, a flak suit, a five-gallon can of gasoline and a Zino lighter. The language of the play is sexually explicit. It is not just ladies' work. "The play itself is obcene," he said, "It's fast, it's funny, it's sad, it's terribly dirty." "Sexual Perverity" is set in Chicago in 1973. The play has 34 short scenes, which Weaver separates by changing the lighting and using music from 1973. "I chose '73 on purpose," Weaver said. "It was pre-stance for one thing, and the sexual revolution The props for the play were sparse, Weaver and audience members would use their imagination. "For an office, we have a desk. For the bedroom, we have a bed," he said. "We give the audience a chance to think. It takes a lot of imagination on the audience's part." harbara Bold, Lawrence junior, plays Deborah in "Sexual Perversion"; Mack Recter, Lawrence sophomore, plays Danny; Robert Mannan, Sophomore, plays Joan; Manzano, Chevy Chase, Md., senior, plays Joan. "They go from clichés and not knowing what to say to each other to understanding," he said. "It's a touching, touching little piece. It's a nice counterpoint to 'Sexual Persuasion.'" Two other one-act plays by Marnet also will be performed, "Reunion" and "M. Happyness." Weaver said "Reunion" was about the meeting of a father and daughter after 20 years apart. "Mr. Happiness" is about a radio announcer who gives advice to people with various problems. "He's a Paul Harvey, Ann Landers, a Joyce Brothers," Weaver said. "He ties the other two plays together and yet has something to say on his own." "An Evening of David Mamet" will run nightly from Sept. 30 to Oct. 5. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats are general admission and are $2 KU students with valid ID's will be admitted unless they must be reserved in advance due to limited seating. 'Act your age'rebutted in 'The Silver Whistle' By KEVIN MILLS Entertainment editor Being old is a physical fact but feeling old is a state of mind. That's the assertion of Robert E. McEnroe's 1948 play, "The White Whistle." The whistle describes community Theatre at the Lawrence Arts Center. The play opened last night, and will run tonight and tomorrow at 8. The Sunday Director Bobby Patton, chairman of speech and drama, said the play is about "what can happen when people allow themselves to step out of roles." "it is not social commentary per se." Pat- tion is not funny and that's the feeli ng people in it. The plot revolves around the appearance of a new resident at a charity home for the elderly. The resident says he is 77 but is subsequently revealed to be a 47-year-old hobo. Jose Ferrer played the hobo in the 1948 Broadway premiere. Peter Dart, professor of radio/TV/film, recreates the role in the Lawrence production. The hobo induces the residents to reject the decision of age by offering them the "secretess of youth." "He uses various plays," said Patton, "such as a secret potion that, when coupled with Scotch whiskey, has a profound effect on the residents." Charles Oldfather, retired law professor and University counsel, Ambrose Saricks, professor of history, Gerhard Zuther, chairman of the English department, Susan Kelso Zuther, assistant instructor of English, Nan Scott, lecturer in English, and Wary Dewx, of facilities and operations, also have roles in the play. In addition, several elderly Lawrence residents have been cast, many of whom had no prior theatrical experience. "Two things I had in mind," Patton said, "One, to involve these people. And two, to do a play that older persons would like to see. "I've never worked with such a receptive cast. They had a lot of creative energy that was based on their life experiences. It also allowed them to people playing roles close to their own are." "The Silver Whistle" already has been presented to various local nursing homes. Wednesday night's dress rehearsal was free for the elderly. Patton said there were several similarities in today's social climate and the one depicted in the 1948 play. Then, as now, a Democratic incumbent president was faced with questionable re-election. Recession and potential economic downturns are in today's headlines, as they were in 1948. "The play is not well known and it hasn't been done that much," Patton said. "But it's my own feeling that it's somewhat ahead of its time. "We have made real progress since 1948 in regards to our social perspective of the The set, designed and built by Ed Kirkman, features period pieces and props, Patton said. One of the props, Omar the rooster, is a live animal owned by cast member Howard Tickets are $3 on a reserved basis. There are only 150 seats for each performance. Reservations can be made by calling 843-9444. B Spare Time Mr. Beebe (Ambrose Saricks), right, discusses institutional living with Oliver Erwersten (Peter Dart) in "The Silver Whistle, Others, from left, are Mrs. Sampler (Reese Saricks), Mr. Cherry (Charley Oldfather), and Mrs. Hammer (Bernice Pulliam)." SCOTT HOOKER*Kansas*usa* TODAY MUSIC: John Hartford, with Alan Weiss, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Plain Jane, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Liquid Fire, 8:45 p.m. at The Plarium THEATER: "The Silver Whistle," presented by the Lawrence Community Theatre, 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center ART: Mark Goodwin, sculpture, and Bhakti Ziek, weaving, at the Lawrence Arts Center Colette S. Bangert, painting, and Vernon Brejcha, sculpture, at Helena/72 Gallery "Americana from the Collection," and "From Drawings to Sculpture: The Creative Process," at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art MOVIES: "Alen," with "Birth of a Notion," 3:30, 7 and 9 p.m. at the Union SATURDAY MUSIC: Alchemy, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Plain Jane, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Liquid Fire, 8:45 p.m. at The Plarium Henry Cuesta, clarinet, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Bard Day parade, 9 a.m., Mass St. THEATER: "A Toby Show," children's theater, 10:30 a.m. at the University Theatre, Murphy Hall "The Silver Whistle," 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center MOVIES: Same listing as Friday SUNDAY THEATER: "The Silver Whistle," 2:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center ART: "The New World: Masters of Modern Sculpture," a film at 3 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium MONDAY MUSIC: Ulravox, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Larry Maxey, clarinet, faculty recital at 8 p.m., Swarthout Recita Hall, Murphy Hall THEATER: Michael Dorn Moody, playwright, presents a slide program about "The Fool," 7 p.m., Conference room of the Satellite Union TUESDAY MUSIC: Allen Ginsberg, poet, and William Burroughs, writer, read from their works. Also, Thumbs, new wave music, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Johnny, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West KU Jazz Ensemble, I Gary Foster, guest soloist, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall THEATER: "An Evening of David Mamet," including "Sexual Perversity in Chicago," "Reunion" and "Mr. Happiness," 8 p.m. in the William Inge Theater, Murphy Hall ART: "The New World: Masters of Modern Sculpture," film, 1 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium WEDNESDAY MUSIC: Janet Jameson, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West John Boulton, flute, faculty recital at 8 p.m., Swarthout Rectal Hall THEATER: "An Evening of David Mamet," 8 p.m., William Inge Theater THURSDAY MUSIC: Elvin Bishop, with Larry Raspberry and the Highsteppers, 9 p.m., Lawrence Opera House Janet Jameson, 9 p.p., G.P. Loyd's West H 'A Toby Show' recreates circus hero By SHAWN McKAY Lacking the comfortable housing of a New York theater, they erected circus tents and hardwood benches. Lacking an audience acceptance, they refused to "choose" the character "Toby" as their hero. Staff Writer During his research of turn of the century tent shows, Harry found that Toby was the reason for his death. "He was so popular that every company had a Toby character," he said. "There were old Tobys, young Tobys, stuttering Tobys, girl Tobys Far removed from the bright lights and sophistication of the Broadway stage were the traveling tent shows of the Midwest. The Toby Show, a play based on the hero of "old-temt week" he presented at 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday in the University "The character that evolved in the tent shows of the early 1900s was Toby, a red-haired, frencel-faced, country bumpkin," said Aurand and director of the children's theater production. "Toby was the son." "With his red wi and freckled face, Toby was Harris took the familiar fairy tale 'Cinn- napolitan' and unlikely position of Cinderella's fairy godmother. Using the rural American character, Harris accepted a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and undertook the research and study of a children's play in "classical Toby style." the image of the country boy. He is funny and cool, a handsome man with black jeers and he always brought about a happy ending. "Children accept the Toby version of Cinderella," Harris said. "They are open to truthful, legitimate suggestions or ideas. They are willing to accept all of that means that you can use any style—even Toby." The show employs all the characteristics of early tent shows. "I used a farcical plot with lots of corry, vaudeville jokes," Harris said. "The tent plays also demanded three acts with short skits and entertainment in between." Harris said much of the appeal of the farm is the increased American farmers' fear of increasing urbanization. "At the time tent shows were at their peak, most of the young people were leaving their mid-afternoon outings." "People who stayed behind felt a little inferior, but Toby always managed to outsmart the city slicker. He appealed to the populace because he had enough men and brought about the triumph of good evil over. In the early 1900s, over 20,000 actors left summer — many of them to play in a summer — many of them to play in a summer. "More actors were employed in the tent shows in the Midwest than ever appeared on Broadway," Harris said. "But with the advent of radio and television, the tent shows died. The few that managed to survive could only attract people if they gave them Toby. The impact of the tent show on American culture can be underestimated, according to Harris. "It was the American comedia dell'arte. It is native American, and we had it right here and there." Harris, who has produced many children's plays, said he has designed children's theater in the country. He is developing children. "I discovered that I like children, I like theater and I like what children appreciate in theater," he said. "They like excitement, movement, color and energy." He then made me see me and that's what a 'Toby Show' creates." CHRIS TODDI/Kansan stef A pre-show charis line from "A Toby Show," a children's theatrical production. University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 7 Haskell celebrates Indian heritage By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter inferior, the city house heymph of Today is American Indian Day in Lawrence, as proclaimed by Kansas' governor in 1914 and by the City Commission this week. rs left every t shows Broad of radio new that people if te. It isere and ildren's theater theater theater," nt,color excites s." The celebration of American Indian Day, which always falls on the fourth day of September, was endorsed by 24 state legislatures and not been declared a national holiday. Kenan Allen This year, however, the Haskell Affairs Committee of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce decided to promote the event in Lawrence and is working to make the day a success, said Katie Goff, executive director of the Haskell Prevention Program. Kansan staff In honor of the holiday, Haskell Indian Junior College has canceled classes... ASTA Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Flowers by Alexandersi TODAY AND TOMORROW, Haskell students will perform traditional dances and offer samples of Indian foods at special events around the city. "We are trying to show non-Indian people the beauty of the Indian tradition and culture," Fixico, a former Haskell student, said. "We are trying to preserve side of Indian life. So much of what is heard in Lawrence is negative." American Indian Day is a largely unrecognized holiday, and the faculty and students of Haskell think it is important that more people recognize Indians and the contributions they have made to American society, she said. This is the first year that Haskell has planned events that involve both the team and the audience. "The parade emphasized that there are many different Indian nations, just as there are different countries," she said. "We tried to represent several groups." THE HASKELL PREVENTION Program sponsored a parade of tribal costumes Tuesday night in Haskell's auditorium. Today, Haskell faculty and students will speak at area public schools on topics such as American Indian literature, the differences between the two cultures, systems and the ways Indians used plants for medicinal and other purposes. Haskell's drama club will present excerpts from "Black Elk Speaks" at Lawrence High School and will act out Indian legends in the elementary SEVERAL DOWNTOWN stores have set up special displays in honor of the day, according to Jerry Gray, a member of the Haskell Affairs Committee. town, Fixico. Haskell students will demonstrate传统 Indian dances from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in front of the First National Bank, Ninth and Massachusetts streets, she said. They live on the Indian lacos, fry bread and other foods. Foreign & Domestic Parts DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS *Part Stop* 1209 EaL 1234 841-1290 Other activities will be held down- "The response of the schools and the merchants has been tremendous," Gray said. "The Chamber of Commerce really pushed the day for the students of Haskell, and interest has mushroomed." Ask us about our PRIVATE LIVES The day's featured speaker, Michael J. Davies, editor of the Kansas City Star and Times, will discuss the need for carpenters to rebuild rapport with print readers. The final holiday activity will be a mini-powwow tomorrow night at the Haskell Powwow Grounds on the west side of the Haskell campus. 1209 East 23rd 841-2200 At the end of the session, Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, will announce this year's addition to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame. Later, Robert Samsot, a deputy editor of Newsday and this year's Gannett professional-in-residence at the School of Journalism, will examine the relationship between editing and technology. ROLLERBALL IS COMING ! REA----E.E.SENIORS - LOOK into the engineering opportunities open in rural electrification and telephony Tomorrow, Ride the - ASK your Placement Office for pamphlets telling what the Rural Electrification Administration offers for a challenging job. HARBOUR LITES GAME BUS - SIGN UP for a personal interview with *MIA Recruiting Representative* who will be at your Placement Office or call 1-800-234-7890. NO DISCRIMINATION About 250 editors are expected tomorrow at Kansas Editors' Day, an annual event sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism, Dana Leibengood, assistant dean, said yesterday. NO DISCRIMINATION "Editors' Day is organized to recognize Kansas editors and to strengthen their ties with the School of Computer Science at University as a whole." Leibengood said. 250 expected for Editors' Day The Editors' Day general session will open with remarks by Tom Buchanan, president of the Kansas Press Association. $1 Pitchers Before & After Game with Ticket or Stub TOMMY JETT Jazz Up At Paul Gray's Jazz Place 926 Mass.-Upstairs A Private Club Saturday Henry Cuesta Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More from the Lawrence Welk Show Don't Miss It! After Midnight-Jim Stringer Come Hungry!! Note Chasers bring 1 or 100 The Jim Stringer Band Handbags Travel Bags Briefcases Book Bags Back Packs Billfolds Jewelry Knee Socks Panty Hose Key Rings Scarfs Belts And More BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves. & Sun. BAG SHOP Holiday Plaza Open Eves, & Sun. After Midnight—the Straight Friday $3.00 Cover for your entire group, Take Advantage of Mr. Steak's Student Special It's not your basic beef patty on a sesame seed bun. - Highest Quality 3c Copies 10% off lunch and dinner - Free Collating (for regular priced items only) Present current student ID to waitress. offer expires 9/30/80 We serve only USDA choice beef naturally aged with no chemicals. Or try our quality seafood. 920 W. 23rd Lawrence, Kansas ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa—Holiday Plaza 842-2001 Mr. Steak You can't cut quality when your reputation is at steak. COPY WARS ENCORE STRIKES BACK 841-3454 Enterprise Copy Corp Lawrence Kansas Pentel Precision Writing Instruments R-68 69c Mfg. List 79c P203, 205 207, 209 $3.25 Mfg. List $3.95 QUALITY * BEST PRICES * R KANSAS Pentel R-68 P203, 207 207, 209 $3.25 Mfg. List Two locations to serve you Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop,Satellite Union BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICES * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the ONLY bookstore to share its profits with KU students. Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Aztec Inn Home of the Aztec Calendar Before or After the Game, Enjoy a Meal at the Aztec Inn. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun. Closed Monday Dine in the true Mexican Village "Huts." 807 Vermont 842-9455 Edward and Naomi Roste invite you to stop in today. Elevators' By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter The quirks of residence hall elevators are not a big deal to some hall staff members, but some residents think otherwise. A Templin Hall resident, who asked not to be identified, said he felt unsafe in the hall's two elevators. The elevator and stop two feet below floor, he said. But residents themselves may be responsible for the elevators' stopping below the floors, said Glenn Allen, director resident of Templin Hall. "On at least two occasions this semester, I have known of individuals crowding into an elevator to see how many it could hold," he said. "There are only so many people that an elevator can hold. If it is overweighted, naturally it is going to stop below floors." FOUR YEARS AGG, crowding of a Templin elevator caused it to fall two floors before a secondary braking system stopped it, said J.J. Wilson, director of housing. None of the people in the elevator was hurt seriously. Wilson said overloading was the main quirks trouble halls' residents Despite occasional overloading, there are no serious problems with residence hall elevators, said Dean Milroy, assistant director of housing. reason for the elevator's temporary failure. However, the elevator company that will begin servicing residence hall elevators Oct. 1 has requested that the brake linings of elevators in Ger- Wilson said the linings would be replaced by Sept. 30. "The brake linings were pretty worn out," said Bob Mueller, manager of U.S. Eleventor, 1522 Erie St., North Kansas City, Mo. of Ellsworth, said the elevators there had only normal maintenance problems. ELLEN SWADLEY, house manager Milroy said the office of housing was not pleased with the maintenance work done there. Wednesday afternoon, a Templin resident was stuck in an elevator for 20 minutes. Club steps to folk dances on Fridays By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter staff Reporter No, a Samogyi Karikazo is not a surgeal xword. The club was started in 1968, Paul It's a circular folk dance for women, one of the several dances taught by the KU Folk Dance Club at 7:30 p.m. every Friday in Robinson Gymnasium. Paul said about 20 to 30 people usually attended. RUSSIAN, UKRANIAN, Bulgarian, Polish, Rumanian, Hungarian and Irish dances are among the folk dances taught. About 15 people attended last Friday's舞, carefully following the steps taught by Craig Paul, Lawrence graduate student. said, and he has attended the dances since January 1972. Beginning dancers are taught new dances during the first half of the evening, and requests for more difficult dances are taken during the second half. Paul said folk dancing was a good way to escape from the pressures of the week. The more challenging the dance, the better the escape it provides, he said. 'My friends in high school urged me to come,' he said. 'At the time, I was chasing a girl who was here. Later, I came for the dancing and music.' "In fact, at times I think it's a lot like a jogger's high. You don't actually realize what your body's doing but you're having a hell of a good time." DANCING, LIKE JOGGING, has its popular dangers. Candass Naeff, Overland Park senior, said she broke a toe during one of the dances. "My theory of what happened," Neff said, "is that of the two people who were dancing with me, one of them went to the right and one went to the left of them stepped on my foot and the other one pulled me the other way." But fear of injury need not discourage anvone. Neff said. "As far as I know, I'm the only one who's ever been injured. It's not typical," she said. Could the Navy interest you in 2 years of paid tuition and a world tour? If you are a sophomore at The University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Chief of Naval Education and Training will even include $100.00 a month Spending Money that's TAX FREE. When you graduate, you will have a job in the Fleet. Pursue the sea as a Surface Warfare Officer, Aircraft Carrier Pilot, Submarine Diving Officer, Nuclear Power Officer, Aviation Maintenance Officer, or a U.S. Marine Corps Officer. You will get a world tour. Take advantage of 2 years of paid tuition and a global voyage. Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC). Take paid tuition, spending money, and a job that gives you a world cruise. That is Navy ROTC. Homecoming 1980 BOND Sen. Julian Find Out "What's Next" Friday, October 17—Hoch Auditorium 7:00 p.m. FREE ADMISSION Village Inn Village Inn PANCAKE HOUSE REBTAURANT Village Inn Good Luck Hawks! Beat Louisville! See you after the game. Village Inn 821 Iowa PANCAKE HOUSE RESTAURANT THE STORY OF JOHN GARLANDS Are you wondering whether to join a huge international accounting firm or an independent local firm? Main Hurdman & Cranstoun invites you to join both. Main Hurdman & Cranstoun, a partner in the third largest certified public accounting organization in the world, is also a group of largely autonomous local offices which offer diverse client engagements and all the opportunities for accelerated professional growth that a young accountant could ask for. With offices in Wichita, Topeka, Kansas City, Denver, and seventy-seven other U.S. cities and seventy foreign countries, Main Hurdman & Cranstoun has all the research capabilities, coordinated marketing strengths, and comprehensive educational programs of an international firm, while Main Hurdman & Cranstoun gives you all the advantages—close client contact, informal working atmosphere, and rapid advancement to positions of responsibility—of a small local firm. Main Hurdman & Cranstoun invites you to explore the best of both worlds. We'll be interviewing on campus on October 10. Main Hurdman & Cranstoun University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 9 ASK registration program adds 1,000 to county roster The tables have been taken down, but the voter registration drive is not over for members of the Associated Students of Kansas. About 1,000 students registered this week at tables set up in front of Wescah Haid and in the Kansas Hair and Rose Kuo, student senator. Another phase of the push to register voters for the Nov. 4 general election will be a mail drive. "We are going to start another part of our voter registration drive next week, aimed mainly at the young living groups." Kuo said yesterday. during dinner Wednesday and Thursday nights, Kuo said. The cards are to be filled out by the volunteers and returned to the volunteers. These cards will be taken directly to the county clerk's office, and registration forms then will be filled out. "More than half the people registering this week did not declare a party affiliation but registered as independent," Kuo said. However, she said they did not necessarily seem to be in support of John Anderson, independent presidential candidate. "I think most of them were in a hurry to get class and didn't want to fill out the extra form to declare a party," she said. ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2831 Manuals, Modules, Miniatures DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS Ral Partha, Citadel, MiniFig paints, brushes, dice ADVENTURE a bookstore 1010 Massachusetts Mon-Sat 9-9 Phone 843-6424 Sun 1-5 RICHARD G. McQUEEN—PRES. Queen JEWELERS the Store where happy decisions are made... 809 Mass. phone: Lawrence, Ks. 66044 913(843)5432 Class Rings Antiques-Furniture BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hampshire JB's BIG BOY Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Try our new Fish Fry Dinner $3^{00}$ includes salad bar & dinner bread Attention Seniors: Get involved in this year's Senior Class activities. Standing committees now forming- Hope Award Senior Class Gift Promotions and Advertising Class Banner Commencement Committee Social Committee Check committees you are interested in serving on, clip out, and turn in to BCOO office-107 B Kansas Union-Level 3. Deadline October 3. RAMADA INN Name : ___ Sunday Brunch 11:00AM-2:00PM All You Can Eat Phone :___ 842-7030 2222 W 6th -Danish Pastry -Bacon and Sausage -Danish Pastry -Scrambled eggs usually $4.95 -Fried Chicken American Fries London Bowl But only $3.95 with this coupon Salad Bar -American Fries -Deep Fried Fish Bacon and Sausage Scrambled eggs Good until October 12,1980 This coupon worth $1.00 off off any adult portion Tight budget jeopardizes ASK's priorities Gov. John Carlin voiced personal support for the issues the Associated Students of Kansas discussed with him. He said he did not promise a lot of financial support. By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter About 10 representatives from the statewide student lobbying group talked with the governor and his special assistant, Steve Millstein, about its priority issues from the Board of Reqents 1981 budget. straightforward. He did not offer any kind of delusions that the budget would include a lot of money for our priority issues." Speaking on Carlin's behalf, Millstein said the governor's office was particularly interested in minimum wages for university students, 100 percent fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants and 100 percent funding of student union rental when used by faculty members and administrators. Bob Bingaman, executive director of ASK, said. "The governor was pretty THESE THREE were ASK's top priority issues from the Regents budget prioritizer, and all were recommended by Carlin to the Legislature last year. Ask us about our footlights Imaginative Cards & Gifts Posters, Stationery, etc. Holiday Plaza 841-6377 PRIVATE LIVES (ecross from Greenbrier's Dell) Princess Schooler SEAFOOD Market 841-6610 925 Iowa at Hicksville Across from bowling lanes Alaskan Salmon Steaks $3.95/lb. Reg. $4.89/lb. Nova Scotian Haddock Fillets $2.29/lb. Reg. $2.99 Jumbo Stuffed Clams $2.65/doz. Reg. $3.25/doz. Your response to the Shogun Special on Tiger Prawns has been so great that I have decided to keep these large lobster tasting cousins of shrimp in stock regularly. Free Tiger Prawn recipes from the world over are available from the Schooner. Michael Caron, your local fishmonger مسلمُ المؤمنين الصلّة سنة القصر الالكتروني - - في البحث السري - الأعضاء والمؤرخين الحالية العدد السلام عليكم وآله وسلم ما سيستخدمه ! الفلاحة النفسية المركزة للعلوم العلمية في مكة - فلاحة النفسية المركزة للعلوم العلمية في مكة - ال Featuring at the grill: يُمكنك استخدام الصفحة التالية ! اللغة العربية - - اللغات السورية - THE WAGON WHEEL The Wheel Football Game Day Breakfast Special: Eggs, Bacon, Ham Hash Browns, Toast & Beer Big Time Coop, Leona & Swanny the singing waiter! 9:00-11:00 A.M. HAIR BE HAIR BENDERS . . We'll give you that new look you want Easy care styles for men & women HAIR BENDERS 24th & Iowa Open Tues., Wed, Fri 9-5 Thurs. 10-6 Sat 9-2 842-9641 The fourth priority issue, funding of student financial aid offices, was the only new issue ASK presented, Millstein said. KU is asking for $60,000 to upgrade its financial aid office and hire more staff. The total requested by the seven schools for such aid was $230,000. Mallstein said that although funding would be considered for hiring more University staff, the administration of the job was unclear where that staff personnel should work. Millstein said the governor was attempting to "bring receipts and expenses into balance" and would be calling for only a 3.5 to 5 percent increase for 1981, compared with an 11 percent increase this year. Millstein said that he was optimistic about recommending funding for the project, that no definite decimation has been made. LEGISLATIVE BUDGET hearings begin Oct. 20, and Carlin will present his budget to the Legislature in January. BERNICE TODD AKS' other five priority issues in the Regents budget are expansion of the state scholarship program, funding to students in need and expanding based education program," University for Man," funding for building facilities for the handicapped, a 12 percent faculty salary and benefit increase and another 12 percent staff salary and benefit increase. YOUR CO. TREAS. REP. Craig Templeton, KU's representative on the ASK executive board and chairman of the board, also attended the meeting. Todd for Treasurer Bill Halvorsen, Treas, Pol Ad. AN EXPLOSIVE MOTION PICTURE the CROSS and the SWITCHBLade the CROSS SWITCH AN EXPLOSION Death was the only door to the hell that trapped them until the preacher showed them love **SHARING** *PAT BODONE* as David Wilkerson with ERIK ESTRADA + JACKIE GROUK + UND DEFOLLIPI *JD ANN ROBINSON* - Scrimpless by DON MURRAY and ROSS - Music by Mackie CARMIN CAMELIEN *DON MURRAY* - by DICK ROSSE - PRIVATE BY TICHLOROIL **GP** Tonight, 7pm. Kansas Union, Jayhawk Room Admission is Free Maranatha Ministries SNA FILMS Presents ALIEN In space no one can hear you scream. A L I E N TON SKERRITT SIOUQERNWEIER VERONICA CARTWRIGHT HOLLYWOOD, CA EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS/DIRECTORS PRODUCES BY GARSON CAROLL DANIEL DAVIS & WALTER HILL DIRECTED BY BRIAN SCOTT DIRECTED BY TAN ROBINSON & RONALD FREYEN SCREENPLAY BY JOHN KETTLER PRINTS BY COLLEEN RESTRICTED Friday-3:30,7:00,9:30 Saturday-3:30,7:00,9:30 Friday and Saturday Sept. 26-27 $1.50 Woody Allen's INTERIORS Sunday Sept. 28 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allowed Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 The University of Kansas Theatre for Young People presents A Toby Show By Aurand Harris Tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office. Call 913-864-3982 for reservations. All seats reserved at $1.50 September 27, 10:30 a.m. University Theatre, Murphy Hall The Arts Room to rent? Use Kansan classifieds. On the Record Two juveniles being detained for armed robbery will appear in court OCT. 3, when the Douglas County juvenile prosecutor will ask that they be tried as adults, Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday. A petition was filed yesterday in the juvenile division charging that the youths committed an act of delinquency by committing aggravated robbery and kidnapping, Dennis McFall, juvenile prosecutor, said yesterday. If the court decides that the two can be tried as adults, both will be formally شعبة شعبة شعبة شعبة شعبة شعبة باب ابن إسحاق بن علي Babاء بن إسحاق بن علي دارخان Darcahan 147 Street 147 Street Middle Avenue Middle Avenue من رابطه ی این هیچ نفر ایجاد نمی کند که از انسان در نظر گرفته شده باشد و از انسان دفتر خالی شود. مثل آنکه من از انسان دفتر خالی است چرا The youths, a 16-year-old from Topeka and a 17-year-old from Horton, were apprehended by a Lawrence police officer Wednesday morning near 12th and Tennessee streets just five minutes after they allegedly stole $260 from Taco John's, 1101 W. Sixth St., police said. The youths were being held yesterday afternoon in the juvenile detention area of the juvenile detention center. Police said the two then ordered a large amount of food. When they were informed of the price by one of the employees, the Horton youth allegedly pulled out a knife and jumped over the counter, demanding money. charged with aggravated robbery and kidnapping. The other employee, who had begun filling the order, ran to the back of the building but was chased by the Topeka youth, police said. According to the police, the two waited until only two employees arrived. The Topeka youth brought the second employee to the front counter, police said, and the youths took all the paper money. The youths took the two employees to a back room and told them not to move, police said. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" God's message to us in the Second Palm says the heathen are the kings, the rulers, and people who imagine they are slaves. The Palm tells us to get rid of the restraints of His Moral Law and Ten Commandments placed upon man in order to keep him from destruction in time, and in eternity. The Palm also forbids the abuse in "Contempt of Court" by "The Judge of all the earth." knock; if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me." Rev. 3:20. What goes on round about us in the Church is to be careful not to give them the power we do have to wait for the home folks, and the state, to repent, for it is an individual matter and responsibility. "No man lives to himself," however, and what we do or fail to do, affects others. What favorable response there are is that you should take care of one common note running through them. They seem to say in one way or another: "Keep it up." May we urge and suggest that all who approve of them generally, or can they? It may be that some of them definitely, and persistently, that God would convert the heathen. In this Psalm after saying: "Yet have I set My King upon My holy hill of Zion." God also says: "Ak of him shall give Thee the heatne Forth inheritance." Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:28 Police said that once the two empl oyees, the youths leave, they called the police. Thank God we don't have to wait for the Church to repeal, for Christ said: "Behold, I stand at the door, and Punishment in this life results in "Divine Contempt" for man: "He pounthe contempt upon princes - makek the judges fools." — Job 12:21,17. The results of The Divine Contemp upon princes and judges for the people and the nobles are punishment; for the poor, bury, rape, etc., and more or less anarchy in our most important institutions: The Home the source of human life: The State, whose duty it is to keep the peace, law and order; and The Church, whose duty it is to teach morals, law, and education; The Lord. Are there any evidences of Divine Contempt in our country and world today? Unless we be converted, turn, repent and bring forth fruit worthy of repentance, punishment for Divine Contempt in the life to come is the wrath and curse of God eternally. The barren and unfitful, cursed, it withered, and doubled cut down for the fire. Pray especially for the "unbelieving heathen" and clergy who have gotten into God's inheritance The Church, "crest in unawares"; those attacking The Word of God, The Dely of Christ, His Virgin Birth, Miracles, The Resurrection, etc. — "the woods are of them!") Such a power of invocation is a source of authority in our great and beloved Protestant Denominations. "The effectful fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much . . ." James 5:16. TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 You've worked hard all week. So treat yourself to our Friday Flower big, bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now Roses $5.25 Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass. 841-6000 Open 9:30 Mon-Sat 100% Woolnuch For those of you who do a lot of walking and hiking we feature the Woolrich Anorak parka . . . terrific outdoor gear. The shell is a rugged cotton/nylon and we have it with either a light liner or plaid wool liner in a variety of sharp colors $60.00 and $75.00 CENTRE Shitenight's Shop the men's shop downtown at 839 Mass Town Shop SGT. PRESTON'S GAME DAY SPECIALS SGT. PRESTON'S OF THE NORTH BAR & RESTAURANT 815 NEW HAMPSHIRE MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE AND THE MAD HATTER BRING YOU BUY A DRINK AT THE HATTER & MEMBERS RECEIVE A COUPON START YOUR PREGAME WARM-UP AT SGT PRESTON'S 11:00 AT THE MAD HATTER REDUCED DRINK PRICES AT THE MAD HATTER BLOODY MARY'S AT SGT PRESTON'S THEN RIDE SGT PRESTON'S THEN RISE SO FREES FREE BUS TO THE KU GAME GOOD FOR 50c OFF A SANDWICH AT SGT PRESTON'S MAD HATTER 700 N THE MAD HATTER 842-9402 700 NEW HAMPSHIRE Ginsberg, Burroughs to give poetry reading Allen Ginsberg, one of the major contributors to the "beat generation" of the 1980s, will give a poetry reading at 7 on Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. He also will perform a duo poetry reading with his long-time friend, novelist Burrough, at p.m. at the La Lune at the Library at Hesault Seventh and Mahwah streets. There is no charge for Monday night's performance. Tickets for the Opera House performance will be $4 at the door Tuesday night. Ginsberg, author of "Howl and Other Poems," "Airplane Dreams" and several other books of poetry and prose, a prominent teacher in college campuses in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1955, Ginsberg, Burroughs, writer Jack Kerouac and several other poets, writers and musicians in the San Francisco area were dubbed "beatniks," and they advocated political and sexual openness. Their movement brought about a new wave in writing, music and culture that later carried over into politics. Ginsberg, 54, is a graduate of Columbia University. He divides his time between homes in New York City and Boulder, Colo., where he teaches at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poets. I Burroughs, also considered part of the "beat generation" although he never attested to it, is a native of St. Louis. C Burroughs also wrote "Junkie," the memoirs of his life while a drug addict, "Nova Express," "The Ticket That Exploded" and "The Soft Machine." A Harvard graduate, Burroughs is most famous for his book "Naked Lunch," a baiting satire that was banned in Massachusetts because of Burroughs' assertion that all people inhabited the junkie's universe. The book later was declared not obscene by the Massachusetts Supreme Court. Experiential group offers class There is an alternative to the Jayhawks' football game tomorrow against the Louisville Cardinals, ac- counting at Ole Miss, KU assistant professor of dance. The free conference will emphasize experiential education. the leaders of the group, the Association for Experiential Education, a nonprofit organization, will hold a regional conference from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow in room 242 of Robinson Gymnasium. "What's going to happen tomorrow is that a group of strangers are going to become intimate," Sloss said yesterday. Sloos called experiential education learning through direct experience and learning of people together to focus on arts as a therapeutic process." "This is the first workshop to be held in the Midwest that will bring all sorts "It's easy to sit on your backside in a classroom and hide," she said. "There won't be any place to hide tomorrow. There won't be any spectators. The conference will focus on part- exceptional and hand- capped people. Each participant will learn forms of creative expression, including group discussions, a movement session and a movement choir. "We want to show how a heterogeneous group of people--young, old, exceptional and handicapped—can work together in an educational setting." Sloss said. "Hopefully, people will come out realizing that we don't have to segregate by age, sex or profession. "Very often, people come out of a workshop feeling better about themselves, with a higher sense of self-esteem." The workshop will be led by William C. Freeman, a dance and movement therapist who has done workshops in the movement, arts and dance education. INTRODUCING A Different Kind of Store KRAZY KARL'S ★ ORIGINAL SILK SCREEN T-SHIRTS - PLUS MACRAME HANGING TABLES, PLANT HANGERS, SUSPENDERS, AND GLASS MOBILES ★ FREE LOGO T-SHIRT WITH EVERY PURCHASE (opening week only) OPEN 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. Located at 15 east 8 st. OPENING SEPT. 29 The timeless realities of Christ's earth unfold on the motion picture screen His darkest day has become our brightest! World Wide Pictures presents The GOSPEL ROAD Saturday, Sept. 27—7:00 p.m. Kansas Union—Jayhawk Room The GOSPEL ROAD World Wide Pictures presents The GOSPEL ROAD I am very much concerned about the safety of children. I believe it is essential to keep them away from dangerous areas and ensure they are protected. Saturday, Sept. 27 - 7:00 p.m. Kansas Union—Jayhawk Room FREE ADMISSION Maranatha Ministries University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 11 Spotlight KU prof's old friend By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Reporter His fingers eased over the keys of the piano, and jazz music filled the night club. It was the 1940s, and the musician was picking up some cash while waiting for a chance to sing opera in concerts. A stranger cried shed him. "My girlfriend here says you're interested in singing—want to make it big. I can't tell. Are you really that good?" the stranger asked. The musician, William Wartfield, told him he had indeed had training and was waiting for a chance to make a formal concert debut. The stranger said he would sponsor Warfield's debut. "Oh, sure. fine," Warfield said, expecting nothing to materialize. BUT THE STRANGER meant it. Warfield made his debut and got favorable reviews. He went on to do concerts, Broadway shows and a movie, "Showboat," in which he sang "Old Man River." Warfield, the Langston Hughes Visiting Professor at KU this fall, spoke at the "Tea and Talk" lecture yesterday. The man who sponsored Warfield's debut explained to him that someone had helped him during a pivotal point in his career, and he became a financial success. He wanted to return the favor after the failure of his career after Warfield's debut, the man died. However, Warfield later met a student in Australia who was playing with a band, and he advised him on his career. In a few years, the student was successful in England. Both Warfield's own sponsor and the student were of Scottish-Irish descent, and both were named Walter Carr. Warfield toked. "It put the fear of God into me. I decided I wasn't going to help anyone." WARFIELD SAID THAT from his childhood to the time he entered college, he really wanted to be a college professor. Instead, he became a perennial Broadway star because of his show, "Call Me Mister," which was on tour for a year. "The bug bit me," he said of that period. He called the cast, which included Buddy Hackett, Carl Reiner and Bob Fosse, "a company of young hopefuls." He already had auditioned for the part of Joe in "Showboat" but had mistakenly assumed that the part had been taken. Then he read in a gossip column that the role of Joe had not been filled. Warfield was in Australia at the time, working at the Australian Broadcasting Company. ABC made a recording of his voice and sent it to MGM, his manager sent a package with pictures and a video of him to his friend Louis Mayer of MGM about the baritone. Warfield was cabled the news of his hiring. young. His music education began in the church where his father was minister. He sang in the choir and took piano lessons. Warfield was born in Arkansas but moved to Rochester, N.Y., when he was When he entered the Eastman School of Music on a scholarship, he was already qualified for a piano degree but continued to study because he liked it. WORLD WAR II HAD begun when he graduated. HE was stationed at Camp Richey in Maryland, where many immigrants arrived, because there he could use his knowledge of French, German and Italian. Warfield is teaching voice and will give a concert in November before returning to the University of Illinois at St. Louis, where he is a professor of music. SNALE SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 End of season clearance $20.00 OVER COST models starting at $494.00 PUCH Franchised Dealer For Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH-PUCH-AUSTRO-DAIMLER CENTURION RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-0042 1033 Vermont Lawrence KS ZERCHER PHOTO Now Carries Jayhawk Souvenirs EAGLE Featuring: Eagle - KU Mugs & Glasses - KU Pencils - KU Stickers - KU Cards - KU Digital Clocks with date & time HILLCREST ZERCHER DOWNTOWN PHOTO 1107 MASS. NON-TRAD PICNIC Let's Get Acquainted! At Clinton Park Shelterhouse, 5th and Mississippi, North of Pinckney School in Lawrence. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 Beginning at 2 p.m. COME WITH YOUR FAMILY OR A FRIEND! Bring a covered dish and table service in sufficient quantity for yourself and your guests. INVITE ANOTHER NON-TRAD! FREE COME SHARE THE FOOD & FRIENDSHIP! Bucky's Special Sponsored by Non-Traditional Student Organization, which is partially funded by Student Senate. FRIED BEEF Bocky's order of French Fries with purchase of Roast Beef Sandwich. Good Through Friday, Sept. 26, 1980. Bucky's 2120 W. 9th 530 Wisconsin 6th St. Wisconsin The Clubhouse Phillips 66 Vista Restaurant Back by popular demand The Moffet-Beers Band Fri, Sept 26 & Sat, Sept 27 From 10 pm-2:00 am Th Ir Thursday Initiation night All the beer you can drink 9-1 am, members guys $3 gals $2 their guests guys $4 gals $3 LH Don't miss our T.G.I.F. 50' drinks starting at 3:00 pm Prices then go up 10' every hour until 10 pm when they return to regular prices. AFROTC IS GREAT For me, the Air Force and my service in the Air Force represented an expression of patriotism and service to a country that I'm proud of. Air Force ROTC is going to allow me to continue to serve my country as an Air Force Officer. As a commissioned officer in the Air Force, my eight years of service will provide me an important financial investment that will allow me to retire in 12 years, should I choose, I'll be in my early forties and ready for my third career. That's what Air Force ROTC is doing for me. See what it can do for you. Wayne Feltman, KU Junior FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: AFROTC 108 Military Science Phone 864-4676 AIR FORCE ROTC Gateway to a great way of life. STEP BACK INTO OUR 19TH CENTURY SALOON FREE BUS TO AND FROM EVERY KU HOME FOOTBALL GAME •BUSES LEAVE AT 1:00p.m. •BAR OPENS AT 10:00a.m. SGT PRESTONS OF THE NORTH BAR & RESTAURANT 815 NEW HAMPSHIRE MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE Shorter Hair can be . . . I . Soft, feathery, full and very feminine. OPEN MOST EVENINGS TILL 8 headmasters 809 VERMONT • 843-8808 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Festival offers taste of folk heritage For lots of dancing, food and good times, KU students can find something a little different this week at the annual Kansas Folkie Festival in Topeka. Strains of bluegrass, jazz, blues, polka, railroad songs and tamaritza (Serbian dance music) are scheduled to mingle with the cries of an old-time auction, noises of craft demonstrations and odors of a variety of ethnic cooking, said Bill Pearson, festival field worker and production consultant. The festival, sponsored by the Kansas State Historical Society, is a celebration of American cultures, Pearson said. The festival is financed by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Kansas Arts Commission. AMONG THE CRAFT displays will be whitening, leather working, decoy carving, horse shoeing, hair weaving, horse training, quilting and spur making. German, Mennonite, American Indian, Jewish, Afro-American and Italian foods will be available during the festival, which will be at the Historical Society's grounds west of Toeka. "There are few experiences around here that could duplicate this kind of exposure to so many different cultures." Pearson said. He said the Historical Society was trying to demonstrate that "these An old-fashioned square dance will open the festivities at 7:30 ten. An auction will begin at 3 p.m. Sunday. Proceeds will go to financing Hampton is the $3 a day or $4 for the entire weekend. Children under 12 will be admitted free, and senior citizens may be purchased in advance at Stem Mason Music. 737 New Hambridge St. The Historical Society's grounds are located 1/8 mile north on Urish Road from the intersection of 10th street and Urish in Topeka. LS! Alvamar, Izods, & You! They all go together! We've got the Izods, come and get 'em. 15% OFF EVERYTHING IN PRO SHOP - Best Selection of Izods in Town Striped and Plain Shirts, Boys' Sizes 12-20 Men's Sweaters and Striped Shirts - Nike Tennis & Running Shoes - Warmups • Activewear • Racquets A vamar RACQUET & SWIM CLUB 3. 4/mile west of Kasold on Clinton Parkway Open 7 days a week, 8:00AM to 9:00PM CBSIS... JEFF BECK THERE AND BACK including: Slow Cycle Too Much To Lose B Becki/Space Boogie/The Pump FF 15684 Jeff Beck's long-awaited new album. It's the answer to where he's been . . . and where he's headed Give the gift of music. 5. 99 LP/TAPE SUGG, LIST 8.98 Also available on 8-track & cassette Also available on B-track & cassette Hunting Eyes Angel Flying To the Ground Two Boys to Every Story If You Want Me To Love You I Will 5.59 LP/TAPE SUGG. LIST 7,98 THE ORIGINAL SOUND MAKER WILLIE NELSON & FAMILY HONEYSUCKLE ROSE Includes: On The Road Again, Angel, Lye, Angel Flying, Too Close To The Ground, Two Birds To Every Shot. If You Want Me To Love You I WILL SQ 36752 For twenty years I'm beening invited to the country, but my love song's the bit he has own love songs. Willie Nelson's stirring spectacular, as is the music con- tained in this album. KC 36512 Crystal's voice has never sounded more natural; truly she has one of the most fine-tuned vocal recordings of any superstrict artist. CBS RECORDS Crystal Gayle THESE DAYS including If You Ever Change Your Mind Aim No Love In The Heart Of The City Same Old Story (Same Old Song) Take It Easy What A Little Moonlight Can Do 13. 98 9. 77 LP/TAPE SUGG. LIST 13.98 7. 98 ...ON "Buy It Once. Enjoy It A Lifetime. Recorded Music Is Your Best Entertainment Value." Also available on B-track & cassette ...ON SALE! On Campus The ENGINEERING CAREER FAIR will be open to all KU students from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Allen Field and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in seniors meet from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. only. DISCOUNT CENTER STORE HOURS: 9-10 Daily 10-7 Sunday THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room in the Kansas Union. GIBERON'S DISCOUNT CENTER TODAY TONIGHT . 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas Good Through 9/28. THE INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 7 in the Kansas Union's Regionalist Room. VISA The KU Folk Dance Club offers beginning INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING lessons at 7:30 and will take dance requests starting at 9 in Robinson THE OBSERVATORY will have an open house at 7 at 500 Lindley Hall. The Association for Experiential Education will sponsor a conference on the use of STEM in Art and the ARTS' "from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. in Robinson Dance Room, 242. The School of Education will dedicate its outdoor playing fields, 23rd and Iowa ALLEN GINSBERG in a reading of his works at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. THE MUSIC THERAPY CLUB will sponsor a Dance Therapy Workshop by Joan Sloss from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium, Room 240. A PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM will be held at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Malott Hall. Manfred Bucher from Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, will speak on "Interaction" in Alkali and Silver Halides." TOMORROW SUNDAY THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE will present a slide show on research for the play, "The Fool," at 7 p.m. in the Satellite Union Conference Room. Larry Day, professor of journalism, will speak on "THE CHURCH IN LATIN AMERICA: CRUCIBLE OF CHANGE," at 5:30 p.m. at the Fellowship Supper at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. The Western Civilization Film Festival will feature "RENAISANCE," "MICHELANG-ELO" and "LEONARDO DA VINCE" starting at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lippincott Hall. The SOLAR ENERGY INTERNATIONAL CLUB will hold an open public meeting at 10:30 a.m. in the Satellite Union. streets, to former teacher HENRY A. SHENK at 11 a.m. CIRCLE K's weekly meeting will be at 7 p.m. in 401 Murphy Hall. THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERS will hold a meeting from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in 2002 Learned. MONDAY The department of English, in conjunction with SUA, will feature poet Larry Maxey, associate professor of music performance, will give a CLARINET RECITAL as part of the faculty recital series at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The Kansas welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus," information on free events should be submitted to the Campus Editor two days before the event. There's only one equation that will solve the nation's energy crisis . . . Professionals + $ = energy and that's to combine talented and concerned people, provide capital to get the job done and then set demanding but realistic go That's what we're trying to at Cities Service, a diversified natural resources company. Our professional requirements include most disciplines applied from discovery to market, computing to research. We have opportunities, not only in this country but abroad If this sounds like your kind of challenge, learn more by making an appointment with our college representative through your placement office. it capital to n set goals. to do October 7,8,9,14&15 an equal opportunity employer We will interview on your campus... or write College Relations Manager Cities Service Company Box 300 Tulsa, OK 74102 Cities Service Company theatre Kansas City Office: 1101 Walnut, Suite 1600 Kansas City, Missouri 64106 (816) 471-1520 THE RIGHT CHOICE A limited number of graduates will join Alexander Grant & Company this year to begin careers in public accounting, taxes, and consulting. They'll choose us for various reasons, most having to do with our size. We're an international firm. Fifty plus years old. Respected by our peers. Profitable. Growing. Dynamic. But compared to the competition, we're not a hugh professional establishment. Our name isn't a household word. We're not what you'd call an institution. That's appealing to many new graduates—those who see that the size of an organization often is a key to things like responsibility, variety of assignments, advancement, and professional satisfaction. When you're a good firm but smaller than some of your competitors, you select new staff members with extraordinary care, and you expect each one to take hold fast. There's no alternative, because everybody counts—heavily. And that's the kind of working environment that talented, energetic people like. If you are one of them, we'd like to talk with you when our representatives are on campus on October 9th. Alexander Grant & COMPANY CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Page 13 Memories outshine talent in first baseball old-timers contest By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Rodney Dangerfield should have popped out of the crowd to take a group photo. The ballplayers gathered at Quigley Field yesterday resembled dropouts from a light beer community, jovial bunch of cronies, all wearing glorious glares on their chawal in remembrance of glorious days past. Remember was all that most of the players could do. The Blue team beat the Crimson, 6-4, during a foul ball slugfest that did more damage to cars surrounding the field than to the ball. With two runners on in the bottom of the fifth and the score 64, a former KU star had the chance to shine again. John Riggins, a member of KU's 1986 Orange Bowl football team and a KU letterman in baseball, came to the plate. It was a remake of "Casey at the Bat." THE BLUE TEAM put together a string of four singles and a double in the second inning to take a 6-1 lead over the Crimson's, led by Floyd Temple, KU coach and organizer of the game. Riggins, a pro running back who recently returned to Lawrence because of a contract dispute with the Washington Redskins, is more accustomed to carrying the ball than hitting it. He fanned the early autumn air like an Edison Fan-1,2,3. "IT WAS a super game," Temple said. "It was too bad I wasn't on a winning team, but we were all on the same team at one time, so it didn't matter." "I never hit a home run here," Riggins said. "I thought maybe it wasn't too late. Temple, who took himself out early in the contest, voiced the thought that ran through the room. He was on his way to a hearing. Caliberw 'tas is important as camaraderie in the old-oldiers game in KU's 103-year baseball hall. Temple backstopped a grounder in the first inning and threw it to first baseman John "I stopped one ball out there, and that was enough," he said. "I didn't want to jeopardize my health." This opening act led to a comedy of errors--bumbles, bobbies and just plain fun. BOB ALLISON, a former Jayhawk who kU after his sophomore year in 1954 to pursue a pro career with the Washington Senators, trotted the field as starting lineups were being read "I'm too old to play Little League ball. That's all the better caliber I am." Allison flew to Kansas City, Mo., from Minneapolis, Minn., and drove straight from the airport. "I mentally took batting practice in the car," he said. "Guess whose team he's on," Temple yelled. *rombold*, '54, who stretched to make the out, then fell over in the chalky dust. So much for mind over matter. Allison stuck out his first time at bat, rapped a single, then hit a home run. "I was just trying to get a hit," he said. "This was my first time at the plate in a couple of games." Allison, who had 256 major league home runs with the Senators and Minnesota Twins, had no hit in a single game. WHERE BHIF TEMPLE, Coach Temple's son, banged a single to fill the bags in the bottom of the room, and then threw them on the past and present, exclaimed, "There are runners on first, and second, third—they're all loaded!" That line drew as many laughs as the batters' hesitation in taking off their caps to reveal bald heads and the fielders' continually hitching up their pants, borrowed from the collegians. Temple was not disturbed by the motley crew of grazing Jawhavas he had assembled. "We had some of the better players back," he said. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one time two times three times four times five six seven eight nine十 nine十十十十十十十十十十 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS The Kanans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. F found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be shared in person or online by calling the Kuwait Business office 484 0458 ANNOUNCEMENTS Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible Study, every Tues. 7:30 p.m. Parians A & B & Union. The Salt Block. 10-2 ENTERTAINMENT Looking for something new on Sundays? TRY THE CUBE LOOK 2.008 LOUIS 0427-813-6920 Open from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. Member簫 available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 75 schoenen of cold Coors every Monday at LSC LOUSE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. if THE DEAL--8 men play'in to win—coming in October. 9-28 This week on "Bringin' it All Back Home" it's blues with Lyndie Melchute plus a clip of the JUNI JAMMIE Band. Wednesday on and about 6 p.m. Catch-6 Case 1-147. 9-26 Oxford: Rotherham, 10.45 am, Thursday. 3. 60 am, 12. 00 pm, 13. 18th and Gred. Friday. 6. 30 am, 12. 00 pm, S. Sat. & Sund. 10. 40 am, 12. 00 pm. Deposit—picture ID. 9-26 FOR RENT Outdoor Rink Skates. Mick's Bicycle Shop sells outdoor-around roller skates at $20 each and indoor-outdoor roller skates at $50 each. Rexor review indicates they bought, you couldn't afford quality skates. At some stores, prices are available if supply won't last long. A Bedroom Townhouse Renting now. 11% increase in rent. You'll like our looks, Southern Parkway. First time renters. Front, nice up for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing These all new and contemporary townhomes are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, an opener, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4855 a. 8 -5 p.m. *Perfect for bus* Close to bus route *Perfect for train* Close to train station, Quincy, Calif. Call 843-5730 or 843-5734. appl. 2. bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid. Quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 835-7597 or 842-4185. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Kitchen, dining room. living room. 2 full baths, garage, air condition. No pets. For more information call 842-4455. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 For fall or spring, Naimalh Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of being in a shared room. It is weekly maid service to your room and bath, full schedule of social activities, homework, study time and some or all of an apartment isn't what you want. HALL, 1800 Mainsdale Drive, 843-8595, tf > bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. €th. 843-7333. tf 3 bdm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across roadway and tennis court 4600 month, 811-5533 Graduate students need 160 people to share two cars, $150 + 15 utilities. No more 9-30 747829 For rent to students 1 bdm. apt., lt- room, $375 / month. $185 + utilities at 1419 Ohio. Also, 2 bdm. assessment with lots of windows at 1423 and 1429 + electricity at 673-730 or 1433 + 1435 XUJIAUX duplexes-newly refurbished DUMMY XUJIAUX duplexes-newly refurbished BEAUTIFUL housing! Calling 013-285-2878. For rent $15,000 app. $30,000 in month, 1 year. Room size 40x60. Ohio Cal Ohm 823-249-800 from 8-5 up for Julie $250 month, Utilities paid, 3 large, attractive rooms, ceiling heights, 12 large, downtown Lease runs till May 31, 1981, 613 W.里尔, upstairs. See www.large.com p. w.mkeks. Weekdays 9-26 843-8185. Nice 2 bdmr basement asstm. furnished-2 blocks from campus=$250 month. 841-9247. (4) 626-7230. (2) 527-7230. Near campus 2 Bdmr. apt. Comfortable for breakfast 4-8:30 a.m. 845-3120, 841-6570 aft. 6 p.m. 9-30 Sublease nites, clean one bdm, apt. Willing one month rent security deposits 843- 119-116 10-3 One mile from Clinton Lake Marina and swimming beach—Two extra nice houses—big yards—one room. Two rooms, one barn, two story—fireplace and wood heat. 748-933 and 1058-405. 10-8 Near campus 2 bdm. apt. Also large single 843-1601, evenings 843-9475. 843-1601, evenings 843-9475. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists- Automotive and generator specialists- AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 813-906-9500, www.automotivespecialties.com WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98, 3 year guarance; WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 648 guarance. New excellent quality bedding -orthospastic bedding. New York, NY. Leco- Lod's Furniture, 1009 New York St. 841. 415-267-3050. www.lecoolad.com MATTRESSER, Orthopedic sets from $39. Furniture, on block west of 9th and 10th. Furniture, on block west of 9th and 10th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! meet the team here in our study guide. 2. For class preparation, 3. exam preparation. 'New Analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Town Hall Mall Bookstore and Office Book store. tt "or sale now=1979 Rally Sport, fully available 843-441 or 842-9241 843-441 or 842-9241 MOPEDJ New 1980 Motobecane M-50B Trav- lor 600 - over $400 needed (sacrifice) 842-384-366. Kenwood receiver. KR 4700, 40 watts/channel. $110. $841-9269-929 1927 VW Bus—Rebuilt engine, new tires, just inspected. Call 748-8645. Keep trying. SURGICAL PANTS - THE REAL THING. NO more: 100% cotton, reversible, the string and wedge. Comes with shoulder pads, the string and wedge. Height and weight alike because the pants vary. 30 day unconditional warranty for a full refund. COST: 8.95. Kansas residents can master charge or visa (in all raised letters), to M.M.A. Inc. Box 13503. Master charge or visa (in all raised letters), to M.M.A. Inc. Box 13503. MEDIATE delivery. 21" , 10 - sped. Motobike. Good condition. 842, 930-833. Keep trying. 9-29 1973 Triumph Skift, low miles, good condition, $1500, 841-1790. 9-26 cal, 39,000 miles. Call 843-2381. 9-26 Black and white Zenith T.V. $45. Brown, upholstered chair, good condition, $9.26 9-26 Relaleigh, International frame set. Reynolds and Cox, international bracket and seat post. Phil-ger 841-693-7250 1960 Olds 88-20 door, 1 owner, $66,000 miles. 1964 Olds 88-20 door, 1 owner, $96,000 miles. Call for 8849-8679 after 6. '96 WV Bug. Runs good. Call Borys 864- 9-30 72 Chevy Station Wagon $400 or best offer. work Call 811-4546 or 10-8 401 ill. jcl Gibson Biflex electric guitar excellent condition 841-1590 or 843-8573 9-30 old. Call 841-0281 after 5 p.m. 10-1 Bang and Oludenbeo Beck 7-5 speakers Absolute mint condition. 841-8621 after 5 p.m. 10-1 76 YW Rabbit. AM-FM 4. speed, econom- ical 39,000 miles. Mlq 843-2831. 9-26 Moving Suite: Furniture, Clothes, supplies to: Sept 17, 27, 8:30 a.m - 3:30 p.m at West Side Market CAR AND T.V. I 1972 Crow Newv Six slx renovated 80 year old apartment years old. Will sell for best offer on car Free to good homes 2 male kittens—12 wks. old. Call 841-0218 after 5 p.m. 10-1 Sacrifice - Low mileage 1974 Trumph 500 Sacrifice - Needs very minor repair. 608 4089 anytime. Nikon: F II A body and motor drive; $75; bodies and motors, $250 each. 9-29. 295-1196 COMIC BOOKS, old playbags, Life. Looks, movie maps, baseball cards, military items, and paperbacks. Booth 210. Quantaria Frea Market, 811 N.H Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5. 1973 Chev. Monte Carlo, Excellent condition. Rustic painted. Censured. $1500. CDs 10-2 Golden retriever, puppy 12 weeks, male, shots wormed, friendly and easy. 84-101. SUNDAY, JULY 5TH 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Excellent condition. cell Info. 841-9674. 10-2 Found prescription glauca in Blue plaid case new Hawk's Crossing. Call Kevin K29-3187 FOUND Small blond female dog wearing brown collar. Followed home from Wexoe Hall. Call 842-1728. 9-29 HELP WANTED Director of Instrumentation and Electronics Manageability, available on or after January 1, 1981. Creative ability required in design of anaerobic reactors, micro- computer hardware and software applied to chemistry and related fields. Experience with supervised ability are required. Salary, experience and qualifications. Send resume, summary of previous design experience and training, and references. J. D. Defriese, Chemistry Department, Kanata College, 260 E. 4th Ave., November 14, 1980. AAO, Education 9-26 Quadrigripic needs live in attendance. Room Equivalent Opportunity Employer. Call 843-2750. Email us at job@job.com. Office secretary wanted for AURH. Must have general typing skills. Must be able to be eligible for work study. Average 121 hours per week. Conferencing room. 844-5734. Please obtain an application at the Financial Aid office and sub-master's degree in 210 McCormick Hall by 5 p.m. Sept. 26th. Need temporary help due to lg. volume from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. daily M/F during room experience preferred. Apply in person. Overland Photo, 1741 Mass. Lawrence Noon hours, Monday, Wednesday, Friday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Henry's Restaurant, 6th and Missouri Street. Sirlinn Stuckeak is looking for permanent, full-time job. April 15th Iowa Street between 2-5 and 3-7 in Rose Hill, NY. LOST Sapphire and diamond necklace near Dyche Reward off course 4 p.m. Call 843-924-1 after 4 p.m. 9-29 REWARD - Our 10 wk old male yellow lab. Last seen following a man south on Miss. Sat. Mom, from our house at 10th and illi. Bedside, to Miss Linda. Bq. 841-7777 or 842-2001. 9-20 Leff, 181. Concordia High School Class Reward upon return. Please phone 864-261- 4050 or return. Reward for a lost black lab puppy. 13 wks. old, male. light on spot on chest. Lost at the vicinity of 31st and Iowa, 9:22 PM. duried in 348 days, 842 hours or 841-817, nights. 10-1 Old female collier, brown with white collar. Petal-collared cowboy in Louisiana. Village tags: B42 849-681. GOLD WRISTWATCH. black band, lost on motion. 3D model. mental value: Engaging on back. REWARD 3D model. Black wallet lost in the Hawk's Crossing contact Dave 749-0476 9-29 asked contact Dave 749-0476 9-29 NOTICE NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE TUCKER AVE. LOUSE membership card gets you $1,60 highhalls all night long. Only at your place, the Louise HOUSE where "Partying in the 9-30 REWARD: Lost my black loose leaf note 9-10 of South Allen 814-696-101 10-1 DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night at LOISE'S WEST, 7th and Michigan behind McDonnals on 6th). $4--guys, $3--girls—All the cold canoers you can drink. THE CLUB LOUSE TGIF TONIGHT 3 for 1 Highballs 508 Locust 842-9429 7-8 p.m. The Wheel Breakfast Special: 9-12 Daily Eggs, Bacon, Ham, Toast and Hash Brown FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment. Birth support. Inpatient care. Call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (913) 622-3100. 4401 W. 10th St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax 617-284-2722 SOLAR ENERGY CLUB will hold a meeting in connection with your interested parties. Information: Jim Brown, 205 W. 13th St., New York, NY 10007. PERSONAL THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP IN THE FIREPIPER BOOK of Lewis Hall, the oldest surviving book of the Church. LOUISEN WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday from 6-8. Enjoy 60 schooners. See draws and 51 $10 pitchers 7th and Mich. "Partying is our business." **tf** HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUIS. Everyday 7-10 p.m. enjoy $1.00 highhalls (75c on Thursday), backgammon and the atmosphere of the club. Reservations: Beer, 89-429. "Partying is our business." If ff LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louse on Wednesday nights). Drinks are only $100 for ladies even Wednesday. The club's $35 room rate applies to Club Louse, 508 Loubr. 862-9289, 9-30 SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB HOUSE 5 for nights from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 LOUISE'S Friday Afternoon Special $1.25 pitcher $1.65 schooners 1009 Mass PART TIME INTERNISHP OPPORTUNITY willing to explore the opportunities available in sales and management with a large eastern based company, our part-time manager. Provide information, call Terry Westland, Collect M2/F/1411. Equal Opportunity Employees 9-29 In keeping with her tradition of bringing announcements TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All the ladies only $2.50 Drink and drown at $ TGIF AT LOUCES BAR with $12 pitch- er tee and a 5.4' field. Friday from 6 to 6. No leave—Aloha. Rent it. Call us. 864-4358 Place a want ad in the Kansan. Call 864-4358 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA singing Telegrames, 814-619-f6. Take a break after classes at LOUSES After school. Afternoon special every day until 11 Singing messages for all occasions. Deliv- ing to the event supervisor ASTA Singi- 络grams. 841-619-6000 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Piesporters and 1943 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons. Is enjoying driving with BATTY. Don't KAT to take the KINESIS! Let me drive. I'll go to the parking lot. CHIROPRACYTIC—Investigate the natural history of a collection from the Moss Chiropractic Clinic 9th and Illinois. 843-9336. Home: 841-5333. 9-30 Tired of all the stores closing at 5:30 PM at Foothill imagina! cardrses and cords, 843-9336. Find our ad in this paper and lown. Find our ad in this paper and let us off any readings. Psychic Personality readings, $25-50. 843-1414. 1-8. Volunteers needed for Campus Safety Serv- ice Work. To Volunteer, Call KU info at 864-3506 or attend the meeting at 7 p.m. Sept. 2nd. Room at Conference Room of White Plate Union SUA Green Bay taequa the teaqua strong kong excellent trapping the teaquas excellent head start needs you to volunteer to work head start teams to volunteer to work a teacher助 two hours, and a teacher助 two hours, and a morning a teacher助 two hours to campus. 30-6 2015 for information. Campus. 30-6 2015 for information. Off the Wall Hall presents the Worm cert for: Dan Wankles, Democrat can- lifornia district. District of Kansas at 8:30 p.m., Friday, September 26. Minimum donation $2. Advance payment to KCFA. In the Holiday Plaza Shopping Center or by calling 814-922-7161. Tickets also available at Want to learn to play SCRABABLE Name? Call Emily 843-693-6358 843-693-7477 10-11 GREEN'S = "the selection of award winning wins" and domestic and national 10.2 wines* foreign and domestic. 10-3 Studious Male Anthropology student looking for a female RC to share discussions and learn about serious Inquiries only. 9-29 Mike B. 643-676. LOUIS' S Open at 10 a.m. 5a.m. for pre-game warm-up. 6:30 - 7:45 p.m. 1000 Mass Miss your Winfield T-shirt this year? Ninth grade students with a full silk screen design, only $2.00. includes postage. Write Ede Shirts; 3740 Marathon Road; Acura Auto Parts. I AM CURIOUS GECKO. 9-29 BEGGARS BANQUET Please allow us to introduce our guests, we have Sunday lunch on Monday, Tuesday and Saturday, carefully prepared banquet portions of quiche, linguage, vegetables, as well as our bread, croissant, bagel and one block north of the Union, at The Crossing 9-26 1% PRICE LUNCH at Hawk's Crouning. We're getting so fast that we'll make you like the meal better. We'll serve it for 30 minutes of the time it's ordered we'll give you a sandwich served on whole wheat bread we bake daily. Open New Sunday. One block of room you'll need to spend sandwiches served on whole wheat bread it's late, and you've been partying. Get down and come back up again. You're with us all. We're in the kitchen suddenly, your stomach says "Veggie" What is this Veggie, you ask. Call the sub shop, order one or any of our 12 veggies. Inside the kitchen there Yelp Sub, 841-2388 or 23rd across Welcome! We are open real早 one week 9-26 I'RE yours, and TGIF is wild at THE HARBOR LITES. All patrons only $1.50 from the Harbor Lites or $2.00 from Harbour Lites "T - Shirt or hat and receive 1.00 pitcher. And remember. The HARBOR LITES are a special day for Memorial Stadium. It's a trip to the Harbor Lites. 1031 Massachusetts first-class队 Anne & Jim—Take time with each other, and continue to grow together, grow flourishing with the seasons; warm up with summer's warmth, autumn's understory; warm up her winter's serenity” 9-26 happily—JAJ Merrill, for everything. You're a "Good Egg" Good luck this year. Dino: 9-26 Happy 21st Birthday Calamity Joan. You are at your peak so stop needing me! Vardar Bob and John sincerely thank the friend, of Cone. 9-26 Hey George-T smile, these may be the best days of your life. Adhere. Baby. Congratulations! Happy Birthday! I Love You! You Say it with a cake, Custom Decorated and delivered for your roommate, lover, or friend. 841-7467 9-30 To the ITALIAN STALLION: the flame is bright red, and its moment since has been filled with pure joy. He prepared for an exciting, stimulating, night out on the town! Loving only you, he leaves the lights off. The Barnes Fick von Hinden is a WOMAN 21st, Debbie. Flicker 9-26- dough eater SERVICES OFFERED COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2½¢ EACH HOUSE OF USHER 812 796-5400 MAZAREND LA CAMPAIGN 812 796-5400 2 1/2 c EACH For the finest complete service on most im- portants-STRIAG ARROW AUTO SERVICE. Over 25 years experience specializing in Datinel, Fiat, Honda, Toyota. B434-2424 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. 10-2 KOPY KAT COPIES 2 $ ^{e} $ TYPING-EDITING BINDING-PRINTING HOURS 8 AM—8 PM MON-SAT Have you had trouble losing weight or breaking the smoking habit? Possibly you are unintolerant in areas where smoking is legal and bynneous to help. Call 843-1995 for more information. **ENSTEIN'S** TUTORS Expert assistance CS, math, Dave 841-783. English grammar, composition, research, typing Randy 843- 7048. LFAIR TENNIR this fall in fun classes with Curtis McGee. (Curtis McGee) or Dacia Cieh. (Dacia Cieh) 030-814-1814, 030-814-2978 Steno wants to do typing in her home. $1 per page. Lucille West. 843-0706. 9-30 TYPING Experienced, typed—term, papers, thesis, music, electric IM. Selective Proofreading, spelling corrected. 843-9554. Mrs. Wright. tf I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correct- Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selecetric. Call Ellen or Jeannam. 841-2172. 12-8 Experienced K.U. typist HM Correcting Selective, Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening and weekends. 748- 9818 tf Experienced typist—thesis 10.280 842-3210 selecting Barb pater's 5 p.m. 842-3210 tt Tipping prices discounted. Excellent work with the client. Call 842-6697 after 5 weeks, if they don't want to work. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 weeks, if Typist Editor, IBM Pim Elite. Quality Work, responsible rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome, editing/layout. Call Joan. 842- 9127 A 2 - 2011 ENCORE COPY CORPS 314 N. WASHINGTON AVE. #621 2001 or PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 41-4980. ff IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE Fast pre- sentations to 11:00 and weekdays. If you wish, TECHNICIAN Exp. typi would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gaggle at 842-103-3 My old typewriter does not correct mistransl type or spell. but I mistake 748-1313 10-96 9-26 GOLD.-SILVER.-DIAMONDS. Class rings Wedding Bands, Wadding Colins, Sterling earl We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 10-8268 WANTED Buying gold. Paying $0-$10 for men's class rings, less for ladies. RDG Com Shop 2120 W. 2th, Holiday Plaza 842288-9-50 for a needle needle. RDG Com Shop 2120 W. 2th, Holiday Plaza 842288-9-50 for a needle needle. Needle needle for a needle needle. N2 birmingham. 1252 month + 3 utilities. Must be able to tolerate 1 and pet. Write or contact 242284 Dubai HQ. WANTED: Person to enter cooperative child care facility with a baby and want to find person with similarly aged children or to trade child care: 4 morning hours or 8 afternoon hours. Am灵活 as to mornings, afternoons, or evenings. Non smoking roommate for 2 bdm. apt. Non smoking roommate for 125m. $120mn. utilities. Jenie. 864-3235 Liberal, easy-going roommate wanted for House. Buck or Jeff, 811-269- 841, 202-899-9 9-26 Semi-Vegitable non-smoker wanted to keep residential residence near Hill. $10,100. 6335 9-26 Studios; liberal male talk; fully fur- ly vocal; gas and electric. Call 814-6957 after 2 p.m. Female Roommate want to share 2 bdmr. hassiment mo. $125/mo. 1 utilities 844. Roommate at the Jayhawker Towers as soon as possible. All utilities call Call 800- 495-3260 Anytime 9-30 Roommate Wanted 2 bdmn. apt. in old building with three large windows, large Windows. Completely furnished in antiques. Prefer female, upperclass or college-educated. Call Jennifer at snoker. $12.50/m. All Utilities paid. Carol. Phone (866) 349-1270. The University Daily Female nominate to share 2dil. unfair- napped apt. on bus route. Pool, near shopping center. $5/month + 1.3 electricity. 749-2438. 10-3 ORDER FORM KANSAN If you've got it, Kansan classifieds can sell it! Just mail this form with a check or money order payable to the Kansan to: University Daily Kansan. 111 Flint Hall. Lawrence. Kansan. 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! ORDER FORM CLASSIFIED HEADING: Write Ad Here: Dates to Run: ___ To 1 time 2 time 3 time 4 time 5 82.25 82.50 82.75 93.00 93.2 02 03 04 05 0 RATES: 15 wards or less 1 time 2 times 3 times 4 times 5 $9.25 $9.50 $9.75 $9.00 $9.25 1 week .02 .03 .04 .05 .08 AD DEADLINE CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch= $3.75 NAME: to run: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. ADDRESS PHONE: --- Page 14 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980 Kansan Predictions
ArnoldBertelsLewisMyersSeeley
Louisville at KansasKansas 21-3Kansas 24-10Louisville 21-17Kansas 31-24Kansas 45-12
Arkansas State at Kansas StateArkansas State 21-3Kansas State 17-14Kansas State 21-10Kansas State 2-0Kansas State 14-13
Nebraska at Penn StateNebraska 27-21Nebraka 14-10Nebraka 23-14Penn State 23-7Nebraka 26-17
Stanford at OklahomaOklahoma 42-21Oklahoma 30-7Oklahoma 27-21Oklahoma 33-14Oklahoma 24-21
Indiana at ColoradoIndiana 21-10Indiana 14-0Indiana 21-17Indiana 20-14Indiana 25-10
Iowa State at IowaIowa State 14-7Iowa State 10-7Iowa 16-7Iowa State I carelIowa 3-0
Missouri at San Diego StateMissouri 27-3Missouri 21-7Missouri 27-14Missouri 17-0S.D. State 35-17
South Carolina at MichiganMichigan 27-7Michigan 21-14Michigan 23-20South Carolina 24-19Michigan 16-13
Florida State at Miami, Fla.Florida State 35-20Florida State 28-7Florida State 20-14Miami, Fla. 21-20Florida State 36-17
Tennessee at AuburnTennessee 14-13Auburn 24-10Tennessee 28-24Tennessee 17-16Tennessee 28-14
Season Totals17-2-118-3-116-3-114-5-116-3-1
The predictors are Patti Arnold, Kansas associate sports editor; Kevin Bertelis, sports writer; David Lewis, editorial editor; Gene Myers, sports editor; and Matt Seeley, sports writer. 'Hawks face new pressure By GENE MYERS Sports Editor There is a different pressure on Kansas this weekend. The Jayhawks not only are favored to win a game but also are expected to overwhelm their opposition. the opponent. Las Vegas rates KU a 12-point favorite, which makes KU the favorite for the first time in two season. KU, however, is not the favorite because of its accomplishments this season or in past seasons. KU is the favorite because the opposition, the Louisville Cardinals, is 0-3 and has been outscored 89-19. The Cardinal offense has produced only one touchdown. "People are saying we should beat Louisville because they've already lost three games," Fambrough said. "But we haven't won any games either." KU'S PLAYERS are expecting and guarantee a victory in tomorrow's 1:30 p.m. game in Memorial Stadium, Head Coach Don Fambrough is holding the conservative line. Kansas is 0-1-1, playing to a 7-7 tie with Oregon and Losing or Pittsburgh to 18-3-1. Louisville has lost 24-10 to Miami, FL., 52-0 to Florida State and 13-9 to Murray State. in a subdued manner. Since the start of the season, they have predicted great things for the season. KU's navers are preparing for a victory, but Most of these predictions fell on deaf ears 'For this game, fans will listen. “THIS IS OUR WEEK to win,” linebacker Jimmy Reid said. He didn’t jelly yet, and we intended to keep them from replacing him. On offense KU will again start freshman Frank Seurer at quarterback and freshman Kernin Bell at tailback. The duo from Huntington Beach, Calif., starred in the season opener but was bounced off the artificial turf last Saturday by the Pitt defense. The only time Seurer and Bell were not hounded was when they were sent to the bench. "We hope this week will enable us to run the ball more, make first downs, move the chains and make touchdowns," Ivy Williams, running back coach, said. "We'll be able to do some things we haven't been able to do the last two weeks." DAVID VERSER, All-Big Eight flanker, expects Seurer to fire the ball in the air, often and deep. "They're not that fast, and they play a lot of man-to-man," Verser said. "They react to the run and move up. If they do the same thing, we'll have our passing game in fine shape." On passing him, Louisville's last loss, 13-9 to Murray State, was a shocker. Murray State is a Division I-A school. Louisville and KU are Division I-AA. "We shouldn't have been behind at any time in the Murray State game," Cardinal quarterback Pat Patterson said. "We've saved that frustration for Kansas." KU STIRD opponent of the season has been frustrated in each of the past three years. In 1977, KU was 0-2 before surprising 19th-ranked Washington State, 14-12. The Jayhawks then dumped eighth-ranked UCLA, 28-24, after a 0-2 start in 1978. sat. 19, 1976. Last year, the Jayhawks whipped North Texas State, 37-18, after another 0-2 start. During those three seasons, KU won only seven games. "We can't take anyone lightly," Fambrough prepared just as hard as we did for Pittsburgh. JAYHAWK NOTES: There are two changes in this week's KU starting lineup. On offense, Lester Mickens has won back the startling split end position from Russ Bastin. On defense, freshman linebacker Mike Arbanas will start for injured Kyle McNorton. Quarterback Frank Seurer suffered an off-the-field loss last night when he lost his bid to be vice president of the freshman class. Seurer, who was running with the Imagine Action coalition, finished fourth with 76 votes. Larry Cook of the Grand New Party won with 114 votes. Gabriel's Football Buffet $1.99All The Pizza You Can Eat $2.99 All The Pizza You Can Eat plus a hearty bowl of soup, a salad from the Garden of Eatin' and a sixteen ounce soft drink. Every Home Football Game 11:00 am until kickoff 2449 Iowa in the Holiday Plaza Carry-out and Delivery 842-5824 GOOD LUCK JAYHAWKS! Rent it.Call the Kansan.Call 864-4358 STRIKE UP THE BAND STRIKE UP THE BAND AND HEAD FOR LAWRENCE'S ONLY FAMILY STYLE SERVING RESTAURANT "A TRULY UNIQUE ATMOSPHERE & EXPERIENCE" Bill of Fare Country Inn Chicken Dinners (4 pieces) Country Inn Chicken Fried Steak Country Inn Pork Chops (2 chops) Country Inn Catfish ALL DINNERS INCLUDE ALL YOU CAN EAT OF THE FOLLOWING: Honeymeal, Homemade Preserves, Chicken Gravy, Homemade Biscuits, Honeypump Butter, Homemade Preserves, Bean Salad, Cole Slaw, Vegetable of the Day, Choice of Beverage: Milk, Iceed Tea, Hot Tea, Coffee, Lemonade, Choice of Dessert: Homemade Cherry or Peach Pie, Hot Fudge Sundae, Sherbet Children 7-12 Children Under 7 $^5$2.50 (Chicken & Chop) 5 1.50 (Chicken) LANTERN Having A Party, Kegger, or Picnic, Let Us Do The Cooking Having A Party, Kegger, or Picnic, Let Us Do The Cooking COUNTRY Inn 1350 N. 3rd 843-1431 Reservations Accepted And Lawrence Book Accepted KU1 HOURS MON.-THURS. 4-9 p.m. FRI.-SAT. 4-10 p.m. SUNDAY 1-8 p.m. fnv 843-1431 Reservations Accepted And Lawrence Book Accepted KU1 HOURS MON. THUR. FRI. SAT. ENJOYABLE ATMOSPHERE, FOR PARENTS, DATES, OR JUST A BUNCH Watkins deception won't fool 3rd Dist. voters Dan Watkins may yet make the making of a (someday) U.S. Congressman, but it seems he is clouding his future with his current mudaling campaign against Larry Winn. Those outraged voters aren't just the supporters of Larry Winn. Richard D. Williamson, president of the Overland Park Democratic Club, has just sent me a copy of a letter he wrote to Speaker of the House Tip O'Neal, which eloquently sums up his feelings about the mirepresentation by Watkina of Winn's atten- The campaign is quite young, but already there are signs that Watkins has outraged some Third District voters by his persistent distortion of Winn's attendance record in the House of Representatives. While Williamson told me he had written O'Neal on his own behalf, he said many other Democrats share his sentiments. The letter follows: September 10, 1980 Dear Mr. Speaker; Recently I have received requests from your office soliciting campaign donations for many of our volunteers. You will be personally advised that a number of However, Mr. Speaker, I am very concerned about the treatment of Rep. Larry Winn (R.), Overland Park, Kansas. Republican he may be but right is making some very false and incorrect allegations about Rep. Winn. This Democratic opponent is maliciously depicted Rep. Winn as having been abnormally absent from the House when, in fact, he was on "of your" President Carter in the United Nations. these requests are presently under consideration by me. Not one dime will I, or my associates, contribute to support a campaign based on such false charges Yours sincerely, Reprinted from "Johnson County Sun" Richard D. Williamson If Watkins' misleading charges need further explanation, they focus on a three-month period in 1979, when Winn accepted an appointment by President Carter as one of two Congressional representatives to the United States House of Representatives. The congressional Congress each year to represent the Congress at the UN — one a Democrat, the other a Republican. The Memo Straight talk by Stan Rose, Publisher Senate and House alternate in this service. Former Sen. Jim Pearson of Kansas did his stint at the UN several Because of Winn's commitment at the UN, his voting attendance record for last year dropped to 67 percent. Overlooked by Watkins in his attempt to create the impression that Winn has a habit of shipping his death with Democrats, he has also averaged the average of Democrats and Republicans in Congress. During his 14 years of service as a Third District Congressman, according to a Congressional Quarterly study, Winn's attendance record has been slightly lower. In attacking Winn for not turning down a Presiden- trial appointment that he, Watkins, undoubtedly would have jumped at had it been offered him. Watkins is following the Carter handbook on how to fabricate phony issues and make them look real. Having seen Jimmy Carter and his associates in action during the 1976 campaign, and having watched them pull one deception after another from their bag of supplies, he was surprised if Winn were set up for this sort of attack. How to help get rid of a Republican Congressman from a fairly conservative district? Send him off to the UN, which is in the doghouse with many middle-of-the-road activists. Then attack his attendance record in Congress! What makes me doubly uncomfortable over Watkin's tactics is the recollection that in 1978, he helped mastermind John Carlin's successful strategy against Gov. Bob Bennett. Remember that Carlin's campaign was given a last-minute lift by an emotional attack on high utility rates. Bennett was the tool of the utilities, and Mr. Watkin would have also would see the rates lowered. We all know what became of that fake issue, but it helped电驶 Carlin. Paid for by Winn for Congress Watkins is an attractive, intelligent political figure who should be above this sort of deceptive, single-issue rule. Paint Political Ad KANSAN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Saturday, September 27,1980 Vol.91, No.25 Kansas journalists owe a debt to Rolla Clymer ByCALDER M. PICKETT Professor of Journalism This is going to be easy today, and it's going to be hard. It's going to be easy because it was with relative ease that I was able to assemble things, to find what I wanted to say. It is going to be hard because by no stretch of the imagination could I, or anybody else in the room, rival the language and the oratorical swell of the remarkable man we're honoring. There's no point in my stretching it out like a nomination at a political convention; the man is Rolla Clymer of the El Dorado Times, the man who was known in his time as the "Sage of the Flint Hills." Maybe, as we thought—and think—about Rolla we pay too much attention to the Flint Hills and to the way he loved them. Maybe, but I think not. Even if you're a kid from the farm valleys of the Kansas countryside, almost maybe, the Kansas countryside, almost, maybe, the Rolla Clymer loved it. Now hear this: "In June's radiance the Flint Hills have now achieved their full panoply of radiance and charm after their long winter siesta and a laggard spring. The brilliant emerald of their cover has been spread evenly over their surface, staining with bright perfection every alluring feature of this billowing wonderland of the Kansas oiraires . . . "With all their knowledge, they have kept their own peace. At the present juncture, with the world's clamor sounding about them, the Hills have wrapped themselves in the garrisons of their own tranquility. No harshness or violence breaks their repose. Obedient to the will of their parents, they remain modest, protomodest, profoundly useful way they always have. In this moment of trial for our Republic, they are the perfect andanee for all our fears and folly—for all our agony and anguish!"1 GOLLY, ROLLA! as I think I remember someone saying to him after one of his impassioned orations, and I heard many of them. The hills in September: "As September draws to its end, the Flint Hills lie in peaceful repose beneath the fading summer sun. The burden of their labor for mankind is over for the present; another season of their usefulness to mankind has been finished—a many million in the ancient book of Time. . . ." A. H. C. M. R. That one I stole from a delightful article Ray Morgan wrote about Rolla Clymer for the Kansas City Times of June 10, 1977. But I've never been on other sources, so for this statement today. The Sage of the Flint Hills. There's a rest stop on the Kansas Turnpike that quotes him on the Flint Hills. That is apt; who else could say it as well? I think he even surpassed his teacher, William Allen White, when it came to rhapsodizing on the Sunflower State. I must move from the lyrical to the factual, as we think about the man who today is being named to the Kansas Newspaper Editors' Hall of Fame. I should note that the vote in his favor was overpowering, a fact that those of us who have worked on this thing over the years had anticipated. Rolla Clymer was born at Alton, Iowa, and as Kansas, on July 28, 1903, of the Rev. George H. and Ella S. Clymer. He was graduated from Quenoquena High School in 1905 and from the College of Emporia in 1909. He did graduate work at the University of Kansas in 1912-13. He married Elizabeth Hosinger at Newton on June 18, 1915. He died June 24, 1975. A son, David, now runs the El Dorado Times. A daughter, Sue, lives in Los Angeles where his wife, Sherry, stand to receive our recognition. Rolla A. Clvmer The Rolla Clymer newspaper career stretched over 70 years. He went to work for William Allen Dayton, a prominent philanthropist. 1907. He became editor and manager of the Olathe Register in 1914 and was there until April 1918, when he went to El Dorado to manage the Daily Republican. In December 1919, the Republican and the Walnut Valley Times were merged, and the paper became known as the El Dorado Times. Rolla Clymer was editor until his death in 1932. He edited and managed the New Mexican in Santa Fe, N.M. His long-time friendly rival, Fred Brinkerhofer of Pittsburg, said of the New Mexico adventure. "By unanimous agreement this lapse will not be charged against him, the theory being that it made him a better Kansan." ROLLA CLYMER was a man of Kansas and a man of Kansas journalism. He was the last president of the Kansas Editorial Association in 1923, when the Kansas Press Association was created. He was president of the Kansas Editorial Golf Association in 1930, president of the Kansas Daily Newspaper Association in 1938, president of the Kansas State Historical Society in 1954-67. Naturally he was a good Republican, serving as public relations director of the Kansas State Republican Committee in the 1930 and 1934 campaigns, as an aide in charge of Gov. Alfred M. Landon's mail in the 1938 presidential campaign, as delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1932 and as an elector in 1966. He directed the Kansas Industrial Development Commission, as its first director, from 1939 to 1942, and was a member of the Kansas Territorial Commission and the Kansas Centennial Commission. In his home town he was the first president of the Rotary Club, 1920-21, was on the board of trustees of the Al Memorandum Memorial Library, and was president of the Continent Federal Savings and Loan, was past president of the El Dorado Free Public Library and the Bradford Memorial Library, and was president of the El Dorado Chamber of Commerce and the Butler County Historical Society. He was a member of the board of governors of the Wichita State University Endowment Foundation, sponsored by Allen White Centennial, sponsored by the White Foundation in 1968. He was in the First United Presbyterian Church, was a Sigma Chi, belonged to the El Dorado Country Club, received a 50 years Mascin井 on Feb. 23, 1982, and received a life membership from the El Dorado Eldo lodge **THAT IS QUITE a list, but Rolla Clymer was more than a list. When he listed the headlines carried words like "Flint Hills Sage" and "Noted Editor." He was both. There was never a quibble with his statements; he was more powerful than any of the Kansas editor in the 29 years I have been in this state. He was one of the many who received their training under William Allen White. All of them wrote, and behaved, somewhat like White, and that may be why Kansas journalism stands out nationally. There was always the White record to look toward. We have a letter that White wrote to Rolla Clymer on March 29, 1918, a letter of advice: now as to the newspaper policy. Of course, the first job of the newspaper is to print the news, but on the other hand, after you have piled your paper full of names, you must have a policy, and I will explain it in a separate section. The spiritual improvement of El Dorado; and do not forget the spiritual improvement stands for dozens of things. You may have to tear up your city printing contract, but do it; and you may have to tear up your county printing contract, but do it, and do it in a cold-blooded way. You will be required to make these adjustments. Your paper's integrity was worth three times as much as the contracts which you lose . . . "Insist on law enforcement," White advised. "Make them drive out the prostitutes and the gamblers no matter whose building they occupy. Brace up your courage and do not be afraid that you may suffer being to weigh against the great good of the paper by having it proved to be liberal and brave and fair." PERMIT ME to tell you about my first memory of Rolla. It was 1982, and I was the new boy on the journalism faculty. We were SeeGLYMER page A4. See CLYMER page 4 Better reader rapport essential to newspapers Rv MICHAEL J. DAVIES BY MICHAEL J. DAVIES Editor of the Kansas City Star and Times As I drove to Lawrence this morning along the interstate, I noticed that in many places the roadway isumpy, potholed and cracked. Part of that repair work has already been accomplished, of course. Hot metal has been replaced with cold type. Reporters and editors use the same set of pencils and pencils in favor of electronic editing terminals. In a way, that read symbolizes our business. Much of what was once a solid foundation has buckled under the cataclysmic changes in society. Some skillful repair work is needed if we are to meet the challenges of the future and keep out of the ditch. As you in Kansas well know, afternoon newspapers in some metropolitan areas have died or have merged with a morning product to create a new animal—the 24-hour newspaper. Readers who used to take two newspapers in India find they have only the time and money for one. And in an area of more than passing concern to you, some companies are beginning to experiment with electronic delivery of news and information. MOST SUBSCRIBERS don't know or care about the challenges facing our craft. They tend to see us as big business, and, as such, a part of the Establishment. They see more and more newspapers concentrated in fewer and fewer bands. They see newspapers distributed on radio stations, and they are afraid of the monopolies inherent in such arrangements. They see a business protected by the Constitution of the United States (the only business honored), and they see the conducent power of Congress. They can help bring about the downfall of a president. Newspapers once were considered the champion of the underdog—remember the Pulitzer motto: Comfort the afflicted and affect the comfortable? Today, many readers see us as just another big business that doesn't care about the individual. Except during a few recessional years, our papers get father and father in attendance. It is an often stays the Can you blame readers for having that attitude? "We must get closer to our subscribers. We must find out what they care about and what they want in a newspaper. More than anything else, we must eradicate the notion that we are arrogant." Michael J. Davies newspapers have as much as a 200 percent turnover in carriers in a year. DESPITE OUR SERIOUS problems in circulation and in the mechanical departments, I don't think the basic problem lies on their doorsteps. it is in the area of news and opinion that most readers form their attitudes about their newspaper. Unfortunately, right now many of us are badly out of sync with the leadership. The time has come for newspapers to make a new approach, and the新闻room carries the key to that task. We are considered arrogant when the publisher and the editor spend all their time in swank country clubs with the business and social elite and no time listening to the concerns of the poor. This is especially true for those of you in small towns. Arrogance. Perhaps more than anything else, this one word sums up the negative feelings against us. Because of our great power to sway public opinion, we are thought of as arrogant. We are arrogant when we refuse to cover a Kiwiana meeting, arrogant when we fail to address the problem, and vice versa; they autoritarily support one candidate but refuse to give the opposition candidate equal time. We are thought arrogant when we send reporters in three-piece suits to interview people on welfare. Conversely, we are considered friendly. We are also a trusted reporter to interview a corporate executive. We must get closer to our subscribers. We must find out what they care about and what they want in a newspaper. More than anything else, we must eradicate the notion that we are annoyed. Clearly, accuracy is one of our great failings. A reader can perhaps understand an error in a story about nuclear power, but he can't understand it. He's wrong in an obituary. To that, he is arrogance. I must digress here to tell you a sad, but true, story. For several days in a row, the Kansas City Times published hard-hitting stories on page 1. While basking in the reflected glory of state journalism, I received a phone call from the proprietor of a funeral home in Kansas City, Kan. same or gets smaller. He said he wanted to complain about the accuracy of our obituaries. He said we often got things wrong, even when the information was correct. He said it was not obvious, in fact, he seemed rather resigned. We are thought arrogant when we refuse to correct mistakes or get the other side of the My initial reaction was one of irritation. Didn't this man know the great job we had done the past few days? I agreed, though, to take a close look at the obits and get back to him. Too frequently, the quality of reproduction is muddy. Our black and white appearance compares poorly with the brilliant color of some exceptions, but with others, our attempts at color have not been good. I WAS SHOCKED by what was unawesthed. we checked every obit in The Times the next day. There was an error of some kind—spelling, fact, you name it—in many obits. We have taken measures to shore up this basic aspect of our reporting. If we can't get obits right, how can we expect readers to believe the page 1 stories? Most readers, after all, only get their names in the paper when they are born and when they die. In addition to redoubling our efforts at accuracy, we must wedge out those reporters and editors who want to use journalism for their own ends. John Hughes, editor of the Christian See DAVIES page 4 January December November Delivery of the paper is often unreliable. Some Cindy Whitcome, Kansan assistant campus editor, goes over a story with advanced reporter Arne Green in the newsroom. And there is the laughter during the aftermath of a particularly bloody editorial disagreement. In spite of our regular differences of opinion, we know we're all in this together for ourselves and those who depend on us—our readers. Special Kansan welcomes editors Welcome to the University of Kansas. The kaplan staff is happy to have you back on campus. It's no wonder you are in this business. To help you remember the day and its activities, we have compiled its speeches, Kansan editorial and entertainment pages. Please join us for you in this section. We hope you enjoy it. We also continue to work hard daily to earn our stripes as Kansas journalists, ever conscious of the long tradition of dedication and perseverance. Sometimes it is a difficult tradition to ubold. There are other, smaller, more private successes, fruits of the careful nurturing of reporters who hung in there when their number dropped to a dismal dozen on a staff that was used to the services of twice as many faithful scribes. We were reminded recently of the difficulty when "marshal law" showed up on page 1 in 36 point Mallard. Somehow the mistake slipped past the reporter, the campus desk editors, the copy editors, the copy chief and, finally, me, as I stared groggy at the paste-up before me at the printer's that morning. We were chastised roundly. We deserved it. Yet the Kansan of this semester, even in its relative infancy, has had its bright moments, too. We've known the unique satisfaction of a scoop on the resignation of the city prosecutor. We've published some of the best writing Kansan columnists have produced in several semesters. CAROL BEIER, Editor Technology challenges journalists of 1980s By ROBERT L. SAMSOT Gannett Professional in Residence That wonderful tool, technology, has brought the world everything from dry-roasted peanuts and Tang to microsurgery and wonder drugs. Gannett Professional in Residence It also has brought pollution of water and of air thalidomide babies and an energy shortage. Technology is, after all, a tool. The misapplication, the thoughtless application, the unchallenged application of that tool have, in far too many instances, achieved consequences that the tool's user didn't intend and, in most cases, didn't anticipate. UNCHALLENDED USE. That is what the world must fear. Unchallenged use of technology was what George Orwell warned about in his *1984*. The use of the anti-nuclear forces are worried about. Unchallenged use has been the reason for creating the EPA, and for establishing OSHA. Blame for unchallenged use of technology has been most often placed on commercial corporations. But has the newspaper been guilty of aiding such unchallenged use by frequent puffery and by reluctance to challenge something that is not fully understood? Strange. The news business has long prided itself on its individuality, its maverick spirit, its watchdog tenacity and its championing of just what is wrong in the world, such cases were among the paper's readers. has the technology dulled some of that edge? It has made ours of rave notes as a tool of progress, dulled its edge. creation of solutions rather than to creation of problems. RELICTANCE TO challenge has not been confined to events outside the newsroom. It sometimes has centered on new techniques for gathering the news. And editors far too often have declined to challenge a world they no longer have a firm grip on. Newman have always been the challengers, the razors of society that cut through the soft, surface tissue down through the bloody meat to the hard bone of fact. But are there really problems in the forest of technology, or are there just glitches in some of them? But challenge is the essence of the professional newsman. If newsmen do begin challenging the use of this tool, which promises so much in return, they risk losing clients who try to confine technology to noble uses, to It has, and if newsmen do not begin challenging the use of that facile tool they will pay the penalty of continued abbreviation until they realize that it is an important detail, that has always given them special stature. There's trouble in the forest. Newspapers, for example, are faced with the temptation to plug reporters into VTDs and let each become a reporter-editor-ypetster. That can lead to costly jobs, particularly those of the editors. Would the public be cheated? Yes. The public, that difficult charge of the news business, would not benefit from the challenge that any editor worth the title should present to the reporter. Technology, then, could eliminate the job of the challenger, and the news business would not go unchallenged. What would the result be? That's just one tree, though, no matter how deep its roots. But, there are other troubles in the newsroom. HOW MANY OPINION polls do editors run without challenging? How many opinion polls have little or nothing to do with sampling Kansans but something of Kansas SAME SAMSTOP page 4 See SAMSOT page 4 Opinion Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1980 KU grins and beers it A plan is being drafted to sell beer during University of Kansas football games. If approved, the plan could tap the keg to some much needed revenue for KU's intercollegiate sports. Actually, beer has been consumed throughout the years at Memorial Stadium despite the University's ban on beer at football games. Fans traditionally sneak their afternoon brews through the stadium gates, and there's been virtually nothing the University can do about it. The University will only gain from selling beer, especially given the sad state of the athletic budget. The availability of beer also probably would curb the amount of hard liquor constantly finding its way into the stadium. A study on beer sales at the University of Colorado at Boulder showed that incidents involving drunkenness were fewer after the University started selling beer in the stadium. With that in mind, instituting beer sales would have few, if any, feasibility problems. The Kansas Union already sells beer, and no Kansas Board of Regents policy prohibits the University from selling beer on campus grounds. KU athletic officials have indicated their interest in the plan, and Acting Chancellor Del Shankel intends to discuss the matter soon. At Colorado, beer costs $1 a shot. While beer sales couldn't save KU's athletic budget, they certainly wouldn't worsen its aliments. Even the University could drink to that. KU honors program breeds boredom. not academic pride For several years I have thought that it was not much of an honor to be in the KU Honors Program. I didn't always think this way, and as I look back now, I realize that my first disappointment with the honors program was making a mistake of believing what I read about the program. I really believed that the honors program would live up to its promise and provide classes BRETT CONLEY that would challenge and develop my abilities, and that being in class with other honors students would provide mutual intellectual benefits. Because I believed the honors program's promises, I entered the Summer Honors Institute two weeks after graduating from high school. The institute supposedly was designed to allow students to apply for an opportunity to begin their college work early in the enriched atmosphere of honors work. After several weeks in the institute, I began to realize that I was not receiving the benefits promised. My alleged reward for pursuing honors studies would be an enhanced intellectual capacity and competence, as well as academic abilities. But in truth, the only lesson I learned that summer was perseverance. I suffered through an English course taught by a professor who became outraged at the honors students only because they could not write as well as college upperclassmen. I also survived a science class taught by a professor who could not present a well-organized, coherent lecture. Although he knew his field well, he could not effectively communicate the subject matter. Finally, there was a more nebulous class dealing with the philosophical aspects of what makes a good education. Plato's Republic and Stuart John Mill's autobiography were the texts that we were supposed to read and draw ideas from. But the class actually became a sort of indoctrination of the professor's ideas about elitist education. The professor tried to impress upon us that honors students were above the average college student and that they were an intellectual elite within the University. We should recognize our place and try to associate only with other honors students, he told us, and eventually we would become the intellectual leaders of the University community while gaining a top notch education. At the end of the summer I was confused. I did not have a broad enough perspective to realize that my bad experience was the fault of the institute and the honors program and not me. I been beater, indoctrinated and bored instead of enlightened and intellectually broadened. But I did not give up on the honors program entirely, even though I had plenty of reasons to do so. I learned that with careful choosing it is possible to take some outstanding courses taught by competent professors. But the positive experience is not the only reason not come close to outweighing the negative aspects, and I believe the program is in need of great change and revamping. David M. Katzman, professor of history, is the new honors program director this year, and I am pleased to hear about his work. The biggest problem with the program is that there are too many mediocre or incompetent professors teaching honors courses. The honors program does not have any means of evaluating the courses that are offered, and because of this, professors who cannot effectively teach honors courses keep teaching them semester after semester. Also, the honors program is less a program that is an assortment on classes that can be taken. Individual departments offer whatever honors courses they want and students pick from them. After 24 hours of these courses a student is required to take one of the tutorial, a one-hour seminar, can be a good introduction to the program, but there needs to be a more defined progression of classes that challenge, stimulate and educate students on a variety of subjects. There also needs to be a class that attempts to pull together an honors course in intellectual experiences at the end of the program. Finally, the honors program needs to disassociate itself with the idea that it is here to build an elite intellectual circle at the University. There is no doubt that honors students can benefit from interaction with each other, but this does not mean they cannot also benefit other students and other University experiences. Katzman has a difficult job ahead of him if he hopes to transform the honors program into something more viable and worthwhile. The task cannot be done in six months or even one year, but it is worth the time because the honors program and its classes provide more intellectual disappointment than academic stimulation. MARK ADELY NEWSBOOK HOUSE BCEB. © MID DAY CHICAGO TRANSIT Letters Policy The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after publication, they should include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. STUDENT SENATE GAS Joe Bantos '80 KANSAN Our student body president and vice president take a short trip. Efforts too late to save Student Senate Proving once again that nothing from nothing leaves nothing, the KU Student Senate took a momentous step last week by halving the number of votes it will contain after the next Senate election. After you've stopped yawning, stop to consider the importance of this step, or rather the lack thereof. The plan, which apportions Nunemaker as one school instead of several districts, was introduced by Student Body Vice President Matt Davis in an attempt to solve the Senate's problem of luring quorum to Senate meetings. A hearing on the proposed measure appeared. A bare quorum of 58 showed up last Wednesday to approve the measure that will doom some of their compatriots' seats. Big deal, right? That evidently is the attitude of the student body when it comes to Senate matters. And it is clearly the attitude of the Senate concerning Senate matters. A look at some of the Senate's antics of the past week bears this out. The petition to shrink the Senate was debated Sept. 9, but no decision could be made because the Senate underwent another of its many "trial" shinkregions that night and could not raise a quorum. The next day, Davis, suitably, and not surprisingly, perturbed at the turn of events, and it turned out thaturntimingly, angry letter to senators that bared them for the show of anopathy. The letter is really something. First, Davis voiced his understanding for the lack of respect that senators may have for him and Student Dr. Reed's character in a case of respect that drives some senators apathetic. The letter then resorted to groveling, invoking the influence of the Almighty and a good deal of exaggeration to try to induce senators to attend Senate meetings. No dice, however, and looking at the reasons Davie gave for having "some respect for the idea of student governance," as he put it, it is not hard to understand why the letter use ineffective Davis' claimed that the dissolution of the Senate and its operations would take with it "the BILL MENEZES M. JOHNSON bus system, the student health policy, the activity fee, Legal Services, the state student lobby and dozens of other programs." Not to mention civilization as we know it. But in truth, these programs are not so intensely complicated that only the Student Senate can operate them. The Senate can barely operate itself. The notion that these programs could not be operated by any organization other than Student Senate, or the institution's main suitable student representation, is ludicrous. Equally laughable is Davis' contention in the letter that the Senate's dissolution would mean a "university at which students have no input into academic policies, into freedom of speech debates, into the selection of faculty and administrators and thereby into the most basic decision-making processes that take place on this campus." Assuming there was massive student participation in these arenas now, and that would be quite an assumption, Davis would have senators believe that students could not independently Student representation in faculty and administration selection, for example, probably would be better if the students were not drawn from a small, relatively homogeneous group like the one comprising Senate. It would not be difficult to enact procedures whereby students would participate in committee meetings or mittees when they were available. The system would be much more representative. perform the same functions without a student who knows what is known in common pardance as a crook. If apathy prevailed as it does now, then the students again would have shown that they did not want to have a hand in the process anyhow. The students had been given more of an opportunity to participate. But all this supposition is wasted time, just like the efforts of Davis and others to legitimize the Senate. But it is nice to know that at least somebody cares enough to do what he thinks needs to be done in order to save what he feels is a necessary part of this university, it is obvious that the efforts border on the quixotic. Apathy has been the strongest force in the Senate for years. Unfortunately, despite his admirable efforts to change this, Davis remains blind to the fact that only a miracle of DeMille proportions could change it. At the Sept. 9 meeting that failed to pass the Senate shrinkage petition, Davis said that if Senate did not improve its efficiency, "no one will be able to graduate." Student Senate will begin losing its legitimacy. To say Senate "will begin" losing credibility is like saying that Nixon "began" losing credibility when he resigned from office. To worry about her losing credibility, Happie Hooker worrying about her virginity In both cases, it's just a bit too late. Letters to the Editor Kansan breeds mud slingers, smart alecks "There has come into the department of some immature or ambitious journalists an overbearing elitism that sets the public's teeth on edge . . . Rude demanor on the part of a smart-earlier reporter courts cheap peer approval at the cost of public patience. What a dumb way for the press to act." (Eugene Patterson, Quill, April 1980). To the editor: Your own particular brand of elitist, smart-aleck journalism has passed from the annoying to the insulting and finally to the preposterous stage. Enclosed is a quote that I would like to share—one I hope you will all read carefully. The comments are quite an accurate description of Kansan behavior: Scarcely a day goes by that you don't sing mud at some branch of the University, be it the Honors Program, the Student Senate, the Chancellor. You lull everyone and everything with equal ease, rushing your dirt to the press as soon as possible. You're as the facts or accurate quotation—things that no doubt are considered to be of peripheral importance to your staff. Yet there is one exclusion that is even more conspicuous and more annoying than these others, and that is your total inability to propose solutions to the problems you bring up. We all know how easy it is to cut a program down, but the trick is to build it up and solve the problem. Without that answer, that solution, your editorials have no legitimacy; they merely serve to set the public's teeth on edge," and the editors earn the labels of "overbearing" and "elitist." I will grant you, there are a lot of problems on this campus waiting to be joined by a lot of curses. But unless you are willing to crawl out of your ivory tower and face these problems with the rest of the 'mortal' population, don't bother to visit the campus; no interest in listening to what you have to say. Matt Davis Student body vice president Student Senate To the editor: Come on! Give us a break. I ever hear from the Kansan is criticism. Rarely is there an article or editorial offering solutions to the problem of child welfare. I'll never will ever get better if the Kansan keeps giving Senate a bad name. Why don't you try helping Senate by encouraging it instead of killing it? There is little alternative to Senate, unless you would prefer to eliminate all forms of student violence. I ran for office to try to implement internal changes in the Senate, making the organization more efficient and responsive to student issues. We are not finished yet. At least we are trying different proposals to see whether they work. What has the Kansan done? Criticize, mostly. If you, the editors, have solutions to the problems of the Student Senate or to how we can make the student population less apathetic, then why don't you write about them? I am tired of hearing what a lousy job we are doing and that nothing we attempt is working when you offer no yourselves. Greg Schnacke Student body president The University Daily KANSAN (BUSP 658-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday and June July and August Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or Chicago for up to $250 per student, or $300 for a student outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a student, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas. Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Carol Beder Manager Managing Editor Cydn Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodson Associate Campus Editor Jeff serven Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Whitcome Sports Editor Gena Myers Associate Sports Editor Patricia Arnold Entertainment Editor Jennifer Holmes Designer Wife Loi Winkelmish, Tom Tedeschi Wire Editors Elaine Iwamoto, Gail Eggers, Tammy Giardio Copy Photographer Garcia迪 Photographer Ben Bigler, Ken Combo, Scott Hooker, Dave Krau, Drew Torre Staff Photographers Amy Hollowell, Ted Lickagg, Bill Menenez, Brad Gondy, Scott Forder, Blake Gumprecht Columbia Joe Barton Artist Cartoonist John Jinks, Michael Wunts, Brian Johnson Staff Writers John Jinks, Michael Wunts, Brian Johnson Retail Salesman Kevin Konter National Sales Manager Nancy Gurge Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Columbia Media Tracy Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jandy Westmorel Staff Artist Judy Seiler Staff Photographer Jason Walkins Photo Desk Assistant Leslie Paylak Tearsheets Manager Barb韦曼 General Manager and News Advisor Chuck Chowin Entertainment University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1980 Page 3 ... Bernie (Bart Ewing) puts the move on Joan (Robin Manzano) in a scene from "Sexual Perversity in Chicago." 'Sexual Perversion' opens Inge series By JANE NEUFELD Staff reporter From its opening discussion on the merits of wearing World War II flak suits during sex to its closing anatomical rating of the female body by the two male characters, the one-act play "Sexual Perversion in Chicago" explores sexual mores. The play is one of three short plays by contemporary playwright David Mamet that will be presented at 8 p.m., Sept. 30 to Oct. 5, in the Theatre of Washington. The play. The plays are the first of the fall issue series. "Sexual Perversity" maps the relationship between four people, Bernie, Danny, Deborah and Joan. The two men are roommates and best friends, two women. Danny and Deborah become lovers. Weaver said "Sexual Perversion" explores the problems everyone faces in dealing with sex. "Danny and Deborah meet at a library, fall into bed, then fall into love, have a relationship that falls, and then go back to their school," said Amy Foster. Mich., senior and director of the three plays. "Everyone has to go through the time when they say, 'Well, do I want to get laid, do I not?' " anyone who's looking for and trying to figure out sex." The characters in the play have their problems figuring out sex. As Danny and Deborah drift apart, she tells him, "You're trying to uncover what happens and I'm confusing you with information." "We got baby seals dying in Alaska, and we write amendments for bands," Bernie says. "We've been doing that for years." "Nobody does it normally anymore," Danny says after Bernie's description of a night out with a girl, a flak suit, a five-gallon can of gasoline and a Zippo lighter. The language of the play is sexually explicit, Weaver said, and is not suitable for children "The play itself is obscene," he said. "It's fast, it's funny, it's sad, it's terribly dirty." "Sexual Perversion" is set in Chicago in 1973. The play has 34 short scenes, which Weaver separates by changing the lighting and using music from 1973. "I chose 73 on purpose," Weaver said. "It was disco for one thing, and the sexual revolution." The props for the play were sparse, Weaver and audience members would use their imagination. "For an office, we have a desk. For the bedroom, we have a bed," he said. "We give the Barbara Bald, Lawrence junior, plays Deborah in "Sexual Perversion"; Mack Rector, Lawrence sophomore, plays Danny; Bart Miller, Sophomore; John Leaf, Manzano, Chevy Chase. Md.季, plays joan. Two other one-act plays by Mamet also will be performed, "Reunion" and "Mr. Happiness." "The they go from clichés and not knowing what to say to each other to understanding," he said. "It's a touching, touching little piece. It's a nice counterpoint to 'Sexual Persuasion.'" Weaver said "Reunion" was about the meeting of a father and daughter after 20 years apart. "Mr. Happiness" is about a radio announcer who gives advice to people with various problems. "He's a Paul Harvey, Ann Landers, a Joyce Brothers," Weaver said. "He ties the other two plays together and yet has something to say on his own." "An Evening of David Mamet" will run nightly from Sept. 30 to Oct. 5. Curtain time is 8 a.m. Tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats are general admission and are $2 KU students with valid ID's will be admitted who may be reserved in advance due to limited seating. By KEVIN MILLS 'Act your age'rebutted in 'The Silver Whistle' Entertainment editor Being old is a physical fact but feeling old is a state of mind. That's the assertion of Robert E. McEnroe's 1948 play, "The Silver Whistle," from which he has created a community Theatre at the Lawrence Arts Center. The play opened last night, and will run twice on the night at 8. The Sunday matches are in 12:30 Director Bobby Patton, chairman of speech and drama, said the play is about "what can happen when people allow themselves to step out of roles." "It's not social commentary, per se," Patten says. "It's all hilarious funny, and that's the feeling that I get." The plot revolves around the appearance of a new resident at a charity home for the elderly. The resident says he is 77 but is subsequently revealed to be a 47-year-old hobo. The hobo induces the residents to reject the type of old age by offering them the 'secret' house. "He uses various ploys," said Patton, "such as a secret potion that, when coupled with Scotch whiskey, has a profound effect on the residents." Jose Ferrer played the hobo in the 1948 Broadway premiere. Peter Dart, professor of radio/TV/film, recreates the role in the Lawrence production. Charles Oldfather, retired law professor and University counsel, Ambrose Saricks, professor of history, Gerhard Zuther, chairman of the English department, Susan Kelso Zuther, assistant instructor of English, Nan Scott, lecturer in English, and Wayne Deryx, of facilities and operations, also have roles in the play. In addition, several elderly Lawrence's patients have been cast, many of whom had no one to replace them. "Two things I had in mind," Patton said, "One, to involve these people. And two, to do a play that older persons would like to see. "I've never worked with such a receptive cast. They had a lot of creative energy that was based on their life experiences. It also allowed them to play people playing roles close to their own age." "The Silver Whistle" already has been presented to various local nursing homes. Wednesday night's dress rehearsal was free for the elderly. Patton said there were several similarities in today's social climate and the one depicted in the 1948 play. Then, as now, a Democratic incumbent president was faced with questions about his future role in military involvement in a foreign nation are in today's headlines, as they were in 1948. "The play is not well known and it hasn't been done that much," Patton said. "But it's my own feeling that it's somewhat ahead of its time. "We have made real progress since 1948 in regards to our social perspective of the The set, designed and built by Ed Kirkman, features period pieces and props, Patton said. One of the props, Omar the rooster, is a live dog owned by cast member Howard Durkin. Tickets are $3 on a reserved basis. There Reservations can be made by calling 843-0444. Reservations can be made by calling 843-0444. FOLK STORY Mr. Beebe (Ambrose Saricks), right, discusses institutional living with Older Citizens Sampler (Reese Saricks), Mr. Cherry (Charley Oldfather), and Mrs. Hamm (Bernice Pallman). Spare Time TODAY MUSIC: John Hartford, with Alan Weiss, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Plain Jane, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Liquid Fire, 8:45 p.m. at The Pladium THEATER: "The Silver Whistle," presented by the Lawrence Community Theatre, 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center ART: Mark Goodwin, sculpture, and Bhakti Ziek, weaving, at the Lawrence Arts Center Coilet S. Bangert, painting, and Vernon Briecha, sculpture, at Kellas/7E7 Gallery "Americana from the Collection" and "From Drawings to Sculpture: The Creative Process," at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art MOVIES: "Allen," with "Birth of a Notion," 3:30, 7 and 9 p.m. at the Union SATURDAY MUSIC: Alchemny, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Plain Jane, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West Liquid Fire, 8:45 p.m. at The Pladium Henry Cuesta, clarinet, 9 p.m. at Paul Gray's Jazz Place Band Day parade, 9 a.m., Mass. St. THEATER: "A Toby Show," children's theater, 10:30 a.m. at the University Theatre, Murphy Hall "The Silver Whistle," 8 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center MOVIES: Same listing as Friday SUNDAY THEATER: "The Silver Whistle," 2:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Arts Center ART: "The New World: Masters of Modern Sculpture," a film at 3 p.m., Spencer Museum Auditorium MONDAY MUSIC: Ultravox, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Larry Maxey, clarinet, faculty recital at 8 p.m., Swarthout Recita Hall, Murphy Hall THEATER: Michael Dorn Moody, playwright, presents a slide program about "The Fool," 7 p.m., Conference room of the Satellite Union TUESDAY MUSIC: Allen Ginsberg, poet, and William Burroughs, writer, read from their works. Also, Thumbs, new wave music, 9 p.m. at the Lawrence Opera House Johnny, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West KU Jazz Ensemble I, Gary Foster, guest soloist, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recita Hall, Murphy Hall THEATER: "An Evening of David Mamet," including "Sexual Perversion in Chicago," "Reunion" and "Mr. Happiness," 8 p.m. in the William Inge Theater, Murphy Hall ART: "The New World: Masters of Modern Sculpture," film, 1 p., Spencer Museum Auditorium WEDNESDAY MUSIC: Janet Jameson, 9 p.m. at G.P. Loyd's West John Boulton, flute, faculty recital at 8 p.m., Swarthout Rectal Hall THEATER: "An Evening of David Mamet," 8 p.m., William Inge Theater THURSDAY MUSIC: Elvin Bishop, with Larry Raspberry and the Highstepers, 9 p.m., Lawrence Opera House Janel Jameson, 9 p.m., G.P. Loyd's West 'A Toby Show' recreates circus hero By SHAWN McKAY Staff Writer Far removed from the bright lights and the large stage were the traveling tent shows of the Midwest. Lacking the comfortable housing of a New York theater, they erected circus tents and hardwood benches Lacking an audience accustomed to the violence, "they chose the character 'Toby' as their hero. "The Toby Show," a play based on the hero of old-time TV shows, will be presented at 10:30 at the University's Theater in the University Building. "The character that evolved in the tent shows of the early 1900s was Toby, a red-haired, freecleed, country bumpkin," said Aurand the theater production. During his research of turn of the century tent shows, Harns found that Toby was the reason for his success. "He was so popular that every company had a Toby character," he said. "There were old Tobs, young Tobs, stuttering Tobs, girl Tobys - You were the star." "With his red wig and freckled face. Toby was the image of the country boy. He was funny and helpful, he always outsmarted the city-slickers and was a nice man. Using the rural American character, Harris accepted a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and undertook the research and study of a children's play in "classical Toby style." Harris took the familiar fairy tale "Cinderella" in the unlikely position of Cinderella (fairy tale) or "Children accept the Toby version of Cinderella," Harris said. "They are open to truthful, legitimate suggestions or ideas. They are willing to talk about what they mean that you can use any style—even Toby." The show employs all the characteristics of early tent shows, "I used a farcical plot with lots of corry, vaudevillian jokes," Harris said. "The tent plays also demanded three acts with short skits and entertainment in between." Harris said much of the appeal of the report is that American farmers' fear of increasing urbanization "At the time tent shows were at their peak, most of the young people were leaving their families," he said. "People who stayed behind felt a little inferior, but Toby always managed to outsmart the city slacker. He appealed to the populace because he made sure they and brought about the triumph of good over evil." The impact of the tent show on American treatments cannot be underestimated, according Hardy. In the early 1900s, over 20,000 actors left Kakuma and the other wonders every summer – many of them to play Toyo. "More actors were employed in the tent shows in the Midwest than ever appeared on Broadway," Harris said. "But with the advent of radio and television, the tent shows died. The few that managed to survive could only attract people if they gave them Toby. "It was the American comedia dartle 'art.' it was native american, and we had it right here and there," he said. Harris, who has produced many children's painting, the discovered children's theater when he discovers it. "I discovered that I like children, I like theater and I like what children appreciate in theater," he said. "They like excitement, movement, color and energy." He added that "theater and that's what a 'Toby Toy' creates." A pre-show chorus line from "A Taby Show" a children's theatrical production. CHRIS TOOKER PHOTO Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 27, 1980 Clymer From nage 1 dedicating the new building, or at least dedicating the remodeled building. I heard Rolla speak, and I had not heard anything like it before. We had come from Denver, where the language tended more to the prosasic, I guess. I gazed in wonderment, and I listened as those powerful passages rolled out. I confessed somewhat what happened when it had been when a small boy I had seen my father cry. I came to love Rolla Clemmer for the way he wrote and the way he talked, and I think his impact on the journalism of our state was related quite largely to his use of the language. It was 19th century talk; even Henry Watterson hadn't impressed himself with such vivid imagery. The Talk Rolla gave that day a tribute to William Allen White. A passage or so, White "burst in every morning with suggestions for timely news stories, which usually meant that the town's Sacred Cows were in for another distressing series of shocks and outrages. He interpolated straight-away news copy here and there with some twist of his own that raised ordinary reporting to a high level. He wrote headlines, in flowing purple ink strokes, which gave dash and color to staid Associated Press accounts. . . ." About a staff party: "During the evening, as he stood with his hand on my shoulder, he said: 'All good boys and girls, Rolla, and not a boozer in the hunch.'" INUS ROLLA CLYMER, on William Allen White. We came to recognize Rollas the Our Orator through the fifties and sixties, until he reached that point when he no longer could stand up and roll out the wonderful words. He was a regular at the University of California, Doho Dolphins Simons of the Lawrence Journal-World. It was Oscar Stauffer of Stauffer Publications in 1908, Whitley Austin of the Salina Journal in 1904, Drew McLaughlin Sr. of the Paola Republican in 1965. In 1966, he was given the KU Alumni Association citation for distinguished service. In 1977, he was the one to receive an award for Journalistic Merit, the fourth to be honored. Fred W. Brinkerhoff was the speaker. "Mr. Clymer's editorials are not limited to any field," Brinkerhoff said. "They read literally with everything. He is no specialist, although he is an outstanding authority on the Kansas oil industry. . . Scanning the news of home and state and nation and world, the editor finds for the editorial columns the importance of other sanctums from other sanctums in Kansas he obtains inspiration for editorials of agreement or disagreement. From his contacts with the men and women he meets come ideas that yield thoughtful observations in print. The variety of subjects is amazing . . ." He had youthful dreams "to edit a paper whose thunderings would arouse the Masses, and find now that I am rich fortunate in my scribblings if I do arouse the wrathful Regular Advertiser and Constant Reader. I once imagined that, by some legdemain to the deponent unknown, I might achieve wealth as a few of our purse-proud publishers have done. All but the gold and silver I have laid up will never cause moth nor rust to work overtime in corrupting it." And he mentioned some people who had influenced him: White, the Murdocks of Wichita, Ed Howe of Atchison, Henry Allen of the Beacon, Arthur Carppe of Topek, Charles Scott of Iola, George Marceau of Fort Scott, and many more. He said that "in my passage through this batter'd caravanseral, I have been able to witness the deeds of many sterling members of my profession, past and present, and to thrill the immensely grand accomplishments. The long leet of state's press has taken toward the spans in the few decades that embrace the spans of many living men, must surely be regarded as among the proudest gains which Mother Kansas has fashioned." When the Kansas Centennial and the Civil War Centennial came along he was busy in a new role. He was chosen to portray Abraham Lincoln at ceremonies in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia. Ray Morgan wrote that "With soldiers standing by in the Union军队 uniforms of the day Lincoln came there 100 years before, Clymer raised the 34-star flag that Lincoln had raised on the flagstaff to commemorate the admission to Kansas." HE WAS THE speaker in 1968 when Fred Brinkerhoff was named to the Newspaper Editors' Hall of Fame, and he chose the occasion to comment on what he termed, not surprisingly, the "Vahalla" of Kansas journalism: "During the last four decades of the 19th century and the first six of the 20th, a stately procession of newspaper titans has marched across the Kansas scene. Perhaps no other state has bred so many of them, or of such surpassing superiority, in any comparable period. . . . "Many of these editors would have been outstanding figures in any period of history, or in an clime. All of them were engrossed in the fascinating business of building their state from its pioneer trappings into an orderly structure of high civilization . . ." And the years went by for the elder statesman of Kansas journalism. When he reached 80 he said he was not yet ready to write "20" on his career or on his life. "I am 80 years old today," he wrote. "My parents always hitherto I have been sensitive about revealing my age." He was honored in El Dorado, and he said of himself that "Fifty-two years ago this month his good fairy took him by the hand and led him into this bright haven. Here he has found satisfaction and peace which were the kind he had been repaid hundred-fold for any slight contribution he may have made to the general welfare." It was June 4, 1977, when he died, at Allen Park, after a long illness. The funeral, was June 10, at the First Unitarian Church. Presbyterian Church. The editorial tributes were extensive; the Times carried two full pages of them. Gov. Robert Bennett eulogized him. His own paper said that "This man, this lifelong friend of both the high and the lowly, never reached for the stars. Yet there are those who believe that, at least, he has had a McLemore written of his as "The Boose"; "Here was a man who labored long and strenuously at the profession he loved, under physical handicaps of such severity that one of fiber long since have surrendered in despair. But that poetic soul was housed in whiterhead; the mind commanded and willed the physical frame to keep it strong." He believed that a like spent leaf." The Salina Journal, the Emporia Gazette, the Iola Register, the Witchia Eagle, the Lawrence Journal-World and all the others seemed to have something to say. Clyde M. Reed of the Parsons Sun, revered Rolla Clymer, gave the eulogy at the services in El Dorado: "The Clymer prose in the El Dorado was an important educational output was judged. The style, rhythm and vocabulary, not to mention the content, were the products of a master and a devoted perfectionist." AND REEED RECALLED what Sen. James Pearson, who also spoke at the funeral, had said in 1868, when Rolla Clymer was undergone a stroke. "When he died, they can take his typewriter away from him." These several years later, and remembering all the Clymer editors and the Clymer orations, we can feel special pleasure and pride that Rolla Clymer was once among us. I liked what Ray Morgan wrote in the Kansas City Times: "On the day Rolla Clymer, respected editor of the El Dorado Tortoise, died, a sudden summer thunderstorm darkened the skies over the Flint River and caused an orange pattern sweeps across the waving grass. "Darts of lightning zigzagged across the darkened skies, thunder rolled across the treeless hills and guts of heavy pounded at the grass. It was as though the spirits of ancient Indian hunts and sachems were in sorrow over the poet of the beloved grasslands." And, some words from Clymer himself, to this day, he concluded his White Dwarf words with this curse: "Push off, and sitting well in order smite the sounding furburts; for my purpose toToa sail beyond the sunrise in order to die." At what the Times published in its special edition of June 6, 1977: The Hills have warmed me with their sheen And charmed me by their grace; Throughout life's bitter cudgeling They've clasped me in embrace. They that life itself must end And I no longer fill And I no longer fill A horteschge spot. I do besech A bootless spot, I do besech Thev mav embrace me still." The words of Rolla A. Clymer, August 7, 1965, entitled "Requiem." We are honored almost beyond measure in naming him this year to our Kansas Newspaper Editors Hall of Fame. Samsot newspapers as representing the mood of the people? Do editors challenge those polls, the products of technology? Do they ask what the sample includes? Do they ask what the margin of error is? Do they even know the terms to ask about? Another problem is with advertising's market research. More applied science. More technology. Virginia Dodge Fielder, editorial research manager at the Chicago Sun-Times, recently pointed with pride to her group's influence on the editorial content of the paper. She told a group of teachers that the market researchers had found that many people seemed interested in air conditioners at a particular time of year. Her group, the market researchers, convinced the editors that that particular time would be a good one in which the conditioners and how to shop for them. The series ran, she said, and public interest was high. But no editor had challenged the assumption that the research began with. No editor had wondered whether the newspaper should be in the business of associating the course with the other series, what the series did. Perhaps the service was sound. But its premise was never questioned. No challenge. Again. The editor who nods assent when an opinion poll comes over the wires, who acquiesces to an editorial project suggested by a market researcher, who does not see the results about the validity of the basis of the research and its validity, is a dulled editor. A dulled editor isn't doing his or her job. There must always be challenge. AN EDITOR WHO simply nods might just as well not off to sleep. Some editors might think such challenge is unnecessary. They might point to the popular nightly news shows on television to show that the media is not all that interested in depth reporting. After all, television and its limits of time support a superficial, headline-type format that the public has come to expect from television. "What is it?" asks the crowd. "way it is," or, "that's all the news you need . . ." What have many editors done, faced with this ubiquitous, competitive nuisance? They have shown fear at the prospect that something might be on television that is not in the newspaper. So a lot of them have simply followed the same and the cameras done the same, the same or have reported the same triviet that television did. They could always boast that television didn't beat them. An editor must challenge to make sure the technology, as wonderful as it can be, is working for him and, more importantly, for the public, who are interested in the journalistic principles he should stand for. Of course, television has its defenders. Eric Sevaride, in a PBS telecast, claimed that television made up for its deficiencies by fielding magazine-format shows. r potting television. What a horrible way to go. But, as Newsday's Alen Keneas concluded in a survey of television news a year ago, "This isn't where we're supposed to get our news. We're supposed to get it from the day, or night," So, too, with newspapers. It is not enough to point to national magazines, to other media to excuse provincial shortcomings. The readers of any newspaper expect to get their news from the But what has all this television talk got to do with newspapers? with newspapers. THE FORMAT CHALLENGE that television has so far failed to overcome will be a challenge for newspapers in the '80s. The electronic newspaper has been unveiled and will, according to many predictions, take over an ever larger share of the news business. Daily newspapers will be called upon to feel it in. What challenge must editors make to this new technology? John Ahlhauser, an Indiana professor conversant with the development of the electronic newspaper, said that reporters would have to write shorter stories because only about 200 words would fit on the television screen—the vehicle for the electronic newspaper. The only similar development in newspapers, one that forced writers to condense their work, was the tabloid. In too many cases, tabloid editors opted for what has become the television approach, and they were often employed or seduced or seduced in a new format. They stopped trying to present the news in detail. newspaper, Editors, then, will either copy television's sorry methods or will challenge their reporters to better utilize the space available. Readers have been subjected to this confusion mainly because there has been no one to challenge the reports or the reporters. Out of the mass of reporters and editors, only a handful has been willing and able to challenge the technocracy. That is why anyone reading newspapers has been assaulted by waves of economists predictions or pronouncements that the country is in a recession, coming out of one or heading into one, that the world either has been pitched straight to hell or has saved itself. Technology, the application of science, has produced an alarming array of data, all part of what has been called the information explosion. It has produced, along with that data, a body of people who can interpret, analyze, estimate and predict. This is the new mandarin class, and editors have seemed loathe to challenge this class of elite and knowledgeable people. rave newspapermerm lost some of the intellectual process that used to go into reporting, writing and editing? Have they lost the urge, the ability to challenge? but back to technology and another problem it poses. IT HAS SEEMED at times that they were cowed by the information explosion. And if an editor somewhere has felt that he should be to cowed, he should have read about Gary Tennant. Van Anda was hired as the managing editor for Van Anda also read hieroglyphics. One night, poring over the material for one of many stories the Times had done on excavations, he looked at a picture and decided that the inscription it showed was a forgery. Van Anda's discovery was substantiated by Egyptologists who concluded that a young Pharaoh had been assassinated. His name was Tutankhamen. the new York Times back at the turn of the century. He was not loved by the staff, but he was respected. He was not ousted by his boss. He was not ousted by a reason for that. He was not a dull editor. DURING WORLD WAR I, Van Aranda mined himself with every available military map and charted the courses of various battles. By doing that, he anticipated many of the campaigns and got his people there ahead of the rest of the world's press. Van Anand pushed the Times to expanded coverage of the great feats in aviation and in polar exploration, and a brief account of some of their accomplishments. Day Talees 's The Kingdom and the Power." Van Anda was the first editor to publicize a young physicist and, when he was reading a story that one of his reporters had written about that physicist's speech. Van Anda made him make an equation. Van Anda had spotted a mistake that Albert Einstein had made in public. Yes, today's editors have suffered from an information glut. But think of Van Anda. Had anything prepared him for aviation, for physics in the Einstein mold, for the first World War, for polar exploration, for the Titanic? He had not allowed himself to become dulled. Van Anda also disputed the claims that the Titanic was uninkable and, when radio contact was lost, deduced what had happened and pushed his staff to a world scoop of the disaster. Few editors are geniuses. In light of that, the rest must be even sharper, must work at learning even more, must challenge and prove themselves able to challenge, must be the ones who can harness and direct technology to serve the people. It is too much of a dudge to decide that readers are becoming disaffected and are turning to television and that what editors and reporters need to do is to feel the readers the pap they want. That's what prime-time television is all about. Technology was certainly around in Van Anda's day. It is present today with a vengeance. How many Titanics do we have? Are nuclear reactors safe? Technology will be either the problem or the solution of the '80s for journalists. This is the challenge. Journalists must maintain their tradition and must serve the public, even if the public does not evidence interest in being served. If editors do not continue, or maybe begin, challenging technology and its potential abuses, they will become more and more like the Cheshire Cat's smile—pleasantly visible, but with nothing behind it. Davies From page 1 They must challenge or become the publisher's dress swords—snazzy, ornate, perhaps, but without edge. Science Monitor, said in a speech last year that journalism is a lot like the priesthood. "It means be scrupulous about the truth and following it wherever it leads. Some of today's novitates have a different view. They enter the profession not with a sense of clinical objectivity, determined to explore all views, hear all sides, but committed to a particular social cause. Journalism is, for them, merely an instrument to further this cause." Hughes said journalists of this type were not welcome on the Monitor. Nor are they on The Kansas City Star and the Kansas City Times. Nor, I suspect, on many of your papers. re maints the problem is one of misunderstanding. He says, "It is) namely the notion that the writers and editors of a newspaper hold values and pursue purposes somehow different from the wider community's; that, sequestered behind the archictecture, they seek to preserve themselves to be a kind of class apart—willed, self-important, cunning in the working out of our arrogant designs." Charles Gusewelle, a columnist for The Kansas City Star and one of the most sensitive writers of the Year, wrote a column on the occasion of the Titanic. He found in which he touched on the problem of arrogance. He continues, "Nothing could be further from the truth . . . . It may sound lame to say, but we do bitterly regret our occasional mistakes, just as we regret our talents' limitations." I disagree in some measure with my colleague. I think some of us truly are arrogant. But whether we are or not really does matter. The answer is that we may use that way, and that is what really counts. If we can put aside our arrogance, then perhaps we will listen to readers and begin to give them what they want. I don't mean we should pander to them and feed them nothing but the pabulum of good news. But if they tell us they care about neighborhood news, then we have to find a way to give them the former without giving up the latter. A new and better rapport with our readers is important for another, more fundamental reason. It concerns the very existence of a free press in this country. If the public doesn't support us and the First Amendment, then it won't be long before the politicians and Supreme Court begin to dismantle it. Some think the dismantling process already has begun. MY MESSAGE TODAY is a simple one. I hope you will help me plant the idea that editors and reporters can help set the tone that could result in a new, more trusting audience of readers. And that, in the long run, must surely be the official results for the folks in the business office. Alexander Hamilton had this to say on the subject: "W whatever fine declarations may be inserted in any constitution respecting freedom of the press must altogether depend on public opinion and the general spirit of people and of the government." Norman E. I Isaacs, chairman of the National News Council and one of this country's most remarkable journalists, said in a recent speech long-range trend is clearly against the press. secure one punch. That is scary. Just as scary, perhaps, is a finding from a Gallup poll earlier this year that showed Americans favoring the view that present curbs on the press are not strict enough rather than being too strict. The chairman of the National "It takes no genius to remark that down the road may lie a tipping point. What happens if public disaffection (with the press) goes beyond 50 percent? Or moves, say, to 55 percent? Will American journalists so much enough to understand why they support it so that rational citizens who can recognize that without a free press there can be no free nation?" Perhaps you have seen the surveys indicating that a majority of people would not vote in favor of the Public Amendment today if it were put before the public. That is scary. Maybe I should have told them that just working in a small town for three months was as good a reason as any. The pace there is different; the world isn't tipped down to a fraction of a second. It was a whole new world for me, because I had grown up in the Kansas City metropolitan area—and compared to Chanute, Kansas City is a mighty big city indeed. "Why Chanute?" people kept asking me. I had no answer for them last spring when I told them I'd be spending my summer as the intern on the Chanute Tribune. Or I could mention how my work kept me jumping, such as when I was called upon to write an account of a late-night bullfrog hunt. But I'd never been on a bullfrog hunt; I'm not even sure I'd know a bullfrog if I saw one. That assignment and I knew it had a little artistic license and several dogpuns. If we are to do that Isaacs suggests, we must serve readers rather than ourselves. If we do that successfully, we just might find readers serving us. Perhaps I should have told them all the advantages of working on a small-town newspaper. On a big metropolitan paper, I'd have been locked in one job all summer long. Not in Chanute. Before the末季 editorial editor (for two weeks), society editor (for one day), and done numerous other jobs involving political reporting, editing, makeup and pasture. Yet the best answer may simply be the eternally patient people at the Tribune who remembered it what it was like to break into journalism. They even remembered it when they accidentally button on my terminal, prompting erased several stories that were to go on a page I'd laid out. assignment so odd that many people (including myself) doubted my sanity. A Kansas inventor brought an air-powered car to Chanute and asked me to test-drive it, something that was more dangerous than it looked. I dugged huge holes in the floor of the car and我 felt it be road a few times before the trip was through. My sunburn was soothed somewhat by the front-page story that resulted. But all this wouldn't convince most people. So maybe the best answer I could give them now is actually something I didn't do rather than something I did. Oh, I could mention that I was given an Don Munday (1) Our summer vacations I didn't have to write a single obituary in those three months. I rest my case. I interviewed last spring for what I thought was a reporting position on a Harris group daily. But the summer position I was given was more than I bargained for. And more than I could have Scott Faust except for selling ads and taking pictures, I wore all the hats of a weekly newspaper. I was assigning editor, the one and only feature and Each week was a headlong rush towards a Thursday pastime deadline. I had the editor's fears of unfulfilled holes and butting heads, and the editors' sources of sources and time constraints. I was on my own. news reporter, copy editor, typesetter, layout editor and pasteup artist. My Wednesday nights were, without fail, marathon layout and headline writing sessions held in my bedroom at home. Thursday meant I had to think of my ideas to work of, work of themes coalesce. 1 I had to put out special issues on Lenea's July Fourth celebration and the Aug. 5 primary races and faced the angry onlaught of a local restaurant that gained in connection with a food poisoning incident. This summer my life was the Lenexa News. I thrived on the demands of the job and bathed in the satisfaction of each Friday's publication I have to have had the opportunity, to do so much so soon. Vanessa Herron On the first day of my internship as the Cofer- ville Journal, I expected the worst. On that first day, I was given a desk, a webbly chair, a tour of downtown Coffeeville and, along with an assignment to interview a high school tennis team, the keys to the company car. After the first assignment and driving experience were over, I became more and more trusted in the Journal newsroom-first with obituaries, then with courthouse records and, finally, with more complex stories. B. B. JOHNSON I think I did well. But, of course, there were a few slip-ups. One Monday morning, I made six major mistakes in a single crime story—the kind of mistakes that would have made our lawyer wake up in a cold night. The story never reached the records page, but Paul McMasters, the managing editor, told me that he When I left the Journal, I left behind friends I had not expected to make and work I was afraid I I had gained newspaper experience, enough money for one semester's tuition and, most importantly, self-confidence. KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Monday, September 29, 1980 Vol. 91, No.26 USPS 650-640 friends I afraid I age, but told me enough d, most AAUP wants open forum with finalists By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter The KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors has asked the chancellor search committee to open its meetings with the finalists for the position. Evelyn Swartz, AAUP president, said yesterday that because the names of candidates were usually publicized anyway, an open forum would decrease speculation about the candidates. Jacob Kleinberg, search committee chairman, said yesterday that he had not received the request. The request was not valid. SWART2 SAID THE request was based on a secure university law school last year in its secrecy. We new deam. Sidney Shapiro, chairman of the law dean search committee and associate professor of law, said the faculty members involved with the research are at first about the benefits of open meetings. "It was my impression that most of our faculty thought that after it was over it was a worthwhile exercise," he said. "I personally think it is a good idea." Swartz said the open meetings would give the University a chance to meet the candidates, to know who they were and to find out about their personalities. Shapiro said he supported the open meetings for several reasons. The search committee, he said, can learn how a candidate responds to a group of people asking questions. He said the search committee could benefit from the involvement of groups at the University because they might raise concerns not recognized by the committee. "Various interest groups in the University could ask the questions they want answered and give their conclusions about a candidate to the search committee," Shapiro said. He said an argument used against open meetings was that the candidates desired privacy and that better candidates might apply to their interest in the position was confidential. HOWEVER, SHAPIRO SAID, in all probability the finalists for the position would be discovered. "It seems to me a red herring," he said. "I am extremely unlikely that the list be public." He said that the AAUP proposal was based on the assumption that the finalists would be put up. "What we urged was that, given the inevitability of publicity, to consider it (the request) on merits other than that," he said. Shapiro said he did not know how the committee would respond to the report. Iraq offers cease-fire The chancellor's search committee will accept nominations and applications for chancellor until Oct. 31. After that, they will choose five candidates to be the board of Rogents, who will make the final selection. BAGHADD, Iraq (UPI)—Iraq President Saddam Hussein ofered a cease-fire in the week-old Gulf war yesterday in return for Tehran's acceptance of all IRA claims on disputed lands. Iranian President Abdass汗an Bami-Sad, Iran ever, bridged to carry on fighting "until the end of this century." The surprising Iraq offer came after Baghdad claimed its troops had pushed 60 miles into Iran in their deepest penetration of the seven-day-old war. In a nationwide television address, Hussein said Baghdad was ready to consider a cease-fire. "Obviously our national interests have to be defended in any negotiations," he said. He listed See related story page 2 officially for the first time Iraq's claim to sovereignty over the Shaal al-ajat waterway in the tiny islands in the strategical Strait of Hormuz. The two islands and the islands are claimed by both countries. HUSEINE ALSO demanded "full democratic rights in Iran"—an apparent call for some form of autonomy for Iran's ethnic minorities, such as the Kurds in the north and the predominantly Arab population in oil-rich Kuzniki, the city which Iqra's invasion force sent its main push. 'if the other side does not want to accept a cause-fire, it is up to them to accept the con- dition.' Iraq's claim to Shatt al-Arab is at the heart of Meanwhile, both sides renewed air attacks on each other and facilities, already crippled by the bombing. the conflict between the two oil-rich states and surrender of the disputed waterway will almost disappear. IRAQ SAID IT captured Abvaz, capital of Kuwa. He fled Iran. Tehran said the claim was a 'deranged life'. A GRI correspondent, reporting from 500 yards outside the city, said that the Iraqis were not yet in Khormarshahr, but that virtually all Iraqian forces had left. Iraqi forces all but captured Khorramshahr, Iran's major nort city on the Shatt al-Arab. Invading Iraqi field commanders said only "15 or 20 sniper" and civilians still defended the city. Iraqi mortars and artillery moved up to within a mile of the city. SOME OF THE local population from Iran's Khuzistan province, ethnic Arabs who have been hostile to Iran's government, joined the Iraqi forces in fighting around Khorramshahr and Abadan, where the huge Iranian refinery lay in ruins. At the United Nations, the Security Council approved unanimously a resolution calling on Iran and Iraq to "refrain from any further use of force" and settle their week-old war peacefully. TOMMY ROBERT POOLE/Kansan staff Brian Ahshapnnek, 13, straightens the headdress of his Kiowa costume before performing in the gourd dance. The dance was part of the Haskell Indian Junior College celebration of American Indian Day Saturday. Haskell closes day's festivities with dancing By KATH POROSSELL Staff Reporter The powwow was the climax of Lawrence's celebration of American Indian Day, which falls every year on the fourth Friday in September. The "everybody dance" seemed the perfect melody for the crowd. Hankell Indian Junior College Saturday night. Blue jean-clad Lawrence residents danced side-by-side with dancers wearing colorful, feathered costumes as the group circled a ring of drummers in the middle of the Haskell This year, Haskell officials worked to involve the entire community in the celebration, which ended with gourd dancing and intertribal dancing. Although it is not a national holiday American Indian Day was endorsed by 24 state governors, including the governor of Kansas, in 1914. THE GOURD DANCING was done in the afternoon on the Haskell Powlow Grounds. The dance originated with the Kiowa tribe in Oklahoma, where the gourd clan policed the tribe, according to Marquis Woodard, a professor at the Program and a member of the Kiowa tribe. Plains Indians depended on the hunter for survival, and gourd dancing done to honor warriors and hunters in the tribe, as well as to emphasize family ties, he said. THE KILOWA'S MODERN gourd society is a fraternity of lawyers, lawyers and businessmen. Woods said, "That just goes to show that you don't know what you're going to do of a person when you educate him." he said. Many traditional dances, such as the sun dance and the scalp dance, were banned by the U.S. government after American Indians lost much of their native land, Woodard said. Some of the dances went "underground," where Indians secretly kept the songs and their meanings alive, and have resurfaced only in recent years, he said. Gourd dancing was revived in the 1850s, and has since been adopted by Indian tribes all over the world. Spectators at the gourd dance had a chance to sample Indian fry bread, a round patty of dough deep-fried in oil and then covered with honey. Also for sale were corn soup and Indian corn bread; cream, cheese, lettuce and tomatoes on top. THE FESTIVITIES continued that evening Themes, values of '60s alive for Ginsberg By RAY BRECHEISEN Staff Reporter volved in peace movements, sexual revolutions, acid tests, race riots and self-discovery. The last time Allen Ginsberg was at the University of Kansas was in 1966, and there was 'a lot of noise.' The times have changed, but the themes and values of the 1960s, in the mind of poet Allen Ginsberg, are very much alive, and perhaps more valid than ever before. The Vietnam War was at its height, and students all across the United States were in- Known during the 1960s for his outspoken views on war, sex and life in general, Ginsberg. along with many of his peers, advocated an "awareness of spontaneity." Ginsberg, in Lawrence for a poetry reading, said yesterday that spontaneity and true experience are the best and that there is and others of the 'beat generation' simply discovered it, "or recovered it." THE ATTITUDE of openness so prevalent in www.howstuffworks.com Walker Dolifika, 649 N, Sixth St., and his dog, Coyote, take a break from the busy routine of keeping a truck garden. Carlton Orchards DAVE KRAUS/Kensan staff Heat burns gardeners' crops Bv ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Walter Dolifia has trucked his garden vegetables to retail markets and some Lawrence residents for 30 years. This year however, he doesn't have much to sell. Eighty-five percent of his tomato, corn, and potato crops burned in the summer heat, he His crops usually bring him between $2,000 and $3,000, he said. This year, he said, he will be lucky to get $1,000. Dolfka, 649 N. Sixth St., does not qualify for a federal loan to recoup his losses. But he and his wife, Evelyn, do not rely on the money from the crops. Both receive 8000 a month railroad pen- "I feel sorry for the kids who are just starting out and can't really effort to take a loss," he Dolifka turned his gardening hobby into a fulltime venture in 1975, when he retired as a railroad flagman after 35 years. Since he started his garden in 1950, he has invested about $10,000 in electrical irrigation and water. When his five children were home, he said, he planted strawberries in addition to his other crops. For the past two years, he has paid two of his grandchildren to help him out in the garden. With their help, he irrigated his fields three times, the water cost more than it might have worthen. "I got nothing but a $195 light bill for my efforts." Dolftka said. This year, he said was going to retire from farming. "I'm getting too old," said the 70-year-old. "I'm just going to sit and drink beer." Dolifika's wife said he had been retiring from truck farming since he planted his first crop. But Dollaff insisted that this year would be his last—unless spring fever got hold of him again. CLOUDY Weather Wet weather It should be mostly cloudy today with a high in the low 70s and winds 5 to 15 mph, according to the National Weather Service in Tooneka. Clouds should be clearing tonight and the low will be around 50. Tomorrow it should be sunny and warmer with a high around 80. Wednesday through Friday, it should be held no or little of chance of precipitation. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Neo-Nazis seized in Oktoberfest blast MUNICH, West Germany—Police arrested the leader of an outlawed neo-Nazi group and five of his followers in connection with the bomb attack that killed 12 Oktoberfest revelers Friday night in the worst terrorist attack in West Germany history, officials said yesterday. Karl-Heinz Hoffmann, 41, leader of the neo-Nazi Wehrsportgruppe Hoffmann, was arrested with five other group members. The mother was a known internee or orphan, and the dead included an unmarried mother and three West German children. The other widows were West German adults. the alleged bomber, Gundolf Koehler, a student with a knowledge of explosives, was killed in the blast and probably had both hands near the bomb when it went off, Bavarian Interior Minister Gerold Tandler said in announcing the break in the case. Five U.S. Air Force personnel were among the 211 people injured in the blast, authorities said. Gormann and his five followers were arrested Saturday. Four of the group members were caught trying to cross the border to Austria on their way to Yugoslavia in a car convoy, which included six vehicles allegedly destined for the Middle East. Poles threaten walkout over benefits WARSAR, Poland—Shipyard workers in Gdansk threatened yesterday to walk off their jobs again unless the government implemented pay increases and other benefits promised in the historic agreement ending their original strike last month. The Workers Defense Committee said the shipyard workers would stage a one-hour strike Friday to protect the lack of government action on the issue. The committee, which acts as a clearinghouse for strike information, said the workers would launch a full-scale strike if the protest produced Delegates from other Polish union committees, linked together in the Solidarity Movement, went on Monday to decide whether to make a plea against a MEP-wide protec- Poland's Communist Party Central Committee was expected to meet this week to examine the country's economic plight. The newspaper Zycie Warszawy earlier had questioned the country's ability to pay for the benefits that the government had promised. The newspaper said wage increases alone would cost $3.5 billion yearly, a effect which could not be supported by higher productivity or greater efficiency. Afghan youths join rebels to flee draft ISILAMABAD, Pakistan—Afghan teen-agers from families too poor to send them abroad are joined Molson Rein force rebels rather than be drafted by ISIS. The official, who has taken refuge in India, said midnight house-to-house searches, raids on schools and universities and roadblock kidnapping have been carried out by the police. Families too poor to afford emigration either hide youth at home, send them to relatives in the country let them join reinforce forces, said the official. The number of refugees is increasing. Rebels who recently traveled across the Afghan border to Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province said many youths aged 12 and 13 fought with them inside Afghanistan. One man said his 10-year-old son was fighting with the rebels in the northern provinces. The Afghan government has stopped issuing passports to block the drain of students, high-ranking officials, teachers and other professionals from the country. In another development, the Urdu-language daily Jang reported that an Afghan pilot who had been ordered to attack rebel positions turned his bombs on an important government airport at Kandahar, destroying five jets. Senate panel to end Billy investigation WASHINGTON—Senate investigators will offer their conclusions in the Billy Carter case this week, but several members of the subcommittee that handled it have said they are confident. some of the senators said they thought the evidence in the case clearly indicated that Libya was encouraged to approach the president's brother after the White House asked him to seek Libya's help on behalf of the 52 American hostages in Iran. The panel, a nine-man subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has spent two months studying the political and financial ties between the two parties. Several subcommittee members privately said they were not satisfied with all aspects of the investigation, despite weeks of depositions and testimony in both open and closed hearings. One member still is pondering events that followed a White House meeting Dec. 6 with Ali Hloubert. Libya's tooni diplomat in the United States. Billy Carter helped set up the session after Rosalymn Carter suggested his friendship with Libyan officials might be useful in trying to gain release of In late December, Billy Carter received a $20,000 payment from Libya. He later received another $200,000, which he said was an installment on a loan. Los Angeles in last stage of busing LOS ANGELES—Security was stepped up during the weekend at high schools and elementary schools scheduled to enter the final stage of the Los Angeles Lakers' draft. Only 25 schools remain to be added to the mandatory busing plan in the nation's second-largest school district, but officials said they included several schools that had been centers of anti-busing demonstrations in recent days. School officials said they were taking extra precautions to prevent school buses being bound, as well as at several elementary schools set to enter the plan. At schools where busing began a week ago, demonstrations were tapering off. The addition of the eight schools that came into the plan later in the week, plus the '26 schools scheduled to enter today, was expected to push total enrollment in the mandatory program to between 55,000 and 60,000 students. As of last Monday, enrollment in grades one through nine in the program's 119 schools was 62.2 percent minority and 37.8 white. Titan II silo might have toxic leak LITTLE ROCK, Ark.—High levels of toxic chemicals in a well near well-destroyed Titan II missile is silo in Damascus, Ark. suggest the silo might be used to test nuclear weapons. Dr. Robert Young, the director, said weekend tests by his department showed mitrate concentrations of 16 parts per million at a private well about 10 times higher than the average. A later test at the same well after heavy rains showed a nitrate level of 9.4 parts per million, he said. The maximum safe level for nitrates put by the Environmental Protection Agency is 10 parts per million. Tests at two other wells within a mile of the silo showed nitrate concentrations of 1.8 and 2.4 parts per million, Young said. Nitrates can be particularly harmful to fetuses and young children if ingested in large concentrations. However, the wells tested did not provide drinking water for humans or animals, said EPA Engineering Division director Bruno Kirsch. Nevertheless, Young said, his department plans to watch the nitrate levels in water samples taken near the site because gradual increases in toxicity could indicate a leak in the silo. Iranian, Iraqi war drains oil stockpiles The main question posed to industrialized nations by the week-long war between Iran and Iraq is how long it will be before the war adversely affects the world's oil supplies and another energy crunch sets in. By United Press International All indications are that the crunch is imminent. After a week of fighting, Iran and Iraq appear to have destroyed each others' multi-billion dollar networks of oil refineries, pumping stations, storage tanks and export terminals established during the past century. The industrialized Western nations temporarily are being spared the worst effects of this destruction by the 100-day war, because they have built up during the past year. But the loss of Iraq's 2.8 million barrels per day of oil exports and Iran's 700,000 barrels per day effectively wipes out a daily glut of 2.5 million barrels and has soaked the world of market and prices down for the last three months. THE BURDEN on the world market would be eased slightly if Iraq could resume pumping some of its crude through pipelines across Turkey, Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean. But Iranian air strikes and saboteurs have prevented a major oil spill in Iraq's exports, 6 percent of the West's daily consumption, are choked off. Those countries that depend most heavily on Iraqi and Iranian exports, such as France, Brazil, Japan, West Africa and South Asia, have to make up the shortage either by The long- and short-term ramifications of this cutoff will be felt in different ways by the industrialized and developing countries. BUT WESTERN industrialized nations have the advantage of being able to draw on their stockplies for the next few months. Most of them also can rely on the International Energy Agency's oil-sharing scheme. The IEA comprises 19 of the world's largest oil-consuming nations. buying higher-priced odd lots on the spot market or by securing new long-term contracts with other oil producers. For developing countries, the pinch will be felt immediately. Many of them are victims of human trafficking. Analysis from Iraq, usually on favorable terms. They have no access to extensive stocks or to the IEA and can be expected to be divided into a secure scramble for replacement crude. Because the United States has received no oil from Iran and very little from Iraq, it would not be hurt immediately. However, should the IEA be given a share sharing plan into effect, the U.S. would be obligated to share its stocks. Those OPEC members sympathetic to the West—Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar,mezuela and the United Arab Emirates are quicky increase their production. GAUGING THE DAMAGE already done, analysts say that if the loss of Iraqi and Iranian production is sustained for much longer, it could be months before the countries will be back at full production. But Libya, Algeria and Nigeria, OPEC's price radicals, probably will raise short-term prices. Energy planning lacking House report reveals WASHINGTON (UPI)—A House panel concluded in a report yesterday that federal and state plans for coping with extreme fuel were either nonexistent or so bad that they would be of little use. The report by a House Government Operations subcommittee on energy said, "The current worldwide abundance of crude oil and the need to develop better relegated energy contingency planning to a low priority status." Because the world oil situation is so unstable, the panel said, that attitude is both dangerous and foolish. Last November, Congress passed legislation designed to speed development of a standby gasoline rationing plan and to encourage their own energy conservation programs for use in an oil shortage. Each state was required to submit its plan to the Energy Department. In addition, Congress authorized the president to set mandatory conservation targets for each state if it possesses the potential energy shortage existed. So far, however, Nebraska is the only state that has submitted a conservation plan to the Energy Department for construction. U.S. have completed emergency plans designed to meet the law, the panel said. The report said the Energy Department itself had "serious shortcomings" in establishing state gasoline conservation targets. The subcommittee, headed by Rep. Toby Moffett, D-Conn., found that planning was so bad that the president's powers to set mandatory state targets and plans would be virtually useless as an effective tool to respond to a national energy supply interruption. On the Record KU police are investigating the theft of $750 in football equipment stolen from the Louisville Cardinals' locker on Friday's Friday night or Saturday morning. The theft was reported by the account manager at 11:30 Saturday morning. According to police, the locker room was left unlocked overnight. Police said 10 football jerseys, six pairs of practice shorts and four pairs of team bags and three pairs of football pants were stolen from the locker room. KU police issued notices to appear to two KU students who allegedly were climbing the KANU radio tower shortly after 11:00 Friday night. KU police said the students will face criminal trespassing charges. A notice to appear is similar to an arrest, except that the suspect is not expected to appear. The suspect signs his name to the notice, agreeing to appear in court on a specified date. SUA FILMS Monday, Sept. 29 Ryan's Daughter A livashove love story in Ireland. A young married woman (Sarah Miles) wants to leave her quaint school teacher husband (Louise Jones), to marry a topher Jones, John Mills and cinematograph Freddie Wow Owens; or David Lean, 192 (milk) Color: 7:30. Tuesday, September 30 The fourth of Eric Rohner's "Six Moral Crimes" is *Maurel Maud* and *Claire Knoeher* is the story of a summer love affair that never takes hold. The second, more mocking, wily style. It is a line concocted to his other tales. Plus: Bruno Buster Eggs. (80 mln) Color. Frenchisch Wednesday, Oct. 1 German stage director Max Reinhardt was brought over by Warner for a series of short films that focused on financial reasons sent him back once a film. The result, this adaptation of the Shakespeare comedy, is a visual delight, and it's very funny. Mickey Roney, Olivia delHavill, Dick Pewton, Joe E. Brown, etc. A unique film, "Enter the Hater!" (1924) . 8:4W. 7:30. Thursday, Oct. 2 A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935) La Collectioneuse The Battle of Algiers Gilio Pontecorvo's chronicle of the Allegiant light for freedom is so realist that it's an ingenious fiction film with a strong basis in reality that w won many innings and its cinematic brilliance. "One of the important qualities is as real as, but more interesting than, the truth."—11 min. BNW. Frenchsubtitles: 7:30. Unless otherwise noted; all will be shown on Monday. Weekend classes are $1,000; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1,250; Midnight films are $2,000. There is a $75 per person Union, 4th level, information 864-3477, no smoking or refresher admissions at Save up to '4.00 off film developing (coupon must be presented with film when left for processing) Developed and Printed, now only $1.99 12 Exposures 110 or 126 Kodacolor Print Film 20 or 24 Exposures 110 or 126 Kodacolor Print Film Developed and Printed, now only $3.49 Offer expires Oct.10,1980 JICK-STOP PHOTO-SHOP 711 West 23rd The Malls Shopping Center 841-2778 = KODAK-FILM NATIONAL STOP PHOTO SHOP ONE DAY PHOTO FINISHING the tweeds are in season . . . and we have a great collection of the breed. Beautiful woolens, full of character and rich color, tailored by our fine quality makers: Cricketeer, Corbin, and Stanley Blacker. Come in and capture one for your fall wearing. MUSEUM OF HISTORY hitenight's Town Shop the men's shop downtown at 639 Mesa the men's shop downtown at 839 Mass University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY TONIGHT A PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY COLLOQUIUM will be at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Malott Hall. Manfred Buchen from Goethe University in Frankfurt, West Germany will speak on "Interaction Potentials in Akali and Silver Halides." An organizational meeting for groups planning to enter floats in the HOMECOMING PARADE will be at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the the SIGMA DELTA CHI and WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will sponsor a speech by Robert Samsot, Gannet Professional-in-Residence in the School of Journalism at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF PETROLEUM ENGINEERING will meet from 10am to 2pm, Feb. 7-8, 2013 The Western Civilization Film Festival will feature "RENAISSANCE," MICHELANGELO" and "LEONARDO DA VINCI" starting at 7 p.m. in the basement of Lincoln Park. The department of English, in conjunction with SUA, will feature tool ALLEN GINSBERG reading his works at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Union. The MUSIC THERAPY CLUB will sponsor a Dance Therapy Workshop by p.m. in Robinson room 209, room 210 The UNIVERSITY THEATRE will present a slide show on research for the play, "The Fool," at 7 p.m. in the Satellite Union Conference Room. Larry Maxey, associate professor of music performance, will give a lecture and faculty recital series at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. Robert Weaver, associate professor of biochemistry, will speak on GENETIC ENGINEERING at 7 p.m. in 420 Wesco Hall. TOMORROW NEW PERSPECTIVES will sponsor Harold Slucher, assistant professor of physics, University of Texas, who will teach the course at University "at 7 p.m. in 3139 Wescoe. THE BAPSTH STUDENT UNION will hold a meeting at which Vyonne Keeler will be directing a study on the Awarded Awards, at the Baptist Center, 629 W. 19th St., 829 W. 19th St. TAUG SIAUM DANCE CLUB will meet p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium room 209. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST winter at 6:30 p.m. in p. 293 and 223 a.m. with the following dates: 19-15-2017 Students turn to sleuthing to find books By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Renovations of Watson Library and Marvin Hall in past months have sent several branch libraries to new students and professors in hot pursuit. The art and architecture libraries are two branch libraries that recently were reopened. The art library was moved at the beginning of the semester from Watson Library to the basement of Spencer Museum of Art. The books are on the shelves and the library is open full time, but the situation is not perfect, said Paul Bobo, art librarian. in a way, this is sort of like the people who build a ship and take it on a shakedown cruise to see what it's wrong with them. The library is going to be for the first year." HE SAID HE TRIED to lessen the confusion of the children and help them find the books they need. "You should be able to get the same sort of service here that you get anywhere in the library system," Bobo said. "If you are whatever they can do to make things easier for the people who use the library, I just simply do not like to send Vikdil Appleton, a Birmingham, Mich., major senior in art, she said didn't expect problems in finding the old location in Watson better. someone away without some kind of assistance." "For me, Watson is more convenient, period," Appleton said. "In Watson I know my way around. In Spencer it's going to be, 'What am I doing?' " APPLETON SAID SHE didn't see any way the situation could be changed. "I don't see why they can do," she said. "It's a token library, but Watson needs it." John McKay, acting chairman of the design department, said he did not like the idea. "I think that the library is fine and the facility is fine. It's just that geographically, it's across the campus," he said. "I think some of them aren't even aware of where it is." The move had confused some students, he said. McKay said he didn't expect the library ever to move back to Watson, and he didn't know how the situation could be improved. "I wish I knew. I don't have an ans- tasy to just something we have no voice in them." scheduled for renovation, Marvin Library was sent in three different directions, and the architecture to rest in the stacks of Watson Library. Several architecture students and instructors said the move has made it difficult to teach. WHEN MARVIN HALL was "Flii a coin. Look into a crystal ball. 'Flii a coin. Plant a seed and see if it grows toward the sun, or not. It grows toward the sun, but you asked not to be identified. You are a no-win situation.' Bill Johnson, Kansas City, Mo, junior majoring in architecture, said the problems with the change discouraged the use of the library. "When they tell you to look up reference materials, it's such a hassle that you almost don't try." Johnson says. "I almost go to K-Sate. I'm almost to that point." JOHNSON SAID THE library was an added frustration for the architecture students, who are being housed in rooms until until the Marvin renovation is finished. "They haven't provided adequate working conditions for us, and then they've also made it harder for us to find reference materials," he said. "We have students who are under their belts but they're downgrading the conditions under which we work." He said that the confusion in finding books was more of a problem than the change in use, and even if they couldn't find books "If they could just figure out themselves where things are, it would be easier," Johnson said. PATIENCE AND QUESTIONS are the keys to surviving the architecture library, said Richard Rink, reference and bibliographer for architecture. The problem of organizing the books is not insurmountable, Ring said, but it is time-consuming. All the catalog cards for the Marvin Library books must be changed to show the new locations of the books. "It takes hundreds of man hours to pull all the old cards and change location symbols to get information that is accurate," he said. "The library is not exactly overstaffed to begin with." Ring said that in the meantime, he was going to take care forarians for help if they couldn't find books. ASTA "They probably ought to ask every time a card says 'Marvin'," he said. Ring said that Watson offered some advantages over Marvin Library. "The records and the card catalog here are better and more complete than ever." Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Flowers by Alexanders Manuals, Modules, Miniatures DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS Ral Partha, Citadel, Minifigs paints, brushes, dice ADVENTURE a bookstore 1010 Massachusetts Mon-Sat 9-9 Phone 843-6424 Sun 1-5 THE UNIVERSITY Karen Deanna Jayni Karen Diana The staff at the Uppercut would like to help you with any of your hair needs. Stop by for free consultations anytime. Mon-Sat: 9:00-5:00 Tues: 9:00-8:00 Julie Undercut Uppercut 1031 VERMONT 841-4894 MAD HATTER MONDAY THROW A BRICK AT HOWARD If you are tired of listening to Howard Cosell every Monday Night, come on down to The Hatter. For a $1, you get a raffle ticket. The winner gets to throw a brick at Howard. And, you get to keep the TV. DON'T MISS MONDAY NIGHT AT THE HATTER. 700 New Hampshire 700 New Hampshire 842. 9402 2 abil's restaurant The Super Special is Here! Every day this week Nabil's is offering a Super Special to honor our newly redecorated restaurant. In addition to our regular daily specials, Nabil's is offering these Super Specials for only $4.75: Mon: Sweet and Sour Beef Tues: Chicken Stroganoff Wed: Baked Spinach Parmesan Thurs: Beef ala Turque for only $6.00: Fri: Coq au Vin Sat: Roast Tenderloin with Bernaise Sauce and Mushrooms (All Super Specials include salad, rice, & beverage) Ask for Tonight's Super Special and Enjoy! "An Experience in Dining" Serving Lunch & Dinner: Mon-Sat 11-10 Sunday Dinner: 4-9 9th & Iowa (Hillcrest Shopping Ctr.) 841-7226 Page 4 Opinion University Daily Kansan, September 29. 1980 Enrollment gains help The final enrollment figures for the University of Kansas have been completed, and as expected, the University once again has re-written the enrollment record book. The results, which were released Thursday by KU's office of admissions and records, were late as usual. Yet there are now 341 more students gracing the University's campus. This fall's enrollment, including enrollment for the College of Health Sciences, is 26,745, an increase of 518 students. The figures prove that KU is one of the Midwest's better academic institutions. While many universities have suffered enrollment declines, KU has consistently increased its enrollment each semester. Experts have long said that the 1980s will be a time when enrollment declines hit colleges and universities across the country. KU not only has avoided declines, but also has registered record enrollments. The institutions that stand to suffer in the next few years are the state's private schools. As inflation continues to crunch the economy, more students will be forced to attend public institutions of higher learning if they wish to receive a college education. The reason is simple. If tuition at private schools is not already out of the ballpark, it soon will be. This development certainly won't hurt KU's prospects of keeping its enrollment at reasonably high levels in the future. The University's enrollment figures determine the allocation KU receives from the Kansas Legislature. KU's allocation will increase accordingly. That fact has to make KU officials happy. Letters to the Editor Kansan reporting is biased; Derby Day snubbed unfairly The Kansan is reportedly one of the finest campus newspapers in the nation. I do not argue that point, because I frequently have found toonth articles in the Kansan. To the editor: What I do take offense to is the occasional bias demonstrated by the Kansas in its failure to report on stories that I believe would be of much interest to its readers. The latest incident is the lack of coverage of the Sigma Chi annual philanthropy project, Derby Day. This year the event was held Sept. 17. Attendance at this event was more than 5,000 people, almost all of whom were students. People were admitted with their $4 donation. We raised more than $5,000 for charity for the second year in a row. This gives us the distinction of having the most successful philanthrop project ever at KU. All the profits we make are donated to the Wallace Village in Colorado, a home for minimally brain-damaged children. All Sigma Chi chapters in the nation participate in this year's year, our donation was the largest of all chapters. The last two years we have suggested to the Kansan that they cover our event. Last year we held the event at a ranch just outside of town. We were told that because it wasn't on campus, it would not be covered. This year the event was held at Potter's Pavilion (on campus). When we went to the Kansan to inform them of our event, we were sent to several departments. It turned out that the one we needed to talk to was out for lunch at Potter's Pavilion. I was the event was "overlooked, sorry!" Maybe the editors ought to read their own paper. We took out substantial advertisements in the Kansan on Sept. 15 and 16 and a half-page layout on Sept. 17 detailing our event. The problem of biased reporting is not simply limited to the Sigma Chi's event; there are many other organizations that are not getting the recognition they deserve. The Kansan is a newspaper for students. Why don't you report on the activities the students are sponsoring? Randy Chilton Wichita senior Senate not boring Much of the apathy toward the Senate has been brought on by the senators themselves, as most everyone knows. For example, I went to the Student Senate offices to talk with student body vice president Matt Davis. During our conversation, he complained about complications during the past year. He suddenly became very uncomfortable and had quite a bit of trouble replying with a satisfactory answer. To the editor: For an organization with so many important responsibilities, I have seen too many people take the issue of Student Senate lightly. Are people really aware that the Senate allocates about $400,000 a year? Senate alone spent about $400,000. Is this an organization to yawp at? No. Later that same week, I attended a Senate meeting to see how the meetings were run. After the meeting, I got the floor to speak. to reduce the size of the Senate was presented to the senators. They had two speakers for and two against. One would think that a legislative action of this magnitude would cause some debate from the floor. However, the petition was passed with absolutely no argument from individual Senate members. Most of them just sat around and gossiped during the presentations of pro and con, and then went with the majority when the vote was taken. Frankly, I think there is more debating taking place within the Kansan than there ever was in the Senate. Student body president Greg Schmacke argued in a recent letter to the editor that the Kansan has failed to present solutions to the problems it presents about Senate. In lieu of that, I would like to propose that the people who plan to run for Senate this fall be those who really want to do something with and about Senate, not those who run for the sake of popularity and prestige. That is possible, then maybe we can dispel some of the rumors about Senate and eliminate most of the apathetic attitudes of the majority of KU students. Michael Greenberg Omaha, Neb., freshman Preacher is bother To the editor: I am amazed at Ira Bound's assertion that preacher Cindy "speaks on the right side." I also are amazed at the attention that Jed and his circus have received. It does not take a devout Christian, a devout atheist or anyone in between to tell the difference between a prophet and a clown. Perhaps clown is not a good word, though, because these people are dangerous if taken seriously. They are of the same breed that used to burn witchs in Salem. I hate to see them taken seriously because I believe that Jesus of Nazareth was a highly intelligent, reflective and philosophical man. I believe the meaning of his life reduced to a campus side show. Bond asked, "What was going on in the minds of the many guests. sober faced on lockers?" Nothing, Cindy had absolutely nothing to say that appealed to the mind. She was all superstition and threats. She appealed to the emotion of fear. She could not answer any serious questions about the Bible, and I believe that any objective onlooker would soon realize that any girl was somewhat sick and perhaps in need of help. If you want to be saved, consider this: Who was Jesus' savior? Hirsel. If you want to follow Jesus, then, start by realizing that you are your own savior. Don't look to a mindless, graceless brob of prophileism for power. Without his mind, man has no saving power. Your mind is your salvation. If I may address those "sober-faced" onlakers, let me say that there is something very seriously wrong with your own image if I am to be intimidated by the mindless preaching of Cindy. Kansas City, Kan., senior Kevin Helliker The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 690-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through Monday and Thursday in June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas or $150 for students entering from other counties. Second-class postage or $18 per year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $2 per semester, along with the student's academic year. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansas Flint Hall. The University of Kansas, Elevator Beam Developer Editor Carol Beer Managing Editor Editorial Editor Campus Editor Associate Campus Editor Assistant Campus Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Makeup Editors Retail Sales Manager National Sales Manager Campus Sales Manager Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Staff Artist Staff Photographer Photo Desk Assistant Transportation Manager General Manager and News Adviser Kansas Adviser Business Manager Elaine Shriver Crystal Hughes David Lewis Jake Woods Jeff Swerven Mark Spencer, Don Sunday, Cindy Wintcome Juan Silver Patty Arnold Kevin Mill Ellen Iwanteo, BobSchand, Jennifer Robbins Kevin Koster Nancy Clause Bob Light Tracy Coon Jane Wenderson Jane Seelers Brian Watkins Leslie Veagley Bian Speaker Rich Musser Chuck Chowls CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG CHUG Woo Wooooo... The railroad. For those who remember, it was smoke and steel in service of an era of expansion. For us, it is a symbol of nostalgia for a past we never knew. For the farmer, it is an ever-lossening link to markets that can't afford to be lost. In a decade where progress is measured by miles of pavement, the freight railroad finds itself caught by faltering profits and the energy crisis. It is pulled between the priorities of the state and the federal good depends on salvency and the protests of farmers whose livelihood depends on rail. The only railroad in Kansas Farmers, crops are getting derailed For small farmers who operate on the thin edge of economics, loss of rail service can translate profits into losses. Consider the case of the new-defunct Rock Island Railroad. When the railroad declared bankruptcy last March, it raised eyebrows in urban areas and costs in the agricultural sector. Farmers' brains were the most alarming market, were forced to finance the higher costs of trucking their produce. In a market where undifferentiated competition draws the fine line between demand and supply, individual farmers have no choice but to sell at a market price that doesn't promise profits. The Rock Island Island's collapse rebounded hard in Kansas. John Hanson, transportation expert for the Kansas City Board of Trade, estimated that 72 percent of the loss was from losing from 11 to 23 certs a bushel on their grain. "We have farmers trucking 400 miles to Kansas City and back, and the secondary roads in Kansas won't take the heavy truck traffic." Hanson said. "It is a hell of a problem." It is elementary economics. If Kansas had to shoulder the transportation of Kansas' three harvests—milo, wheat and corn—then increasing amounts of money would be required for road maintenance. Yet road repair revenue, financed through a state tax on gasoline, is reduced because of decreased gasoline consumption. The General Accounting Office put a federal perspective on the problem in its July 1978 *Excessive truck weight is a major cause of highway damage, the report reads.* Five. SUSAN SCHOENMAKER M axle tractor-trailer loaded to the current 80,000 pound federal weight limit has the same impact on an interstate highway as at least 9,600 automobiles." Rather than waiting for an imperative to force their hand, Kansans should support the regeneration of their railroad before economics cuts off all answers. The 1974 energy crisis taught us that if we approach long-term problems with short-order politics, we're begging for more and greater problems. Short-sighted solutions to transportation led us into our current crisis; skilled and expedient answers are what can save us. Although planning and politics have lagged behind transportation needs in Kansas, there are signs of improvement. foresight out of failure. Farmers, aware that the fate of the railroads may determine the future of their fields, have met the crumbling com- and with forceful calls for its revitalization. Admittedly, farmers look more to their pockets than to a transportation philosophy, but the government is beginning to listen. County, state and federal officials from 27 counties in four states, including Kansas, have joined to form the Midwestern Port Authority. Borrowing from a legal mechanism that allows governmental control over water resources, the Midwestern Port Authority has the eventual goal of purchasing a long-term lease for freight service through northern Kansas. State governments in South Dakota, Oklahoma and Wisconsin are purchasing their own rail, joining states such as Ohio, Maine, New York, Michigan and Vermont. More and more states are buying up track as energy becomes a larger figure in the transportation equation. Because railroads are up to four times more fuel efficient than trucks, states are less willing to let the market make up their minds on transportation. Backing them is the Rock Island Transit and Employee Assistance Act. The legislation transfers $25 million previously allotted for the City's bus system to track by groups other than rail companies. But that is only a beginning. The railroads, which have maintained a hold over the hearts and history of America since the 1890s, must be guaranteed a place in an energy-efficient future. The only future we can afford is one that preserves the best of our past. As you can imagine, it is vital for the handicapped person to know the nature of the psychological and social barriers that might exist between him and his "normal" classmates. When a disabled student attends a large university, he has many doubts and apprehensions about what others might think or say. He often wonders how they will react to his helplessness and especially to his speech, which is strained ani, to some, unintelligible. Attitudes toward KU's handicapped varied There were about 40 respondents to each of several subjective questions. My first question dealt with a person's first encounter with a handicapped person—a critical encounter, in With this in mind, I decided to circle around the KU campus. My purpose: To ask some of you how it feels to work at the KU campus. It is not easy to understand how to interact with the students in a way that promotes understanding. If the handicapped person is able to establish an open relationship with classmates, perhaps they will be less inhibited when they encounter other severely disabled people in the future. One person said he believed he was witnessing God's will, and another said she was thankful to God that her family had no handicapped members. Finally, a number of people alluded to "shying away," "withdrawing" and "feeling uncomfortable" in such situations. Answers varied. Nine respondents said they "pitied" or "felt sorry" for such people. Eight said they admired or respected the courage and motivation of anyone who was willing to suffer. Six answered other answers. Other answers included "unneasness," "fear," "inhibition," "sympathy," and "curiosity." "What are your first opinions of severely handcapped people such as me?" Please be brief. But I do not want pity or sympathy—just queen, sincerity, openness and understanding. What do you think? things, I and many other severely disabled pepl, prior sincree, bumping awkwardness to their backs. Po After all, as our physical appearance will indicate we are not perfect, either. But we will be very happy with our appearance. FRED MARKHAM with ir nasium Hask dressed bleach Four ca, was She learn t ferent never v For powwo anthem which and "v have lo A consistent response was given to my second question: "What would most keep you from being acquainted with a severely handicapped individual?" Usua awayss honorer relativi Give "pays" allown with yours. Further, we might not be so brave or courageous as one might think. Consider the alternatives. It's no fun hiding from society or vegetating mentally. THE dances couple around Anot "speci tain in" Fifteen people indicated that they were held back by an inability to communicate with a handcapped person. This is possibly the greatest problem affecting people with serious speech impediments such as my own. Because it's more difficult for me to speak than it is for you, I am willing to suffer through the embarrassment if you are willing. A little bit of strained communication for me is more precious than the hours of effortless exchange so many people take for granted. In short, I enjoy people and want very much to break the communication barrier that stands so cruelly between us. Almost everyone who was questioned said that handicapped people should pursue as much education as possible, and that they could con- tinue society, even in a competitive job market. With some notable exceptions, there seems to be greater positiveness in wanting handcapped people to succeed in professional pursuits than in being interact with them on a personal and social basis. One thing is sure. We must begin tearing down whatever psychological inhibitions stand in the way of communicating and understanding. This is made possible by the no-hand-capped and the hardcapped. Letters Policy Letters must be signed 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. 1 University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1880 Page 5 Powwow From page 1 with intertribal dancing in the Haskell gymnasium. Haskell students, faculty and their families dressed in native traditional costumes and lined the Fourteen-year-old Tanya Littlewalker, a Ponce was nervous before the dancing began. She had been listening to tapes at home to learn the tribal songs, but there are many different kinds, and they are always memorized, never written down, she said. For instance, the various songs heard at the powwow included "flag songs," or the "national anthems" of different tribes, "starting songs," which signal the beginning of a round of dancing, and "veterans' songs," which honor Indians who have lost their lives in the armed forces. THE INTERTRIBAL DANCES included war dances, on to anyone, the two-step, where couples formed a train that snaked its way around the room, and more gourd dances. Another integral part of any powwow are the specials, 'or' dances requested to honor a ceramic person. Usually, specials are accompanied by "give-ways," in which the family of the person being honored presents gifts to his closest friends and relatives. Giveways also may take place when a family pays' key members of the tribe for the honor of a memorial. soldier is on furlough and tribal members give him money and gifts. For many older members of the audience, the powwow was reminiscent of the Indian gather- * Tribal dance is an integral part of American Indian heritage, and Newman Littlewaker Jr. said he was making sure that heritage would be passed on to his daughter, Tanya. Littlewalker's great grandfather was the seventh chief, or head religious man, of the Ponca tribe. His position of power has given all his descendants the right to speak before the tribe on any matter of importance and to run a powwow. Like many young Indians, Tanya is learning the tribe's songs, but he said many other traditions and meanings had been lost through the generations. "When Indians today are asked why they wear their hair in braids, they'll say because it's 'traditional'," Littlewalker said. "But they don't know the real reason behind it." WHEN THE INDIANS lived on the plains, warriors would dig a hole in the ground and stick a braid of hair into it, he said. Through the braid they could see their horse, which was the location of enemy horses or an animal horn. Although "powww" is a white man's term for an Indian dance, the gatherings are a good opportunity for Indian children to learn the customs and history of their people, he said. the 1805s grew out of the beat generation tradition. The band's success allowed Jack Willem Burroughs and other Later, in the 1960s, these people, along with other writers and musicians in the San Francisco Bay Area, formed a band called "Pump Up the Radio." From page 1 Ginsberg The openness spawned by the beat movement was later to spill over into the 1960s in the form of the sexual revolution and revolutions in art forms and lifestyles. "I think it diffused throughout the culture, and throughout the world." Ginsberg said. GINSBERG, A graduate of Columbia University in New York, said that the new openness had made people more aware of the threats posed by nuclear, nuclear power, nuclear war and pollution. "We opened people's eyes" Glinarb said. "We pop up to the fact they're sitting where they are." Ginsberg said that because of America's prolonged involvement in Vietnam, "perhaps some time was lost." As a result, he said, there is no way to reverse the current world situation, a change he sees as necessary for ecological and nuclear survival. "In the '50s and '60s we started out with a statement of hope that if we woke up we might be able to go back." "I think there's too much addiction to centralization . . . so, it seems it's gotten to important." make a statement like that—how can one person say that the majority is nuts? But, say, Jew or liberal German in the '30s or '40s could very well sav the country (German) was nuts. "In the 1960s, people still had the hope that they could save the world. But then, in the 1970s, I think that people realized that the world is unassalvageable. It was too late." "It was almost like we were already in hell, standing in hell with the shift up to our nose, and if you started making waves, well, you just have to eat more shit." Ginsberg, who grew up as a communist Jew in Paterson, N.J., is an instructor part of the year at the Jack Kernoua School of Dissimbed Religion and a professor at the Colo. He will teach a literary history of the beat generation there next spring. The course will include an in-depth study of his poem "Howl." IN "HOWL," Ginsberg writes of the deseration and disaffection of "the best minds of my generation" and of the resulting self-abuse, including the ravages of heavy drug use. Ginsberg himself was well known, especially during the 1960s, for using drugs and advocating their use. At one time in the 1960s, he told a group of people the people in the government should take LSD. Ginsberg said he took drugs "because it was a subject, like travel." "I took some LSD in Wales in '84 and wrote sort of a classic poem, 'Wales Visions', which is sort of a Blakean pastoral nature poem, full of details," he said. Ginsberg said he wrote almost all the time by keeping a journal "which is poetry itself." "I don't try and write unless I have some idea, and I only write when I'm not too busy," he said. HE SAID THERE were many writers who just spat out information and ideas that they got from other writers and formed opinions without looking at what was really there. "It just seems like trench mouth going from head to head," he said. "You see, the real scene's in front of them. Poetry's a probe. A probe into death, a probe into sex, a probe into the winds . . . so sometimes the greatest moment in writing is when you write something down and you realize it's so true and so right. And you didn't know you could say it." "Sometimes I've written something down, and he back and read it, and it's so true, I just cry." Ginsberg's publisher will soon release his new book, *The Great American Cereal*; cerning draft registration in the United States. Ginsberg is in Lawrence "accidentally on purpose." He knew that his long-time friend William Burroughs was speaking in Lawrence, and "decided to rendezvous with him here." Ginsberg will give a reading of his poetry at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Gunberg and Burroughs will be at the Oread barn on the Kansas University at 1 p.m. today for a booth bid. BUY OR SELL SILVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boyds Coin & Antiques 731 New Hampshire Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm Applications For: GAMMA OMICRON BETA JR.-SR. HONOR SOCIETY Are Available in 220 Strong Hall Deadline is 4:30 p.m. Oct. 15 GLADNESS Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $1.70 $5.40 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only SAVE $2.50 $6.65 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery!! Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) We Pile It On! SAVE $1.70 ALMIGHTY EYE SAVE $2.50 ramid Pizza Buy Now and Save!! $40 or more value 1 FREE module+ with purchase of a TI-58C $98 or more value 2 FREE modules+ & PPX Membership with purchase of a TI-59 TI-Programmable 58C TI-58C Reg. $130.00 Sale Price $110.00 includes Free Module $40 value Save a total of $60 ti Choose from these solid state library modules: Real Estate/Investment Marine Navigation Applied Statistics Surveying Aviation Leasure Security Analysis Business Decisions TI-Programmable 59 TI-59 Reg. $300.00 Sale Price $259.00 includes 2 Free Modules & PPK Membership $98 Value Save a total of $139 With two locations to serve you Pool Water Analysis Math Utilities Electrical Engineering Farming RPN Simulator KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Kansas Union Level 2 Satellite Union We are the ONLY Bookstores to share profits with KU students. BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST SERVICE YOU'K KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Could the Navy interest you in 2 years of paid tuition and a world tour? If you are a sophomore at The University of Kansas, you may qualify for a Navy Two-Year Scholarship. The Chief of Naval Education and Training will even include $100.00 a month Spending Money that's TAX FREE. When you graduate, you will have a job in the Fleet. Pursue the sea as a Surface Warfare Officer, Aircraft Carrier Pilot, Submarine Diving Officer, Nuclear Power Officer, Aviation Maintenance Officer, or a U.S. Marine Corps Officer. You will get a world tour. Take advantage of 2 years of paid tuition and a global voyage. Take paid tuition, spending money, and a job that gives you a world cruise. That is Navy ROTC. Call the Professor of Naval Science at 864-3161. He will be happy to tell you about the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC). WILLIAM BURROUGHS Novelist Meet and ALLEN GINSBERG Poet Signing their works 1 P.M. Today in the Oread Book Shop Level 3, Kansas Union OREAD BOOK SHOP BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the only bookstore to share its profits with KU students. Page 6 University Dally Kansan, September 29, 1980 Candidates' low profiles belie race for 45th seat By BILL VOGRIN Staff Reporter The low profile of the two candidates in the race for the 48th District sent of the state House of Representatives does not accurately depict the intensity of the contest. Solbach calmly responded to the charges. Knyt Sandy, the Republican challenger, last week blasted his incumbent Democratic opponent, State Rep John M. Solbach, for "not representing the conscience of the district." He criticized Solbach for loaining touch with the members of the district and for voting against the party's bid. "It is hard to determine what a majority view is," Solbach said yesterday at his home in Douglas County. "But you can't rely on unscholarly scientific proof." You could poll the state of Kansas, feed the results into a computer and let that guide you. "We can't do that." THERE ARE five diverse issues that Snyder thinks Solbach let the district down on. Snyder's charges are vague, and, according to Solbach, unsubstantiated. Snyder said Solbach misrepresented the district on a capital punishment bill, a prayer in school bill, a state spending lid bill and a bill that would have exempted farm machinery from taxation. He also questioned Solbach's amendment to the Kansas Landlord-Tenant act. The capital punishment issue is an emotional one for Solbach. "I had to decide if it would be more than just a death ritual, if passing a bill for capital punishment would enhance the quality of life or serve a utilitarian purpose or deter crime," Solbach said. "It was an honest decision on my part. At this time, I could not vote in favor of capital punishment." ACCORDING TO the information he had studied, Solbach said, capital punishment destroyed respect for human life and engendered disrespect for the law. "I didn't vote against it because I am squeamish," he said. "I have seen hundreds of young men die during my service in the Marine Corps in Vietnam. "I would be betraying my own conscience and the people who have put their trust in me. I have Analysis to make decisions according to what I honestly believe." He said that knowing how a legislator reached a decision was as important as the vote he cast. Solbach said he voted according to his firm beliefs. Snyder said that he would not be in favor of capital punishment, but that he would "yield to the majority view of the district." ANOTHER QUESTION is how Snyder would know the majority view of the district. Snyder, 21, has completed two years at the University of Kansas and has lived in the 48th District about His sincerity and commitment to the district also has been an issue. He originally filed for office in the 44th District, but apparently shied away from running because of the candidacy of Snyder moved and established residency in the 45th District but denied he had any political motive for the change of address. He also would have to drop out of college if he was elected and take a possible leave-of-absence from Stephens Real Estate, Inc., where he works. Wint Winter Jr., son of State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Ottawa it is important to consider his age and lack of experience or degree," Solbach said, "but he has every right to run for the Legislature. It is open to anyone who is willing to run." ANOTHER OF THE ISSUES, Solbach's pride, the self-help amendment to the Landlord-Tenant Act, was something Snyder said he could not get too excited about. The amendment was not adopted in the 1980 session. "It throws me off," Snyder last week from his office. "The incumbent worked on the amendment, was a two-year project, and then he got excited that just can't get too excited about a bill like that." Solbach contends that the amendment is very workable and that he did not give up on it. Rather, he has shepherded it through an interim committee that studied it this summer, and is confident that it has a chance for passage in the 1981 session. Simplified, the amendment would allow tenants of rental property to make repairs on their apartments or houses, less than $100 or one-half of the periodic rent. If the landlord fails to respond to the tenant's request, the landlord then would be billed for the repairs. "This is very much alive, and I have worked extremes with this get this concept to clear a barrier." "Solihua," she added. COMMUTE: SOLENDE: QUESTIONED whether Snyder's close association with the real estate business had anything to do with his seeming lack of interest in the self-help amendment. "I have received threatening letters from Realtors who have said they have lots of time to negotiate with them. I will wait on the bill, they would do everything they could to see that I don't get re-elected," Solbach said. The state Realtor's association is one of Snyder's most enthusiastic supporters, and also is one of the biggest opponents of the self-help amendment. snyder claimed that Solbach missed an important vote on a farm machinery tax exemption bill in 1979 and then voted against a similar bill in 1980. Sobach said he had 100 percent attendance in 1979, but did miss a vote on a tax exemption bill that passed overwhelmingly in 1980, and which had his support anyway. 1n we vote had been close, I would have left the courtroom and the case I was defending and driven to Topena and cast my vote in favor of the bill," Sollach said. "I have missed only three votes. And the judicial process had been taken I would've been called out of court and been there for the vote." THE CLAIM BY Snyder that Solbach voted against a state spending lid is inaccurate, according to Solbach. The incumbent did he said, in fact, vote against several state spending lids, but that he also voted in favor of two or three bills that would have imposed a spending lid. Solbach also voted against a bill that would have started a program for prayer in public schools. Snyder said he thought the people in the district wanted prayer in the schools. "I would stand on the floor of the House and fight for freedom of religion, and it was hard to vote against a bill that promotes praying in school. But the United States and the Kansas constitutions both state that the Legislature shall pass no law establishing a religion. Solbach said: HE SAID THAT the bill would get government involved in religion and that he thought the two should be separated. According to reports filed with the Ethics Committee after the August primary, Snyder spent more money in the primary than 82 other candidates in the state. His was the 11th greatest amount spent. "I think attendance is important to representing the district and I would be there to cast my vote. Snyder said in outlining his goals if elected. "I would try to maintain rapport with the public." He mattered relatively little what is going on in the Legislature, and will visit to the county. SOLBACH TRINKS that the effectiveness of a regulator can be measured two ways, and he "I have sponsored or co-sponsored 14 pieces of legislation in my first term," he said. "Three are in committee and are still alive. A community resource bill and an amendment to the adoption law both became law, and four concepts I proposed became law." "That is a 60 percent passage rate, while the average bill has a 27 percent passage rate." The other way to judge a legislator, Solbach said, was by his ability to push legislation through the legislative process. The critical bills—the ability to form coalitions and get bills into and through committees. The two candidates will square off at 12:30 p.m. Thursday at the KU School of Law 'Noon HELPING OURSELVES working together supporting and Meet with WOMEN interested in forming support groups Areas of Personal Interest Women's Support Group Being Over 30 Men's Support Group Ending Sexism Lesbian Support Group Being Leaders Buxusual Support Women and Art Areas of Personal Interest If you wish to share your thoughts and feeling with others concerned about similar issues, this evening is for you. DATE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1980 TIME: 7:30 P.M. PLACE: PINE ROOM, KANSAS UNION At 7:45 there will be a panel of speakers on ways to organize and lead support groups. There will be time to meet in your row groups immediately following the event. By the Elysian Center, Office of the Status of Women, Information Center, Women's Coalition, Men's Coalition, KU-7, and Women's Studies. 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TOPSPIRIT HOUSE 846 ILLINOIS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 842-0722 ICE COLD CASE DISCOURS Bennett Retail Liquor 9TH STREET CENTER Next to Hool in Hold 8841ILONG ROLLERBALL IS COMING ! ViN Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! Meisner- Milstead Liquor 25th & Iowa 842.4499 Holiday Plaza Attention Seniors: Get involved in this year's Senior Class activities. Standing committees now forming— □ □ □ □ □ Check committees you are interested in serving on, clip out, and turn in to BCO office-107 B Kansas Union -Level 3. Hope Award Senior Class Gift Promotions and Advertising Class Banner Commencement Committee Social Committee Deadline October 3. Name : ___ Address : ___ Phone : ___ REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN I am very proud to be the host of this special event. It will be a celebration of our shared history and our future. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. Thank you for your time and support. Carol Blubaugh Berniece Garber Lynn Carlson Iowa St. FREE Shampoo and Blow Dry with every hair cut. Good until Oct. 15, 1980 with this coupon, or see our ad in the Lawrence Book. 2323 Ridge Court 841-5999 REFLECTION HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN 1 --- University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 Page 7 12:30 Noon St. 23rd St. El Dorado editor honored By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Rolla A. Clymer, the late editor of *The El Dorado Times*, was inducted Saturday into the Kansas Hall of Fame at Kansas Education Day. The event, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism, is an annual meeting of Kansas editors and publishers, with some members named Clymer to the Kansas Newsaper Edith's Hall of Fame. "This year, the vote was lopsided in Clymer's favor," said Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism. Clymer was a Kansas editor whose newspaper career spanned more than 70 years, said Calder. Journalism was his passion, he journalism who presented the award. in 1907, he said, Clymer began his career as a reporter on William Allen White's Emperor Gazette. He wrote a journal until his death in 1977. Because of his flowing descriptions of the Kansas countryside, Clymer was known as the "Sage of the Flint Hills," Pickett said. A rest stop on the Kansas Turnpike quotes Clymer on the Flint Hills. THE PURPOSE OF Editors' Day is to honor journalists such as Clymer, Brinkman said, and to give editors, faculty and students a chance to exchange ideas. About 230 journalists attended the event. On Editors' Day, the featured speakers were Michael Davies, editor of the Kansas City Star and Times, and Robert Samsot, a visiting professor at the School of Journalism. Davies, 38, has worked for newspapers since he was 17. He said the arrogant image that journalists found hurt their rapport with readers. "We are要去 to be arrogant when we refuse to correct mistakes or get the other side of the story," he said. "We are, accuracy is one of our failings." Recently, he said, the Kansas City Times published a series of investigative stories on its front page, but he couldn't check the facts in simple obituaries. TO REGAIN RAPPORT with Davies said that public sympathies were swinging away from the media. readers, Davies said, newspapers should pay more attention to their readers than to opinion polls. In a recent survey, he said, a majority of those questioned said they would not vote for the first candidate, guarantee freedom of the press. The press can rebuild the public's trust by serving the public instead of itself. Davies said. "If we do that successfully," he said, "they just might return the favor." DECLINING ACCURACY in reporting also was discussed by Samsot, a deputy editor on leave from Newday. Samsot said editors and reporters should check every fact they reported to the public, even when stories were complex. "Editors have far too often declined to challenge a world they no longer have a firm grip on." he said. Editors who do not challenge facts are simply ornamental, he said, and they are not doing their jobs. By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter KU student teams work with elderly KU students from five schools have begun working with the elderly this semester in a new project funded by the government's Administration on Axing. "This is the first attempt by the different schools to try and pull together a team setting," said Shirley Patterson, associate professor of social welfare. fectiveness through a team approach to real world situations. The Interdisciplinary Team Orientated Placement program allows students in medicine, dietetics and nutrition, social work, nursing and occupational, physical and music therapies to improve their ef- elderly, those who are in a protected setting such as a long-term care facility and those who have physical problems, Patterson said. Students work with handicapped There are three teams: one working at the University of Kansas Medical Center; one at Truman Medical Center East Family Care Center in Kansas Mo., and one at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Leavenworth. The teams attended an orientation session Sept. 16, during which professionals from the various disciplines talked about their settings and the format of the program was discussed. The project, developed by Patterson, is part of a three-year program funded by a $156,411 grant to KU and Kansas State University. Second team files for student leadership The two candidates said they would focus on improving communication between student senators and students, as well as within the Student Senate itself. Larry Metzger, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Kristy Kospera, Topeka junior, of the Spectrum Coalition last week became the second team to file for student body president and vice president. Metzger said he wanted to improve student representation in the Senate. Metzger is majoring in biology and psychology. Because he had never been a senator, he was required to submit 500 letters of complaint, reviewed by the Senate elections committee. reduce the size of the Senate, I feel revisions are needed to get better district representation," he said. Kossover, a member of Alpha Phi sorority, is majoring in social welfare. "While I think it's beneficial to University's Blue Ribbon Committee report on freedom of expression at KU. As a senator, she has served on the culture and student rights committees, the athletic seating board and the Senate subcommittee to study the Metzger said not having bee- sensitization an advantage for him rather than a handicap. Senate elections were moved from the week before spring break to the week before Thanksgiving by a vote of 80 votes toote. The last meeting of the spring semester. A petition passed by the Senate to cut its size from 120 to 165 senators comes before: the University Council for consideration on Wednesday. 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The more I learned, the better it looked. After completing the AFROTC program, I will be a commissioned officer with a responsible job. My family and I feel that the Air Force offers the security we want in our homes. We can travel for travel. For us, the Air Force is a great way of life and Air Force ROTC is the gateway to this great way of life. Bill Fulks, KU Junior FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: AFROTIC 108 Military Science Phone 864-4676 THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $2.00 OFF ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Mon.-Sat. Sept. 29-Oct. 4 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $2.00 OFF ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Mon.-Sat. Sept. 29-Oct. 4 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer KINKO'S That's us. And our xerox machines make the best quality copies in the world. For just 4¢ a page. And for dissertation copying, blinding, or passport photos, no one else is as fast and good as us. 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Our professional requirements include most disciplines applied from discovery to market, computing to research. We have opportunities, not only in this country but abroad. If this sounds like your kind of challenge, learn more by making an appointment with our college representative through your placement office. We will interview on your campus... October 7, 8, 9, 14 & 15 or write: College Relations Manager Cities Service Company Box 300 Tel: (212) 655-1100 Cities Service Company an equal opportunity employer Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 KU wins own quadrangular The KU women's cross country team nipped the University of Nebraska to capture a quadrangular meet at Lawrence Country Club this weekend. Nebraska's 52 points were just nine short of KU's pace-setting mark of 43. Colorado State University tailed 64. Wisconsin Wichita State trailed the field with 66. "I think that this was a good indication of what this team is capable of." Kansas coach Carla Coffey said. "We needed a win to get ourselves motivated." Leading Kansas with a fifth-place fresh was finished Nancy Grogowski, with a time of 19:13. Tanya Heard was seventh with a 19:17 time. Five other KU runners finished among the top 20 spots, including Denise Homa, who covered the 3.1-mile course in 19:40, good for enough in 40th. "Denise is really coming on," Coffey said. "She's getting much better." The men's team didn't fare as well as its female counterpart, however. Kansas was buried by Southern Illinois University 45-13. "We thought we had a chance against 'em, but we got whipped," Bob Timmons, KU coach, said. "They were a good team. They looked light on their feet. I think they will win the Missouri Valley Conference this year. "I think that this loss shows us that we have a long way to go to the conference." Timmons said one of the reasons his team lost was its tender age. "We are awful young. We have two freshmen on the team and until last week we had only two runners that had run varsity," he said. Kansas will have a chance to bounce back Saturday when it travels to Stillwater, Oklahoma, for the Oklahoma State University Jamboree. The women will run in Columbia, Mo., against Missouri on Friday. Pitching, defense carry KU softball team By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor In the first non-game of the season, an 18-inning scrimmage with Johnson County Community College last week, the KU softball team pointed out 40 hits This weekend the softball team played in its first real games of the season and finished third in the Nebraska tournament in Lincoln. The power of the KU bats wasn't there, but the pitching and defense were. But KU coach Bob Stancifl said he was not alarmed at the lack of offensive power displayed by his team. The team had lost fundamentals in practices, not live bitting. "I was pleased with the defense overall the whole tournament," he said. "We did not hit the ball at all, but I'm not surprised, no more live pitching than we've seen. I not really alarmed. We have a lot of potential." While the hitting was somewhat chitting was, according to Stanley's report, it Marla Meskimen came one walk away from pitching a perfect game against Kansas State, Rhonda Clarke, the newest addition to the pitching coprs, pitched a complete game against Creighton, gave up five hits and struck out seven. But KU gave up two unearned runs and couldn't get any for itself and the Jayhawks lost 2-0. Kansas won three games and lost two in Nebraska. THE CASTLE TEA ROOM Iowa was the first KU victim, but a the Jahwaks in 1875. KU paired the lates together. Senior LaAnn Stanwix picked up the victory for KU. came yesterday's game and Meskimen-k of his shut-out of K-State. The second game on Sunday was against former KU players turned coaches. Kelly Phipps, who coached Utah State to the national title last year, and Debbie Kuhn, a former KU player and coach, are now heading the Iowa State team. Darla Johnson pitched a two-hit shut for KU. Two bants and a base hit produced the only run Kansas needed. phone: 843-1151 1307 Mass But KU was eliminated by Nebraska 2-1 in the 11th innning after leading 1-0 in the bottom of the seventh. KU gave up a goal against the teams went into extra innings. A bloop infeld single with the bases loaded pushed Creighton to a 2-0 victory in the second game on Saturday. Then Thursday Night At THURSDAY NIGHT AT ICHABOD'S OLYMPIA BEER OLY BEER NIGHT CANS 50c shirts, hats, frisees, posters and a Grand Prize. 1 3/4 Miles North Of The Kaw River Bridge cheat PRIZES: Footlights Posters, Stationery, etc. Imaginative Cards & Gifts check weekday specials Holiday Plaza 841-6377 (across from Greenbrier's Del) each week Watching Your Weight! "It's a Natural" YOU WANT TO WIN AT THE MUSIC GAME DIET CENTER 841-DIET "It's a Natural!" Hillcrest Medical Center Car Stereos and Parts At a Discount 20% OFF Accessories in Stock IMPORTS 15% OFF Mechanical Parts TONY'S DATSUN 2829 Iowa With this coupon Expires 12/31/80 The Department of SPANISH and PORTUGUESE and The Center for LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES A HOLY IMPRESIVE PERCIPHER PRESENTS RON HUDSON, guitarist 842-3059 Wednesday, October 1, 1980 8 p.m. FORUM ROOM of the UNION admission $2.00 We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th Prime Schooler SEAFOOD Market Bt1-6B10 Alaskan Salmon Steaks $3.95/lb. Reg. $4.89/lb. $2.29/lb. Reg. $2.99 B125 lane at Hunters Access from bowing lanes Nova Scotian Haddock Fillets BIG flows in miles! Across from bowling lanes Owen b dav s a week $2.65/doz. Reg. $3.25/doz. Jumbo Stuffed Clams Michael Caron, your local fishmonger Your response to the Shoupon Special on Tiger Prawns has been so great that I have decided to keep these large lobster-tasting cousins of shrimp in stock regularly. Free Tiger Prawn recipes from the world over are available from the Schooner. 3c Copies (8½ x 11 Regular) ENCORE COPY CORPS our Special Events 25th & Iowa—Holiday Plaza 842-2001 Presents the 1980 Homecoming Concert Featuring Ozark October 18,1980 Hoch Auditorium 7:00 p.m. Mountain Daredo Kansas Union Only Tickets on sale Wednesday, Oct. 1, at 7. 00 and 8.00 general public Also Featuring Comedian and Political Satirist 6. 50 and 7.50 with KUID (one ticket per I.D.) Ticket Prices ALL SEATS RESERVED ★ DAVID FRYE ★ KC loses 8th straight; Brett hits grand slam BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (UPI)—After three playoff failures with the New York Yankees, the Kansas City Royals have developed a new approach. The idea is to hit 'play the playoff opponent in compality by clinching the divisional title early and then losing the rest of the games. The plan moved closer to success yesterday with an 8-7 loss to the Minnesota Twins. The loss was the eighth in the series, and a victory was the ninth in a row for the Twins. George Brett, struggling in his attempt to become the first 400 hitter since Ted Williams in 1948, moved closer to becoming the first man since Rod Carew in 1777 to bat 388. He hit a pinch-hit grand slam home run in the sixth inning, his 22nd horne of the year, and raising his average to. 385. The loss went to Rich Gale, making his first appearance after missing several starts with tendinitis of the shoulder. Gale was ineffective in relief, giving up four runs on four hits and four walks in just 1/2 3 innings. Gale also hit a run. The loss dropped his record to 13-9. Starter Paul Splittorf gave up the charter our own earned, to continue live-long problem. The Royals have a day off today and will be at home tomorrow night against the Seattle Mariners. Kansas City will win the season with a six-game homestead. Chiefs stumble to another loss Both of Fout's scoring throws were to Kellen Winslow, a former All-American at Missouri. Winslow had six receptions for 74 yards on the day. SISM KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UO)—Dan Fouts hit 15-of-30 passes for 194 yards and tossed two touchdown passes to lead the San Diego Chargers past the hapless Kansas City Chiefs 24-7 yesterday. The Chargers had the ball for only 2:37 in the second quarter, but Fouts made the most of the time. He went to the bank with a pair of three-play pass and drove out without a loss in four games and Kansas City without a win in four tries. Hal Stringert returned an Earl Garr fumble 28 yards to the Kansas City 32, and Fouts sandwiched a pair of 13-yard passes to Winslow around a 2-yard run by John Cappelli to give San Diego a 14-7 lead with 2:01 left in the first half. INTRODUCING DRY HAIRCUT FOR GUYS $5.50 Shear Dimensions 1802 Massachusetts Dillon Plaza phone 842-3114 (No appointment needed Open Evenings) The Chargers got the ball back with 55 seconds left in the half on their own 42 and Fouts hit John Jefferson with a 42-yard pass on the first play to move the game up City 16. 16 plays later, he found Windows again for the second score. Through four games last season, Fouts had 669 yards passing and four touchdowns. He now has 1,022 yards and 10 touchdown tosses. Queen JEWELERS 5000 5000 RICHARDG. McQUEEN—PRES 809 Mass. phone Lawrence, Ks. 66044 911/433-5433 Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3926 KU bumper stickers available at the SUPPORT A WINNER 420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 Hours M-F 8-5 Sat. 8-4 GEORGE BRETT FOR PRESIDENT 19 BUCKET FULL OF FUN NIGHT AT THE HATTER --second one for 50* THE MAD HATTER Drink By The Bucket-Full With Your Friends Every Tuesday Buy $5 Bucket & Drink And You Get $3 Refills 700 New Hampshire 842-9402 Taco 1101 W. 6th !Bravo! 1626 W. 23rd Buy one at regular price Sun.-Thurs. 10:30 a.m.-midnight Fri.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.-2:00 a.m. TROOP JEWELRY JEWELRY SHOP OF WALES University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 Page 9 Scorecard Gant city 32 s-yard run diego a self. with rown with a move Two ain for N 1 02 Major-league Baseball XX AMERICAN LEAGUE | | W | L | Pct | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 99 | 57 | 635 | - | | Baltimore | 84 | 57 | 110 | - | | Milwaukee | 82 | 78 | 539 | 15 | | Milwaukee | 82 | 78 | 539 | 15 | | Detroit | 80 | 78 | 316 | 18 | | Cleveland | 77 | 78 | 417 | 21 | | Cleveland | 77 | 78 | 417 | 21 | W 92 L 64 Pt 59 GB Kansas City 82 71 491 12 Oakland 80 73 310 18 Tampa 74 82 474 18 Toronto 73 83 468 19 Chicago 64 89 425 27 Cleveland 64 89 418 37 Seattle 50 97 373 33 NATIONAL LEAGUE W 8 L Pct GB Montreal 80 79 541 Philadelphia 80 79 541 Philadelphia 80 79 541 St. Louis 72 64 513 New York 72 64 514 New York 72 64 514 W 80 L 61 Pct GB Houston 85 69 571 3.84 Los Angeles 86 69 571 3.84 New York 83 71 518 3.84 Atlanta 72 71 518 3.84 San Francisco 73 71 471 4.04 San Diego 71 71 471 4.04 W L T Per. 3 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .750 Houston 2 2 0 .750 Philadelphia 2 2 0 .500 Cincinnati 1 2 0 .250 East W L T T Pet. 1 Buffalo 4 1 0 1.000 Milwaukee 4 3 0 1.000 New England 2 1 0 487 Baltimore 2 1 0 300 Dallas 2 1 0 600 | | W | L | T | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | San Diego | 4 | 0 | 1 | .000 | | Oakland | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | | Seattle | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | | Atlanta | 1 | 2 | 0 | .500 | | Kansas City | 0 | 0 | 0 | -.000 | W L 2 T Pct. Dallas 3 1 2 750 Philadelphia 3 1 2 750 NY Giants 1 3 3 250 Washington 1 3 3 250 Louisville 1 3 3 250 AMERICAN CONFERENCE W L T O Pct. Detroit 4 0 1 1.000 Tampa Bay 2 2 1 0.500 Minnesota 2 2 3 0.300 Chicago 1 2 3 0.250 New York 1 3 0 0.000 | | W | L | T | Per. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | San Francisco | 3 | 1 | 0 | .700 | | Los Angeles | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | | Miami | 2 | 2 | 0 | .500 | | New Orleans | 0 | 4 | 0 | .000 | Volleyballers lose edge after loss to 'Huskers NFL Football In the first match, KU took on home team Nebraska and led 14-12 in the first game of a best-of three match. This was as close to victory as KU would have been, with next four points and a 16-14 victory and then crushed KU in the next game 15-2. NATIONAL CONFERENCE KU was then beaten by Minnesota and by Western Michigan on Friday and ended the day early Saturday morning by losing to Oklahoma. The KU volleyball team took a harsh lesson in emotion from four talented teachers this weekend in a tournament in Lincoln, Neb. emotional edge in the first game against Nebraska and playing flat the rest of the tournament. Volleyball coach Bob Lockwood said the losses were the result of losing the "We were so flat against Minnesota I couldn't believe that it was the same team that played NU so well in the first game," Lockwood said. "It happens so often, a young team loses an emotional flare of team flat. We weren't beaten physically." The squad will play again Wednesday against southwest Missouri State and St. Louis University in Springfield, Mo. Southwest Missouri and St. Louis both are regional opponents for KU. In order to qualify for the regional tournament, KU must rank in the top two in games played against regional counterparts. The University Daily Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one tiger two lions three elephants four rhinoceros five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer two words three words four words five words six words seven words eight words九 two tigers three elephants four rhinoceros five six seven eight nine ten two tigers three elephants four rhinoceros five six seven eight nine ten AD DEADLINES ERRORS Rush Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. The Kanan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be loaded instantly and based upon the &x27;buy now, book it now&x27; offer at 843-8388. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS ENTERTAINMENT Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship with spirit filled believers. Come to Bible study, every Tuesdays 7.30 p.m. Parians A & Bunion B. The Salt Block. 10-2 72c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUISE'S BAR, 1099 Mass. tt Looking for something on Sunday? Try THE CLUB LOUISE. 508 LOUSE. 922-423-6871. Come in and see them play "1 a 3 am." Memberships available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 FOR RENT Outdoor Rider Skates. Mick's Bicycle Shop offers outdoor-riders roller skates at $20 off regular roller skates. Boxor roller skates couldn't afford quality skates, so your chance is sizes available, if not $50. THE DEAL something you can't afford to pass up. Accepting bookings for Fall, Winter and Spring. 841-7097. 10-3 For rent, nice out. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. tf 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now, 1'/2 bath, attached garage, all appliances, you'll like our looks. Sunny Parkway Townhouse, 26th and Kasold, 1949-757, iif Apt. and rooms for rent, newly remodeled near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 811-5500. tf 3 bdrm. townhouse, on KU bus route, across from swimming pool and tennis courts. $400 room. 841-4653. tf For rent to students 1 bdmr. apt., fur- rent to students 2 bdmr. apt., $155 + ium $155 = ium at 1419 at 1419. Also, 2 bdmr. basement with lots of windows at 1423 $175 + electricity = 845-770 per sq. foot. 2. bedroom ap, and small efficiency ap 3. kitchen ap, and medium comfortable, reasonably priced. Call us at (864) 555-1234. Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. $12.50 each per month. Large 4 bdm. duplex, central air conditioning, all appliances. Call 843-5730 or 843-7204. Graduate student needs persons to share two bursar name; $150 * 4; utilities: no 9-30 DUMC duplexes—newly refurbished. 2 bdm. carpet, draps, parking, appliances. beautiful housing! Call 913-818-2876. 10-3 Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing For fall or spring, Naisthalm Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of an apartment that provides ample service to clean your room and bath. full schedule of social activities home or with an apartment isn't what you want. HALL, 1690 Naisthalm Drive, 843-8559, tf hall.1690.Naisthalm.Drive.843-8559 Near campus 2 bldm. ipm. Comfortable for bathroom. Bldm. ipm. 9-30 841-521, 841-507 up 6 p.m. 9-30 3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6ih. 843-7333. tf For rent 3-bdm. bprn, $300 a month, all utilities paid, $100 deposit, no pets. 800 Ohio. Call 843-2440 from 8-5 ask for Julie. 16-1 These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1½ baths, garage with automatic water heater, walk-to-wall carpeting, window coverings, all this and much more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-445-8.5 a.m. f. Sublease nice, clean one bdm, apt. Willing one month rent security deposit 845-1118 One mile from Clinton Lake Martina and swimming beach - Two extra nice houses - One 2 bdm bath in basement - One 3 bdm warehouse and wood heat - 748-0933, 748-0856, 10-8 Near campus 2 bdm. apt. Also large single room 3 bdm. apt. Also large single room 843-1601, evenings 843-9475. 10-1 New and contemporary 2-level duplex, kitchen, kitchen dining room, living room, 2 full baths, garage, central air. No pets. More for information call 842-4455 8 am.-5 pm. 9:00 Spacious, 2 bdm. apt. for 2 to 4 people. Fireplace, off street parking. Near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-15500. FOR SALE Alternator, starter and generator specialists AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, a23-9060, 580 AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, a23-9060, 580 WATERBED MATTRESSES $36.98 3-year guarantee; WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass. $45.98; New excellent quality bedding—orthospatial bedding; new luxury mattresses in New York's Furniture. 1200 New York St. 841-367-8999. MATTRESSER, Orthopedic sets from $29. HOMESTEAD, Wooden furniture, Furniture, one block west of the fifth and fourth floors. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them**1**. As study makes sense to use them**1**. As study exam preparation. "New Analysis of West- ern Civilization." Cars Bookstore and Oread Book- crave. Mails Bookstore and Oread Book- For sale now—1979 Rally Sport, fully built. 843-4431 or 842-9243. 9-29 843-4431 or 842-9243 Kenwood receiver. KR 4070, 40 watts/channel. $110. $811-9269. 9-29 1972 VW Bus- Rebuilt @$none. Keep just inspected. Call 784-885. Keep try- ing. 21" , 10-spaceped. Motobike. Good condition. 21" , 843-0320. Keep trying. 9-29 SURGICAL PANTS--THE REAL THING, no more trying to steal them from the hospital; very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, brown, and orange, size benefits because the pants vary, 30 day warranty, guarantee. If no cleaning, send bleach/benzene additive. CO2灭火器. Adds 4% sales tax. Send check, money in cash or raised letters, to M.M.A. Inc. Box 15303, MEDIATE INSTITUTE. In stock for MEDIATE DAYEN. 9-30 72 Chevy Station Wagon $400 or best offer call 814-355-9280 401. III 82. 72 Chevy Station Wagon $400 or best offer call 814-355-9280 401. III 82. CAR AND T.V. 1972 Chev. News. Six slim- y cars from the mid-1960s will sell for best of three years old; they will sell for best of one year old. Gibson Firebird elec. guitar, excellent condition 81-1590 or 84-937-93 9-30 '66 VW Bug. Runs good. Call Borys 864- 30-9 9-30 Bang and Olufsen Beovox S-75 speakers Absolute mint condition. B1-8621 after one year. 173 Chev. Monte Carlo. £1250 condition cities. Heated recently. £1500 6105. Free to good homes 2 male kittens -12 wks. old. Call 841-0281 after 5 p.m. 10-1 Sacrifice - Low mileage 1947 Trumph 500 Sacrifice - Needs very minor repair. 4089 airline 4089 Airplane Nikon: F II A body and motor $75; bodies and motors, $250 each. 9-99. 285-1196 Motocycle bicycle frame, nomade model crank cranked included. 10-3 684 - 693 633 T. I. 59 with printer, Master library, leisure extra cards, and other extras. 10-10 334-647-8 10-10 LOOK! Motobike Grand Turing 13 speed Need money for racing bike $41,845.00 Need money for racing bike $41,845.00 Golden retriever, puppy 12 weeks, male, shots, wormed, friendly and cure 841-585-3800 Guitar, Yamaha FG-160, with case, Mint condition. Best offer over $545 842-303-6991 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Excellent condition. Must sell. Info: 841-9674. 10-2 Small blight female dog brown brow cut female dog born home from Wenche Wall 84-1728 84-1728 9-29 FOUND Found prescription glasses in Blue plaid case near Hawk's Crossing. Call Kevin 841-7137. Quantidiplegic needs live in attendance. Room 102, 493-683. Only Opportunity Employer. 443-231-811. HELP WANTED Nine hours, Monday Wednesday, Friday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. At Henry's Restaurant 6 and 10 Museum Silron Stockade in looking for personable. Applies 1015 Iowa street between 2-5 m and 3-6 m. AIRLINES Major airlines are now hiring for the following op tiers: FLIGHT ATTENDANTS HICKY AGENTS RAMP & BAGGAGE PERSONNEL CLERICAL POSITIONS CUSTOMER SERVICE RESERVATIONS AGENTS Individuals interested in applying with these airlines must be career oriented, have an interest in health care and be in good health. For further information on how to immediately apply directly, please visit www.afl.com. CUSTOMER SERVICE ATTEN: AIRLINES APPLICATION TRAVELEX,INC. Please indicate briefly your background, what airlines position(s) you are interested in applying for and enclose a letter of interest with your resume to receive further information as to what steps to take so that possible interviews might be arranged by these airlines. All major airlines are EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYMENTS. 3865 SOUTH WASATCH BLVD. SUITE 101 SALT LAKE CITY UTAH #4109 PROGRAMMER The University of Kansas careers center Office of educational high quality data processing professional to work on a applications development. The person selected for this position will be responsible for en- cine in developing COBOL system with a munications skills Knowledge of IBM, OS, JCL, MARK, and CICS is preferred. We pre- vene growth and career opportunities as well as computer-wave. Submit resume to R. Alan Growth and career opportunities as well as computer-wave. Submit resume to R. Alan Growth and career opportunities as well as computer-wave. Box 2034, University Systems P.O. Box 2034, University cation deadline Oct. 7, 1980. $ p.m. Opportunity affirmative employer employe Wanted: Experienced House Painter. Su- ple to work at least 20 hours. Must be willing to work at least 20 hours $3.50-4.25 or be a decorator. Decorative Image Painter 841-0787 10-1 Needed: Nude female models for art classes Required: Inquiries only. Inquiry Comrie 861-4401 10-1 Sapphire and diamond necklace near Dyre Continental value. Reward offer. Call 843-276-5900. Black wallet lost in the Hawk's Crossing account. Contact Dave 740-6476 9-29 asked. Contact Dave 740-6476 9-29 Old female collie, brown with white collar, countryside cougar. Villaaga town. Village tag. Cail 842-891. 10-1 LOST GOLD WRESTHATCH black band, lead on band of black leather with valence mental value Engraving on back. IEWARB Leather belt with silver buckle. Left 1981 Concordia High School Class of 1980 will return. Please phone 864-253-6000 upon return. Please phone 864-253-6000 upon return. REWARD Lost my black lace leaf note 7-9-19 of Southen of Allen 841-616-656 10-1 Black leather wallet with all my identification—KS driver license, KU I.D. and KU phone numbers. Flint, Wescoke, Union or KU-Ellsworth host 9-23, Please #812-9047 after 5. 9-30 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MERCHANTS AT 1493 WEST 8TH ST. membership card gets you $1.00 highballs all night long Only at your place, THE LOUISIRE WHERE "Partying is the LOUSIE" in 9-20 DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night drink McDonald on five days $-$ drink McDonald on five days $-$ NOTICE **FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC**-abortion up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating, Birth Control, Counseling. *12 p.m.* (918) 624-3100, w14 10th W. St. Overland Park, Kansas, fax 624-3100 PERSONAL The Wheel Breakfast Special! 9-12 Daily! Eggs, Bacon, Ham, and Teaset Honey Brownies. LOUISBURG'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday wife and $16 pitchers, 7 toilers and $16 pitchers. 7 toilers and "Partying" for the game. HAPPY HOUR at the CLUB LOUIS. Everyday 7-10 p.m. please $1,000 highballals. Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to midnight. sphere of the Club louis. 508 Louct. 842-942. "Partying is our business." tt LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Louse on Wednesday nights). Drinks include the club's own bar, and there's no cost to hire. Only At the Club Louse, 508 Locus, 842-9239. 9-30 SUPER TGIF AT THE CLUB LOISE. 3 for 1 drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday night. tf PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. 9-30 PART TIME INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY. Our team is uneached in the opportunities available to them, and we are available in sales and sales management with a large western based company, our part-time team of 20 people, full-time information, callerry Westlund, Collect #81-421-1411 Equity Opportunity Earn 9-29 FREE Ping Pong Club Tuesday, 9/30 7-10 p.m. Union Ballroom --- SUA In keeping with her tradition of bringing you more good times for your friends, THE CLUB LOUSE. All the clubs at the club have 8 DRINK AND DROWN AT THE CLUB LOUSE. All the clubs at the club have only 8$ indicates only 8$. Drink and drown at a club! THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 Locust. The club's music available. "9-30 is our business." TGIF AT LOUCBS BAR with $125 stip- mary. From Friday to 2 ul 6 be -there-Alcohol. If Tuesday from 2 ul 6 be -there-Alcohol. Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it. ASTA Singing Telegrams, 841-619-768 Tak a birmay affer classeau LOUCEY Take盟 a brochure at學院 SIEUCEY WITH Singing messages for all occaions Deliv- ly messages to: ASTA Singing Telegraphs. 814-6169 Green's Liquor has 1976 German Piersporters and 1974 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. CHIROPRACTIC—Investigate the natural approach to your health care. Call Dr. Mark Johnson, MHS Chiropractic Clinic, 9th and Illinois, 843-933-68. Home: 841-533-69. 9-30 WEEKEND GETAWAYS PRESENTS: KANSAS CITY ROYALS v c cludes transportation and tickets! GREEN'S—"The selection of award winning wines," foreign and domestic. 10-3 Come see the playoff bound Royals in Come see the playground Royals in their last home game and see if George Brett can bat. 400. Price includes transportation and tickets! servation deadline Friday, Oct. 3 [Congratulations!] Happy Birthday! I Love [congratulations] You have arrived and delivered for your loved ones, love you and keep us happy! SUN TRAVEL wires" foreign and domestic. 10-3 Studious Male Anthropology student looking for a female R.C. to share discussions and perspectives. Serious Inquiries 9-29 Mike B44-8376. 9-29 MINNESOTA TWINS LOVE FEST Chickadee and hummingbird. Tangle ant nest. $4, 99 per ant. 13 grys. At least 10 chicks. Thrush & Merganer. Sigma No. X and The Wheel present the $25 price of a Sigma No. X and The Wheel. The Sigma No. X and The Wheel. All Campus and the Sigma No. X and The Wheel. Hey! Shillie, Nancy, Wendy, Jana? Does you gage rides again? Gate 12, Edo- 9-29 $10.00 Personnel Administration Majors Join Stevenson University July 20, 2016 - June 30, Union Tues. Sept. 30 at 6:00 p.m. - 9:30 For more information drop by the SUA office or call 864 3477. I AM CURIOUS GECKO. 9-29 Psychic Personality Readings, $25-50. 843- 841.4.9 p.m. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP night at Lowes Halls' Fireplace Room. 10-3 "WORLD AWARENESS" will be the tribute Boston Center, 1629 W. Third Avenue in Croton, Connecticut. COMES TO THE HARBOR LITES for the Monday. The bottles are in front of the tube. Tough from 7-10 p.m., all lTTE beers 60c bottles; 815 pLbeers. The Harbors Lite, a first-price bottle. Sigma No. & The Wheel present the 8th of October at the Sigma No. House All Camp at the Sigma No. House AM looking for persons wanting to fly via October 10 or October 28. Please call 415-394-6240 Ampremirestation. CALL AT 415-394-6240 Ampremirestation. Enter the intramural swim meet. Entry deadline for individua events is Thursday. Oct. 2 at 5:00 p.m. in 208 Robinson Center. Come play Pimp-Pop with SUA Tuesday. Call SUA 346-8347 for more info SUA CALL 346-8347 for more info 9-30 A GOOD TIME-Come to a Oktoberfest polka on Oct. 3, 8 to 12 p.m. Tickets are $40. Reserved by the St Lawrence Catholic Center, 101 Crescent, 843-017-Free. Beep, Pop, and Blow! Enter the intramural Make A SPLASH! Head Start needs you to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher for two hours, one morning a car lesson, or to camp. Students 12-16 2515 Want to learn to play SCRABBLE cross- word game? Call Emily 843-6935 or SUA 864-3477. *CONTACT WEARBARS* Save on brand and cost of these lightweight, five-layered catalogs. Contact Lens Sappi. www.lenssappi.com Recreation Services 864-3546 m s Miss your Winnel T-shirt this year? Ninth National Flat-pick Championship! Best silk screen design, only $6.00; includes a $15.00 bonus. FI. $3500, indicate color and size. 10-8 SERVICES OFFERED THE BIKE GARAGE -Complete professional sound system for your bike specially specially designed to handle T2T3 Bike Garage 6 EAST 9TH 841-6221 KOPY KAT COPIES $ 2^{c} $ TYPING-EDITING BINDING-PRINTING HOURS 8 AM----8 PM MON-SAT Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 10-2 Strong Hall. Instant color passport photos. Immigration. color & B.W. Tom 841-7294 9-50 COPIES 8:00-8:00 MON-FRI 9:00-3:00 SAT 12:00-3:00 SUN 2 ½¹/₂ EACH HOUSE OF USHE: Tutors: For student referrals, list your name from the Student Assistance. List Strong Halt. 10-2 LEARN TENNIS this fall in fun classes with Lewis-Thomas Arena. Call 212-843-7380 Ceta G, 191-354-6831; 341-333-8431; 341-333-8431. Sten wants to do typing in her home. 1 per page. Lurieville W34. 837-0606. 9-30 experienced, professional tutoring Spanish and French Language 749-850 after 4 p.m. TYPING 108 9048 DBLG.TD#F I do damn good typing. Peggy 842-4746. tf Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correct- ing Solicite. Call Donna 842-2744. tf Experienced typist-term papers, thesis. Master's degree in Computer Science, scoring corrected 843-954. Wright. irf davis@umich.edu 842-2001 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms. Report on the Metropolitan Selective Ellen or Jean. 241-87. 12-8 Experienced K.U. typemt IBM Correcting Software K.U. typemt IBM Correcting Sandy, Sandy and weekends. 781- 450-238-1860. Typist Editor, IBM Piece/File, Quality Editor, IBM Piece/File, Editing, editing/layout, Call Ann, 842. Nameless, editing/layout, Call Ann, 842. ENCORE COPY CORPS Typing prices discounted. Excellent work papers, etc. Rotty, 823-6697 and wires and wires. Experienced typif- thesia, dissertations, alternatives to selection, select barb. after 5 p.m. 843-210-391 **I will not post any duplicate entries.** **Please use a different identifier for each entry.** For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 841-4980. tf IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- liable, accurate. IBM nico/alte. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. .250t The University Daily Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 842-353-6920 WANTED Buying gold. Paying $100-$150 for men's class rings, less for ladies. RAD Coin Shop. 2120 W. 25th, Holiday Plaza. 842-9628. 9-30 Roommate at the Jayhawk Towers as soon as you arrive. All utilities paid. Call 49-300 Anytime. Female Roommate will to share 2 bdmr: bavenport apt $12.00; 3 utilities $48.00 Male Roommate to share 2 bdmr, apt. Finished $100 roommate utilities. #483. $1500 roommate share & bdmr, unfurnished; on bus; new apartment; $93/month; - 1/3 electricity center; $68/month; - 1/3 electricity center ORDER NORM ORDER NORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! 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: Dates to Run: RATES: 18 words or less additional words 3 4 5 times times times $2.75 $3.00 $3.25 04 05 08 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 NO DEDUCTION to run: Copy due: MONDAY Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME: NAME: ADDRESS PHONE: --- 1 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 29, 1980 Kansas falls to new low with loss to Louisville 30 BvGENEMYERS Louisville safety Sebastian Curry successfully blocks out KU flanker David Verser as strong safety. Jamie Perrin comes in for the hit, Verser had trouble with the Louisville secondary all day Saturday, collision calls for 24 yards. He did, however, become only the fifth KU receiver to a mass more than 1,000 yards during his career. Sports Editor BEN BIGLER/Kansan staff The Coke-covered celebrated in one locker room. The lover lamented in the other. In one room, Louisville was celebrating like a champion. There was enough Coke-dousing and smiles for a television commercial. In the other room, Kansas was lamenting like a loser. There were enough long faces and frowins for two teams. They were the frowns of the convicted, guilty of giving in to the lesser op- "This is the lowest our program has been the last two years," Head Coach Don Fambrough said. "We really hit an all-time low—you can't get much lower." The Jayhawks, 0-2-1, lost 17-9 in a game they were supposed to win by a rout. Instead of a laugher, they were laughed at. They were whipped, walloped and demoralized. They hit a The low was even lower than last year's 55-7 loss to Missouri. The game was at least one giant step backward for Fambrough's 2-year-old rebuilding program. rubbing progeny. "We go out in the first half and stand around, and they make fools out of us," Fambrough said. "I don't know the answer. 'we've got a lot to talk about. We've got to look at the film. We've got to look at the players. We've got to look at the coaches. We've got to do something.' The question is what that something will be. The main problem, as usual, was offensive inertia. The passing attack was usually grounded and the rushing attack was effectively sabotaged. KU's had only 158 yards of total force, 103 of which were from tailback Kevin The KU defense was sturdy but depressed. the defense held its ground, despite Louisville drives of 54 and 97 yards and five KU interceptions and two fumbles. "It always makes it hard when you have to be on the field all the time," said linebacker Chris Toburen, who had KU's first interception of the year. "It's dazzling." It's also demoralizing for the offense, which has had only one touchdown all season. "This is worse than the Missouri game," David Verser, Big-Big Eflanker said. "I think it is worse because Louisville is not a ranked team and they just whipped our butts." One change Fambrough doesn't plan to make is at quarterback. He stuck with freshman Frank Seurer on Saturday even though Seurer fumbled once, tossed a bad pitch that was fumbled and threw five interceptions, his first interceptions of the season. "I hope I was not being unfair to him," Fambrigh said. "I bothers me to lose a football game, and I can stand to lose a football game. I do not want to destroy a young backer." "I still feel he has tremendous ability and I hope this game doesn't affect him. I hope he Seurer went 10-of-25 for 98 yards and five in terceptions. He lost 58 yards for the nine times he was sacked or forced to scramble. Searer, however, wasn't KU's only inefficient offensive player. Fullback and captain Harry Sydney had 10 carries for 14 yards. For the season, he has needed 26 carries to gain 68 yards. verser, an All-America candidate, had three receptions for 34 yards. He missed 50 yards well. "One of the best pass receivers in the country was muffin and meeting around." I asked, "I don't. Did you?" In the Louisville locker room no one was asking the question why. The players had carried their coach, Bob Weber, off the field and continued celebrating in the locker room. For the Cardinals, who were 0-3 and 13-9 losers to Murray State, the victory earned the Super "Last week everybody said that we were not playing in our league against Murray State." quarterback Pat Patterson said. "We just wanted the reputation of beating a Big Eight team. They were definitely in our league." The Cardinals were in a different emotional league from the start. They were psyched and ready. KU seemed stale and tentative. On the way back, they made a point of being but slapped and shook and praised each other. "Seuer said in our paper that KU had audibles he thought would hurt us," Cardinal safety Frank Minnifield said. "We got fired up about that. "KU didn't seem excited about the game. They were not so focused on their weight. I think Kouga used to look lightly." Verser thought the same thing. "Maybe this is for the best," he said. "Maybe we'll learn that we can't lay down for a team like Louisville, because Louisville will not lay down for us." JAYHAWK NOTES: Even though David Verser did not have a spectacular game, his three receptions for 34 yards gave him more than 1,000 yards for his career. He is fifth on the all-time career charts, about 50 yards behind Otto Schnellbacher. Five Louisville players had to wear KU road uniforms in Saturday's game because $750 of equipment was stolen from Louisville's locker room sometime Friday night or Saturday morning. According to KU police, 10 football jerseys, six pairs of practice shorts, six pairs of football shoes, three team bags and three pairs of football pants were stolen. The Cardinals' two touchdowns were the first that their offense had scored in season. Their victory was a record-setting achievement. problems have occurred in the game. Two KU players were injured in the game. Cornack海 Dawris, the Big Eight defensive player-of-the-week after the season opener, had to leave with a back injury. His sub, Roger Foote, sustained a leg contusion. Kenny Robinson ladied Louisville with four shots called by KU's secondary the slowest he had faced. "We noticed from the film against Pittsburgh that their secondary didn't have overall good team speed," he said. "They had to play back and we were able to throw quick passes and get under the secondary and linebackers. They were about getting burgled deep than anybody else." KU started the game without Frank Wattelte, defensive captain and free safety. He had back up for a few minutes before the game. Defensive tackle Greg Smith led KU with 11 tackles. Tackle Jeff Fox was next with 13 tackles. Tackle Randy Hoyt was next with 20 tackles. Fans' support for women's athletics is nothing to cheer about And I was always told the same thing by all of them: "Girls can't play ball." I grew up in a boy's neighborhood. There was a big brother and a bigger little brother in my house, three boys next door, two on the corner and four more across the street. Most of them were older than me, all of them were That belief was reinforced when I started playing in a girl's softball league. The belief strengthened in high school. But now that I've watched KU women's sports for four years, I know girls can play ball. I can remember going home bruised and hurting from the neighborhood baseball and football games, but always going back the next day. I wanted to prove to them that girls could play ball. That can clearly be seen by looking at the KU women's teams of the few best. Girls not only can play ball, but they can swim, play tennis and golf, run and do just about anything else they set their minds to. The women's swim team is the perennial conference power and won its sixth-straight Big Eight championship last season. The tennis team won the Big Eight title two years ago, but also went through five coaches in nine months. Under new coach Randy McGrath, the women now can settle down and work toward regaining that title. The women's cross country team is running for fun and running its way to some good times this fall. The team just won the KUInvitational last weekend and another new coach, Carla Coffey, could be the one to drive the women to national contention. The volleyball team is young, but good. Coach Bob Lockwood has had PATTI ARNOLD PETER WILSON nothing but praise for his youngsters as well as his veterans. With some more experience and a few more floor burns they will be contenders, they will be conference contenders. A little-known team, the women's golf team with four players year had the winning single season in KU history, perhaps is ready for its finest season. The softball team broke almost every offensive record last season and looks to re-do the record books again this year. KU coach Bob Stancilift offered only three new scholarship this season, and his first three choices took him up on his offer. The softball team, the team that last In their first game this season, an 18-inning scrimmage with Johnson County Community College, the Jayhawks pounded out 40 hits and scored 35 runs. Johnson County didn't get a runner past third. In fact, only one got that far. The best known women's sport at KU, basketball, is also in the running for the NCAA championship. college today. And she is at KU. She can become the all-time leading women's scorer this season and can be the second woman to be named to the All-America team for four consecutive years. Lynette Woodard is hands down, the best woman basketball player in Woodard is not the only person on the KU team worth watching. The entire team is strong, and Coach Marian Washington has made it even stronger than last year with two high school All-Star players, and several other blitzchippers. It's really too bad that there aren't more people who realize the caliber of women's athletes at KU. Fans pay $19 for a football ticket and then complain about a poor team. They pay $11 for a basketball ticket and then boo when Ted Owens puts his team into a stall offense. The admission to a women's basketball game, softball game, swim meet, track meet or any other event is a KUID. And every KU student has one. It is a pity that people in New York know Lynette Woodard better than people in Kansas—her home state. Kwelen's women's athleticism as being highly competitive, but at home, they are met not with cheering crowds, but with apathy. The crowds at KU women's sporting events are usually limited to family, friends and roommates of the players who was just in the neighborhood. I wish the boys from my neighborhood were around to watch these girls play. I am able to them that girls can play ball. And that at KU, they play well. WE'VE GOT HAWK HATS! • NEW! 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No. 27 t defen opener, o,Roger Wattelet, bad back half. with 11 with nine. clicks. women's, nee swim event is a was one as not. the atuate than satue. KU in around commonly met not apathy. the in family, the players in the my neigh- chatch these be able to ball. And 10 clubs endorsed for extra funding By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee last night made final recommendations to the Senate on only 10 of the 54 student organizations requesting supplementary funds. Although it was scheduled to be the final night of committee deliberations, controversy on whether to finance special interest groups or those groups representing larger segments of the University population caused some tense, spirited and prolonged debate. The committee voted to recommend to the Senate reduced allocations for four student organizations. Black American Law Students Association (BALSA) was cut from $2,398 to $317.25. Black Student Union was cut from $6,844.55 to $141.75. Blacks in Communications was cut from $1,910 to $400 and Chinese Student Association was cut from $840 to $272. BUDGET REQUESTS by four other groups were cut to zero. These groups included Alpha Rho Gamma, a club for jewelry and silversmithing students, which had requested $775; Architectural Student Council, which had requested $4,166.68; Art Education Club, which had requested $50; and the Undergraduate Biology Club, which requested $276. The committee's rationale for cutting funds to clubs such as the Art Education Club was presented a number of times during the four-hour meeting. According to Robin McClellan, Student Senate executive committee chairman, "We have so little money to spend. I can't find budding hobbies that are worth it." The same that affect so many more student on campus." Three groups have withdrawn their requests, but there are still 54 organizations requesting about $4,000. Senate, however, has only $16,067.3 to allocate in supplementary funding. THE COMMITTEE cut travel expenses from both BALSA'S and Black Student Union's requests because of Senate rules and regulations regarding for sending delegates to forums or conventions. Other debate on these groups centered on the extent of their importance to KU students. BALSA finally was recommended for $317.25 to the minority law day program, the production of its Minority Law Day program. Black Student Union also was recommended to receive $141.75 for use in planning a big 8 Budget. Debate on the Blacks in Communications request for $1,910 to aid in printing, publishing and distributing its publication, the Criterion, lasted almost an hour. BIC INCURRED a 846 printing debt at the University Printing plant last week and had to pay $5,000. According to the organization, it was paid off by advertising sold for this year's first issue, which has not yet been printed. The group says it has already run at increased costs of publication caused by inflation. Bren Abbott, Senate treasurer, said, however, that if the group hadn't incurred the debt it would have had that money to use for increased costs, and that by allocating the funds the Senate would He added that paying the past debts of student organizations would be a bad precedent to set. Larriestree Baggett, a Finance and Auditing Committee member and reporter for the Criterion, said, however, that the debt had been substantially reduced, necessary improvements to continue publishing. There was also extensive debate last night on funding the Chinese Student Association. See BUDGET page 5 Slow salary increases could impair KU faculty Staff Reporter Worth said that without faculty pay increases to bridge the gaps, KU would lose good teachers and researchers, impairing the effectiveness of remaining faculty. By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter If faculty salaries at the University of Kansas continue to increase slower than the inflation rate and private sector salaries, the quality of education at the University will be affected, George Worth, University Faculty executive committee chairman, said yesterday. A report written recently by Tom Lawson, a professor of Regents research officer, said that salaries are not up. universities averaged about $1,000 less than th salaries at similar institutions. Lawson presented the report to the Regents and formulated their budget requests earlier this year. EVELYN SWARTZ, PRESIDENT of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said that without a substantial pay increase, young faculty members could be forced to choose between teaching and supporting themselves. "They're having to consider whether they can afford to do what they enjoy doing," she said. John Conard, Regents executive officer, said that the salaries received by KU professors were cost-effective. See FACULTY page 5 A STEVEN MOCKLER/Kansan KU Police Sgt. Flovd Noel extinguishes a fire on one of the facilities operations lawn mowers while Terry Hatfield, facilities operations worker, watches. U.N. peace plea doesn't stop fighting TEHRAN RADIO said yesterday that the commander of Iran's powerful navy told BAGHAD, Iraq (UPI)—Iraq conditionally accepted yesterday a U.N. call for an end to its eight-day old war with Iran, but the iranians had also declared they would widen the war to other Persian Gulf states. Iraq's special emissary, Ismat Kittani, telephoned Baghdad's response to a unanimous call by the 13-member U.N. Security Council "to refrain immediately from any further use of force." The official Iraq response is that Iraq must also deploy its security council 'calls if I ask does a U.N. spokesman said. BATTLE REPORTS yesterday suggested the fighting was slowing down, but in a Tehran radio broadcast, Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai warned other Gulf states that Iran would consider them as being in a state of war if they did not stop helping Iraq. Ayatollah Ruhablab Kohminei that his forces had complete control of the Strait of Hormuz, through which 40 percent of the world's oil must be secured to lighten their hold on the Strait of Arab waterway. "Then they must accept the consequences of their aid to Iraq," Rajai said. "Responsibility for a future war, in which they are involved because of their policies, must be borne by the countries that are helping Iraq by air, on land and at sea by various means." The commander, Admiral Afdal, said his ships were ready to destroy Iraqi naval units See related story page 2 "'sheilinger'' in the ports of other Persian Gulf states. Tehran relayed the admiral's assurance that movement of commercial ships in the Persian Gulf was proceeding normally. Tehran also pledged that Iran's navy would not interfere as long as the ships stayed out of Iraqi ports by sticking to shipping routes. BAGHAD AGAIN offered to end the war on terms that would end Iran's traditional dominance of the Persian Gulf. Tehran quickly reected the terms. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein declared his country was willing to negotiate and accept peace. But as a condition of negotiations, he said Iran must recognize Iraqi sovereignty over the Shatt al-Arab waterway, surrender three tiny islands in the Gulf of Moruz and grant "full democratic rights in Iran." It was an apparent call for a degree of autonomy for Iran's ethnic minorities such as the Jafaris, who have long lived in "They (the iranians) has to know their role as the policeman of the Gulf is dead and gone," Hussein said. "If the other side does not want to rescue it he is up to them to accept the consequences." In Tehran, President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr pledged to carry on the war "until the last aggressor is driven from our territory." He also toured Hamadan air base to bolster fighting edge. The son of Ayatollah Rubailah Khomeini said that Iran was determined to continue the war. "Of course, we are not fighting Iraq but America," said HaJatjalatesma HaJ) Seyedu Nahm the superwoman. "What matters to us is saying No to the superpowers and 'No to force and oppression.'" Poet captivates audience with singing, poetry Staff Reporter By PATRICIA WEEMS The setting was comfortable and the audience was captivated by poet Allen Ginsberg's singing of "My Pretty Rose Tree," a song from "William Blake'Songs of Innocence and of the Experience Tuned by Allen Ginsberg." Ginsberg played the harmonium, sang and danced at the most night in the Kansas Union Ballroom. More than 300 people attended the reading, jointly sponsored by SUA, the department of English and the Kansas Commission on the Arts. They sang "Troost Avon Blues," a song depicting life on a Kansas City, Mo., street. "Dope Fleiend," a scenario about drug use, and "The Blind Dog," a scenario, 'which talked about smoking and its vices. In a duet with guitarist Steve Lerner, a psychologist from Topeka, Ginsberg played the harmonium, an organ-like instrument with reed keys. Ginsberg read several books, including "Approaching Wichita," a story of his first visit to the city, "Empty Mirror," a poem he wrote in the early 1950s, and "Mind Breaths," a poem describing his physical situation in a brief meditation retreat in 1988 in Wyoming. They played and sang several of Blake's poems, as well as some of Ginsberg's. He also read his most famous poem, "Howl," a poem of the desperation and disaffection of some of the best minds of his generation, which had resulted in self-abuse. Ginsberg also touched on the life of his poet father, Louis Ginsberg in his poems, "Don't Ginsberg Leave Me" See GINSBERG page 5 Allen Ginsberg Money evades women's team my ARNE GREEN Staff Reporter Women's basketball at the University of Kansas, which has been ranked consistently in the national polls, has brought the University some fame but not much fortune. Although it eventually could happen, it is unlikely that women's basketball will become a moneymaker or even self-supporting in the near future. Instead, women's basketball coach, said last week. "The potential is there," Washington said, but there's a cycle involved, and money is the key. "You have to have money to the necessary experience and exposure. We just don't have the money to direct toward publicity and advertising." WOMEN'S SPORTS are funded by state money. Men's sports are funded by the KU Athletics. Washington said interest in women's basketball had increased, however. "In 1974, my greatest challenge was to get a precede of our games in the paper," she said. "Now we're ready to go beyond the newspapers." The next step is to toilet people see the team play, either in onscreen or on film. Washington said. 'People at home are reading about us, which I think is great," she said. "The trouble is that their reference point goes back to what women's sport were like when they played. They just had a lot of the high caller and skill of today's teams." EVEN IF MONEY was available for television and radio advertising, it would not assure women's basketball of drawing well enough to break even, said Bob Marcum, athletic director. "I think you have to follow the tradition of most sports," Marcum said. "It usually has been that they are not allowed." Sid Wilson, sports information director, said television coverage of women's basketball was a vital source of interest. "You have to make the general public aware that it is an exciting sport to watch," he said. "It is hard for a sport to be a success when it doesn't have a strong following at the high school level. Until a major network covers it, it will not be easy." WASHINGTON SAID there had been interest in the team in other parts of the country. In fact, a group of bankers in New York is guaranteeing that Madison will play to play a tournament in Madison Square Garden. "We will have the opportunity to play against Louisiana Tech and Rutgers, two of the top three teams in the country," she said. "We also are interested in the team to trip to Detroit, so there is interest in the team." See WOMEN page 5 Weather BEAUTIFUL! It should be sunny and warm today with a high around 80, according to the National Weather Service. Winds should be from the northwest at 5-10 mph. Clear skies will continue into tonight, with a low in the lower 50s. Wednesday also should be clear with a bich in the mid-80s. the extended forecast for Thursday through Saturday shows little or no precipitation likely throughout the period. It would be in the 70s with the low in the 40s. Friday and Saturday should be cooler, with hints in the 60s to low 75s and lows in 80s. Page 2 Universitv Daliv Kansan, September 30, 1980 --- News Briefs From United Press International senate votes to continue expenditures WASHINGTON — The Senate voted yesterday to keep the government in business by extending federal spending power beyond midnight tonight. The bill went quickly to a joint House-Senate conference, whose members faced problems in recoinciling it with widely divergent provisions of a House Bill. The Senate approved 58-27 its version of an emergency bill to extend federal funding until Dec. 15, or until the Congress can vote on permanent legislation. Failure of the House-Senate conference to work out differences today would leave the government without funds after today. This would mean that the government could not pay federal employees not involved in work that protects life or property. In the midst of considering the crucial funding legislation, the Senate handed down in an abortion debate "If we don't get this bill out in 36 hours, all government is going to stop," he warned. Sen. Warren Magnuson, D-Wash., chairman of the Appropriations Committee, urged the government was stale in controversial issues. Dumps can pollute water, report says WASHINGTON—A congressional report warned yesterday that ground water supplies in many countries may be in danger of con- amination from nearby chemical supply sites. The report by a House Government Operations subcommittee said, "Toxic chemical contamination of ground water supplies in several areas of the country has reached alarming proportions." The panel released a list of 2,100 unified chemical dump sites above usable ground water sources. Included in the list are 250 sites that contain potentially hazardous contaminants and lie within a mile of potential water supply wells The report identified the dump sites at Cessna Aircraft in Wichita and Skelly Oil Co. in Medicine Lodge as potentially hazardous. A subcommittee aide said the list was incomplete and conceded that some data could be inaccurate. Some of the areas may not be in use now, he said, "but they are continuing to cause damage." Carter to announce steel industry aid WASHINGTON-President Carter's plan to revive the nation's allied steel industry will be unveiled today, and is expected to offer the industry more tax relief, more protection from imports and more time to meet environmental standards. The administration has been working for months to develop a relief plan for domestic station productions, which have been hurt by competition from Japan and the U.S. Details of the plan have been guarded zealously by administration officials, but it has not been accepted as a program that is currently opposed by Ronald Reagan. the president is expected to emphasize that his recent 'economic renewal' program holds millions of dollars in tax breaks for the industry through faster depreciation write-offs and targeted relief for industries devastated by the recession. At the same time, Carter is likely to announce re-institution of the so-called tricker price mechanism, which was suspended last spring. Court to begin trying 'Gang of Four' PEKING—China set up its special court yesterday to try the "Gang of Four" for treason, and officials indicated a guilty verdict was a foregone excuse. Zeng Tao, a spokesman for China's Parliament, said the trial, involving millions of citizens during the 1986- Cultural Revolution, would be a first. The main defendants are Jiang Quing, 66, a former Shanghai actress who rose to become virtual empress of China as wife of the late Mao Tse-Tung, and the other three members of the so-called Gang of Four. Six followers of Mao Tse-Tung and discredited defense minister, Ln Biao, will be tried on similar charges. The gang members virtually ruined China during Mao's declining years and are blamed for all the problems the country now faces. Communist Party Chairman Hua Guofeng, whose own position may be threatened by disclosures at the trial, has said that none of the Gang of Four was implicated in the plot. Foreign correspondents will be barred from the proceedings because of the state secrets involved in the case. Swedish navv to hunt for submarine STOCKHOLM, Sweden—The Defense Ministry ordered the Swedish navy yesterday to hunt for a mystery submarine that has been stalking Sweden's waters for the past two weeks. Defense Minister Eric Kromnick said the submarine had been identified, because of its nationality. Swedish newspapers reported it was a Soviet submarine. Calling the submarine's penetration of Sweden's territorial waters an "unprecedented provocation," Krommard ordered the navy to go after it. The Supreme Command said it was instructing its battalions to try to break through the ship's depth charges as close as possible to the samarine without hitting it. It was the first time an order of this kind has been issued in Sweden during peacetime. The submarine was first sighted on Sept. 18 about three nautical miles off Sweden's southeast coast and 30 miles from Stockholm. The navy has been trying to track the sub in the Baltic Sea with sonar since last week Carter proclaims love for 'Big Apple' President Carter returned yesterday to the city where he was renominated last month and greedily I love New York. "I have always loved New York," said Carter. "It's an island." New York has 41 electoral votes, and it is generally acknowledged that the state has an almost impossible time winning on Nov. 4 without carrying the state. Meanwhile, Republican nominee Ronald Reagan was in Los Angeles taping new television ads before heading for Iowa in the evening. Hell's Angels tried on drug charges In Washington, independent candidate John Anderson clad politically active religious groups for failing to maintain strict separation of church and Attorneys for the 11 men had sought a last-minute order from the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appalachia dismissing the drug conspiracy charges on grounds that the defendants were not charged with the crime. SAN FRANCISCO—More Hell's Angels and their friends went on trial yesterday in federal court on charges of conspiracy to control drug traffic in the city. The Court of Appeals rejected the defense attorney's motion Friday and ordered the new trial. A group of 18 defendants, including some of those in this case, were tried earlier this year in an eight-month trial that ended with a hung jury. Unlike the first trial, the charges in this case do not name the Hell's Angels club as the tool of the conspiracy. Instead, the grand jury indictment charges that the conspiracy to manufacture and distribute narcotics was furthered by members of the club acting on their own. Planes may be sent to Arabia WASHINGTON (UPI)—President Carter is considering sending highly sophisticated communications aircraft and crews to Saudi Arabia in light of the Iran-Iraq war, administration officials said last night. The indictment returned in August also charged that the conspiracy was promoted by murder and attempted murder, as well as by intimidation of THE USE OF the planes by Saudi Arabia would leave open the possibility of using fighter aircraft to protect the Strait of Hormuz, through which tankers pass with vital oil supplies to the West. But a Pentagon official said no final decision had been made on whether to dispatch the Air Force Airborne Command Squadron to Saudi Arabia. The planes coordinate fighter and bomber plane activity, provide information on hostile aircraft and defenses and act as combat control centers. Such planes now are deployed Earlier yesterday, Egypt, growing more alarmed as the Persian Gulf war continues, appealed again for U.S. intervention. The appeal, delivered by two of egyptian President Anwar Sadat's top aides, drew the attention of the international community. VICE PRESIDENT Hosni Mokarab and former Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil both accused Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and Iraqi President Saddam Hussein of waging war to satisfy "their personal lusts." Both Khallil and Mobarak offered Egyptian assistance to any Arab or Moslem state that faces external aggression, citing a 1955 collective Arab defense pact that obligates Egypt to do so. "Egypt is prepared to assist any Arab or Moslem state that faces an external aggression and has offered temporary and limited facilities to the enemy. Egypt also assists any country that is the victim of aggression." Mobarak said. the United States limited and temporary military bases in Egypt. Khalil also echoed Sadat's call for American intervention to end the eight-year war. "Egypt welcomes the mediation effort of Islamic countries," he said, "and supports a United States invitation to bring the conflict to an end." Employee leaves city after dump discovery The Kansas City Times reported yesterday in a copyright story that Bok Bernard, who worked for a law firm in the Bronx, was in one of six sites, hated the city. KANSAS CITY, Kan. (UPI)—The discovery of several hazardous waste dump sites in Kansas City has led to an effort to fill one of them to flee from the law. Several months ago, residents near the site complained to city officials of sore throats, and two dogs were found dead near the a sixth industrial waste dump, which officials suspect may be one of the oldest dumps in the area, was uncovered Sunday in the wake of escalating fears about chemical wastes in the city. A seventh industrial waste dump was found yesterday. The federal Environmental Protection Agency last week reported that 11 toxic substances were contained in the material at the Bernard told the newspaper he believed he was caught in a struggle between the city and S-G Metals Industries, the company whose industrial slag he dumped at a site in Kansas City, Kan. The city's Municipal Court issued an arrest warrant against Bernard Sept. 2 because he had not cleaned up the site. All of the material in similar dumps found in the city came from S-G Metals, a Kansas City, Kan., metal processor. The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta and the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health have been called in to make health checks on S-G Mets employees and residents near the sites. ASTA Singing Telegrams "Say it with a Song" 841-6169 Car Stereos and Parts At a Discount Flowers by Alexanders 15% OFF Mechanical Parts 20% OFF Accessories in Stock IMPORTS DATSUN 2829 Iowa MARTHA With this coupon Expires 12/31/80. MARIA KALANE 1976 KENNEDY JACKSON 1980 图 C. M. E. BEST FASHION FOR MAN fall '80 in clothes from Mister Guy for him and her . perfect for those cool fall nights Mister Guy lawrence's only complete specialty store for men and women since '69. . Hours: M-T-W-F-SAT10-6 Th 10-9 Sun 1-5 MISTER GUY 920 Massachusetts R SUA FILMS By Sta f Tuesday, September 30 (1935) A Midsummer Night's Dream German stage director Max Reinhardt was brought over by Warner for a series of artistic pictures; as so often happens, the film. The result, this adaptation of the Shakespeare comedy, is a visual delight. Mickey Rocket, Mickey Rocket, Olivia van Haddich, Dick Pewson, Joe E. Brown, etc. A unique film, "Burrow," (1924), 124 mm. B&W., 70."30. wegnesday, Oct. 1 The fourth of Eric Rohrer's "Six Moral Lessons" (1967) is about Maud and the Claine's Knee) is the story of a summer love affair that never takes hold. The film mocks, wilty style, it is a fine companion to his other tales. Plus, Bruno Boretto's "Ego" (88 min) Color French-Chambre La Collectioneuse Thursdav. Oct. 2 The Battle of Algiers Gilio Pontecorveo's chronicle of the Algerian light for freedom is so realistic it'll be an ingenious fiction film with a strong basis in reality that won many international critics and its cinematic brilliance." One of the important films of our time, it is both interesting and but more interesting than, the truth—"It's much bigger" in 8:28. BWF. Frenchbiscuits 7:30. Heir Friday, Oct. 3 The Age of Aquarium arrives. Director Milos Ferman (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest) has made an energetic, entertaining show that will love Love Rock Music" of the 60s. Twiella Tharp's choreography does well by a cast including John Savev, Treat Williams, and Beverly D'Angelo. Plus: Eddie Larkin (12/115 hours) Color: 3:30, 7:00, 8:30 A Clockwork Orange (1971) Anthony Burgess's novel about a society where teen-age gangs rule is brilliantly rendered, but it's a work of the world better than a stale world. The most controversial film of the 70's poses that difficult question. With Malcolm X and Dustin Powers' ageages. (137 min. Color: 12:00 Midnight) Saturday, Oct. 4 Hair 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 A Clockwork Orange 12:00 Midnight. Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Woodstock Auditorium on Friday, March 21st for $1.00 Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday Fridays. Tickets available at the SUA office, Kansas Union, 4th level, Information 864-359-2871 or smoking or retirements allowed. iety ntly lentl The seses oolm in.) University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 will be the 1.00; andday 2.00; Kan- 684 s al- Page 3 Restaurant trial set for guide dog case By RAY FORMANEK Staff Reporter *Lawrence restaurant owner, who asked a blind Topeka woman to remove her guide dog before he would seat her at the office.* Oct. 23 in Lawrence District Court. Ed Roste, owner of the Aztec Inn Restaurant, 807 Vermont St., was charged with violating Kansas" "white cane law," which states that refusing to serve a blind person accompanied by a guide dog in a restaurant is an unclassified misdemeanor punishable by 30 days in jail, a $500 fine or both. Roste, who originally was scheduled to be arraigned today in district court, had his trial date set by Wesley Norrland defense attorney from Lawrence. NORWOOD SAID yesterday that misdemeanor trial dates could be set by the defense attorney and the district judge without the appearance of the defendant. Ann Byington, 32, filed a complaint with Mike Malone, Douglas County district attorney, after employees told her that dogs were not allowed in the restaurant and ignored her table when she sat down. Roste said he did not refuse to serve Byington. He contends he only asked her to remove her dog from the restaurant before she sat down. "I asked her to please remove her dog," he said. "She came into the place in the middle of lunch with another friend, and she had a real reason for her dog to be there." Byington said she passed out notices from the print station on it to Arte Imprenta Group. ROSTE, HOWEVER, contends no one hould him any paper or told him of any law. "I didn't know there was a law against it," he said. "They tried to show my employees some papers, but they were too busy to read them." Roste said he received a "raw deal" from the media coverage of the event. "I've had letters and telephone calls saying I was a mean guy for kicking the Byington out," he said. "I have nothing against the handicapped. Hell, my boy's paralyzed from the neck down from a car accident." Hate letters and threatening phone calls aren't only things Roste has to worry about. "It's hurt my lunch business business is down at 20 percent overall. Roste said he was sorry the incident happened. "I didn't know there was a law against what it was, and I was dealing with that in the official hand." On Campus The Spencer Museum of Art will show a film, "THE NEW WORLD: THE MODERN SCULPTURE" at 1 p.m. in the museum auditorium. TODAY The department of East Asian studies will feature a lecture by Ikhuku Hatta of Takushoku University, Japan, on “GENERAL M. McCarthy” JAPANESE PERSONATIVES” at 3:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas Peninsula. at 3:30 p.m. in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. A faculty representative of Kansas City's St. Paul School of Theology will answer questions about THEOLOGICAL GRADUATE STUDY THE BLACK STUDENT UNION will have choir practice from 5:30 to 7:20 p.m. in 328 Murphy Hall. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST meet at 6:30 p.m. in p. 209, 223 and 233 THE FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES will leave the Satellite Union parking lot at 6:48 p.m. to attend a Phil Kegney concert in Ottawa. Robert Weaver, associate professor of biochemistry, will speak on GENETIC ENGINEERING at 7 p.m. in 4020 Wesco Hall. New Perspectives will sponsor Harold Slusher, assistant professor of physics, University of Texas, in a speech entitled "THE ORIGIN AND AGE OF THE UNIVERSE" at 7 p.m. at the Baptist Center, 929 W.19th St. TAU SIGMA DANCE CLUB ENSEMBLE will meet at 7 p.m. in 242 Robinson Gymnasium. A BIBLICAL SEMINAR at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center will discuss Immanuel Kant and Soren Kierkegaard. Two dance and humanities films bout the origins of Temples; by France and Dame be shown at 7 p.m. in 158 Robinson Center. The SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room of the Union. Avant-garden composer JOHN CAGE will speak on "James Joyce, Marcel Duchamps, Erik Satie: An Alphabet," at 8 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium in a University Humanities lecture. GARY FOSTER, noted saxophonist and KU graduate, will lead the KU Jazz Ensemble I in a concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthowne Rectal Hall in Murphy Hall. Composer to speak tonight on 20th century By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Jon Cage, an innovative American composer, will speak on how not to understand the 20th century at 8 tonight in the auditorium of Spencer Art Museum. "I noticed last year that in both Europe and America there was an interest in understanding the 20th century. That's why I'm giving the lecture." Cage said, "to save it from being understood." His speech, "James Joyce, Marcel Duchamp, Eric Sartie, An Alphabet. is the first of the 1980-81 KU Humanities Lecture Series. "Mozart had a way of tossing dice to make waltzes." Care said. The I-Ching gives answers on a 64-number system. Cage said he took the numbers, converted them to numbers between one and 88 (the number of keys on a piano) and used those numbers as the notes of his composition. Cage is known for his unique methods of composition, such as using I-Ching blocks. "I instead of making choices in a composition, I make a series of questions that could be answered," he said. Cage also developed "prepared piano," in which objects such as keys, coins, weather stripping and furniture screws are placed between the piano strings to produce unusual musical tones. One of his works, "Four Minutes and 32 Seconds," has no music at all but consists of the sounds of the envelopes of four-minute and 32-second time span. It was first performed in three years at the woodstock, N.Y., 30 years ago. Case said. He said the first movement was the sound of the wind, the second was the sound of rain and the third the sound of the crowd. He said he had always wanted to follow music instead of following tradition. His experiments have opened him to some derision, however. "I'm surprised at how much they consider me a clown," he said of his reputation in music anthologies. "I've taken my work seriously, and I've only done strange things when I thought it absolutely necessary." Is he one of the elements of the 20th that people shouldn't try to understand? "I try to be," Cage said. Texas Oil & Gas Corp. Wants Producers Engineers Geologists Permanent and Summer Openings 23 consecutive years of record growth in net income. One of the largest independent oil and gas companies in the nation with over 1.1 billion dollars in assets. During 1979, the third most successful major energy company in the United States in new field wildcats. Operator of more than 5,200 miles of pipeline. The second largest drilling contractor in the nation based on footage drilled. Starting salaries traditionally are among the highest of offers to all graduating students. Company car for engineers, geologists, and landmen. A fast growing organization comprised of fewer than 2,500 employees with a young, aggressive approach to the energy business. We will be interviewing on Tuesday, October 14, 1980 Contact your placement office for additional details, TODAY. Or direct your resume to: College Relations TEXAS OIL & GAS CORP. Fidelity Union Tower Dallas, Texas 75201 h e es Equal Opportunity Employer M/F Page 4 University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 Opinion A vote a day helps keep the apathy away—even at KU. Well, maybe even at KU. The Associated Students of Kansas has started its drive to register student voters for the general election. Unfortunately, registering voters at KU is often like getting milk from a bull. Yet, it appears that ASK's efforts have not been a waste of voting forms and money. Last week, about 1,000 KU students registered to vote at tables set up in front of Wescoe Hall and the Kansas Union. This week, ASK plans to concentrate its registration drive on organized living groups. Then ASK will finish up with a mail drive. If more students voice their intentions to vote, then obviously the voices of the students will be louder at the polls. A strong voice is mandatory if the students want help from elected officials. For too long, apathy has dominated the KU campus. For too long, students have held too little influence in issues important to them. And for too long, nothing has been done about it. Although 1980 is an election year, political activity on the KU campus has been relatively minimal this fall. At times, groups have sat at tables and talked to passing students. Yet on the whole, most students have remained inactive and disinterested. Perhaps ASK's efforts will provide some kind of spark in the student population. Whatever the results, ASK members and volunteers deserve a pat on the back. 'Marijuana Mike's' new role unlikely to cause policy shift The news no doubt drew sneers from conservatives all over Lawrence. Mike Glover"—"Marijuana Mike," the leftwing Democrat during his days in the Kansas Legislature—had been appointed Lawrence's new city prosecute. Gasp! After all, Glover admitted in 1977 that he ignored the law and used pot regularly. Instead he relished a drink from a café where he got home after the officer. Glover was likely to up a joint. Marijuana was his cocktail, He repeatedly fought for the decriminalization BLAKE GUMPRECHT of marijuana during his four terms in the Legislature. One newspaper, in reporting Glover's appointment on Friday, printed a picture in which the young man was depicted. But those who have been concerned that the new city prosecutor might turn Lawrence into Berkeley East can return to their Lawrence Wekr relics and William F. Buckley essays. Glover's appointment as city prosecutor isn't likely to bring any noticeable change in city policies. First off, Glover says, the city prosecutor is not responsible for enforcing any violations of drug laws. They are handled at higher levels of jurisdiction and are exclusive with city ordinances and local laws. The city prosecutor, furthermore, has little political influence in Lawrence. In fact, Glover's predecessor, Colt Knutson, also was known as a liberal. Besides, the majority of the cases that require the services of the city prosecutor are nickle-and-dime cases with 15-minute trials that draw little attention. Most of the prosecutor's court work involves traffic cases—speeding, driving while under the influence and the like. As Glover says, "If someone's doing 40 miles an hour in a 28-mile (an hour) zone, it doesn't make much difference if the prosecutor is liberal or conservative." If the Lawrence City Commission were to pass a proposed ordinance that would prohibit the sale of drug paraphernalia in the city, he said, he'd enforce it as any other law. "Obviously I have an opinion on it, and if the city commission asks me what I think, I'll tell them," he said. "But if they pass the ordinance, I'm try to enforce it. That's my job." But Glover hasn't听 his principles for $17,500 a year. He simply looks at this job as the chance to get the courtroom experience he needs to take himself as the trial lawyer he's long wanted to be. He didn't accept the position with an "I'm going to change the world" attitude. He had no pretensions about it. a lawyer is only as good as the number of trials he 's had, "Glover said." You can't even be graded until you have had 23 trials. This will give you more time to get that experience quicker than any other job." Glover, 33, has had little courtroom experience. He first was elected to the state House of Representatives in 1972—two years after receiving his bachelor's degree from KU—but he didn't receive his law degree from Washburn University until last year. He resigned from the Legislature in December to join private practice in the tiny southeast Kansas town of Fredonia. Glover, though, didn't Fredonia and returned to Lawrence last month. Glover is back where he wants to be. He's lived in Lawrence for 27 years, first moving here in May 1956 when his father, who managed a Singer Sewing Machine store, was transferred here. Glover had lived in Wichita for the first nine years of his life. He figures to stay here a while. "This job will be invaluable for my future," he says. "It will help me develop a good relationship with the local judiciary, the bar and the police. That will be important later on." Glover doesn't plan on keeping the job of city prosecutor more than two years. Then he'd like to establish his own practice in Lawrence. He'd like to get back into politics eventually, but not for another five years or more. "To be honest, I've never really had any desire to be a city prosecutor," he says. "But some of the best criminal lawyers around got their experience and expertise as city prosecutors." The University Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should be typewritten, double-spaced and not exceed 500 words. They should include the writer's name, address and telephone number. If the writer is after school, let the teacher include the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. Letters Policy The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 689-460) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Second-class postage cost $15 for each student subscription and $35 for six months or $85 year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a $1 senior fee, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Klamath, Flint Hall. The University of Kansas Postmaster Editor Carole Beier Business Manager Elaine Stratner Managing Editor Cydel Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Jody Jeffrey Associate Campus Editor Jack Brown Assistant Campus Editor Mark Spencer, Don Munday, Cindy Whitmore Sport Education Associates Sports Editor Patti Arnold Entertainment Editor Kevin Mills Makeup Editors Ellen Iwamoto, Bob Schaud, Jennifer Robles Wire Editors Loe Winkelman, Tennese Chiefs Copy Chiefs Ellen Iwamoto, Gail Eggers, Tarmony Treynor Photographer Treynor Photographers Staff Photographers Ben Bigen, Konica Bonn, Scott Cooker, Dave Kraus, Drew Tortres Columnists Amy Holwell, Ted Lacksig, Bill Menenez, Brett Conley, Scott Paust, Fred Markham, Cameron McGrawker, Joe Barton Advertisement Cartoonists John Jinks, Michael Waugh, Chris Wendt Staff Writers Chuck Howland, Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Kevin Koster National Sales Manager Campbell Sales Manager Barb Light Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Weedcott Staff Artist Judy Seller Photographer Brian LeWinke Postal Assistant Brian LeWinke Tearsheets Manager Barb Speehr Sales representatives Bindy Kleinberg, Amelie Cornet, Terri Fryer Larry Leibengard, Paul O'Connor, Paula Schwiber, Bill Robert Thaine Sheter, Anthony Tilson, Kay Wisecup, Susan Birchingham General Manager and News Adviser Kenan Adverse Chick Crownn WUNSCH '80 The press really ensures fair trials! Free press means freedom for all To see Anthony Lewis speak on the relationship of the press and the courts is also to see the melding of the minds of a court reporter and judge. Lewis, a columnist for the New York Times, covered the Supreme Court for the Titles for 12 years and came away with some opinions his own. Some of them are not favorable to the Court. The issue of 'Free Press vs. Fair Trial' has been jaunted about in recent years, with the press using the First Amendment to defend itself and the Sixth to ensure the rights of a defendant. Last Thursday at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo., Lewis chided the press for standing up for its own perceived interests while ignoring the interests of defendants. Specifically, Lewis attacked the press' contention that it has reporter-source confidentiality in court cases. In several recent cases, reporters or their notes have been subpoenaed by courts to draw out the facts of a case. Reporters cry foul and say, in certain cases, that sources gave them the information with the understanding that the reporter would keep the information secret. Lewis disagrees with those reporters. He says reporters should have reputations as trustworthy citizens to uphold to the courts and quotes Shakespeare: "Who steals my purse I steal your purse," he says, "who he steals my name, steals my dityum." should have the same rights and responsibilities as the public. The crux of his argument is that the press Because, in effect, the press performs a public service, the information it gathers is public information. Unlike lawyer-client and doctor-patient secrecy privileges, which are strictly private, the press' virtue of its public function, when, as when, a judge sees it, to release information to the court. Journalists respond with intemperance to such moves by judges. They say sources no longer will TED LICKTEIG PATRICK TAYLOR that reporters will muster the mounds and many judges deadpan that this is one of the sacrifices that must be made by the press for its public posture. By the same reasoning, Lewis contends, the press should not be treated differently than the public. What is known by the press through its ability to attend sessions of court also would be known by the rest of the public, so there should be no stimulation of the press concerning press access. Two recently decided cases of the Supreme Court, Gannett vs. DePasquale and Richmond Newspapers vs. the state of Virginia, addressed the question of press access to the courtroom. In the first case, Gannett argued that reporters had the privilege to attend all court sessions, and lost. In the second case, Richmond Newspapers argued that reporters were no different than ordinary citizens and had no special privilege of access, and won. The press saw the two cases as contradictory, but saw hope because of the Richmond newspapers' victory. But the top policy-making body for the federal judiciary, the Judicial Conference of the United States, decided that the intent of the Gannett ruling—to deny access to an individual hearing—still would be in effect, and that the opinions issued under the Richmond newspapers case would be used when deciding whether to close entire trials. This clearly is bad news for the press. But the guidelines did allow attorneys to comment to the press after a conviction, but before a trial. The courts, especially the Supreme Court, should realize that the press' interests and the public interest are the same. The due process clause of the Sixth Amendment should not preclude pre-trial publicity. It also is a mistake to allow lower court judges, who may have grudges against the local press, to interpret such vague clauses as, "reasonable likelihood" when determining whether pre-trial publicity would hurt the fair trial process. Letters to the Editor KU Student Senate offers many benefits To the editor. On Sept. 22, Bill Meneses wrote another one of those daily editorials attacking Student Senate. One very interesting point he made was "The notion that those programs (the ones Student Senate funds) could not be operated by any organization other than Student Senate, and still contain suitable student representation, is ludicrous." To me, the Student Senate Treasurer, this statement creates a great deal of interest. It is obvious that the editorial writers and the students do not realize the many uses of their Student Activity Fees. At this time I would describe a few of the uses and extend a formal invitation to the Student Senate office (B105 Kansas Union) if they would like a complete breakdown. For those of you who have ever participated in an intramural activity you may have wondered why the cost is so cheap considering the cost of maintaining the fields, the fields themselves, as well as the referees. Better yet, the next time you answer the question how it is able to stay open these late hours. The answer to both of these questions—Student Senate to the tune of more than $10,000. I'm intright amazing that any KU student can go to a University play or to a program put on by the University Concert Series and/or the Chamber Music Series FREE or for a very little charge (usually a quarter)—Student Senate comes to the rescue again! Have you ever wondered where the funds for the award-winning programs such as KU Bands and KU Fonercies come from? — The University? — WRONG it comes from Student Senate. It goes to the university radio station — KIHK? They receive more than 90% of their funding from Student Senate. If you have a problem that requires an attorney you can always go to the Student Senate funded and run Legal Services Program. It is the only legal service program available at KU. Are you aware that KU is one of the few campuses in the United States that has a student-run bus system? A system that only students must not administration--thank you, Student Senate. The only lobbying group KU has—Associated Students of Kansas—receives its funding through Senate, a move even the Kansan has endorsed. This letter is an attempt to inform the students of only a small amount of things Senate does for them. It is saddening to think that most students don't know this, but Senate really cannot afford to advertise on a regular basis. But perhaps the Kansan can help lessen student apathy by making them more aware of the many programs Senate offers. Finally, let's not forget about our luxurious student newspaper! The Senate direct funnels in more than $73,000 to the Kansan—where would the Kansan be without Student Senate? If what Menezes says could challenge him and the Kansan to return the $73,000 plus to the Senate and do what Menezes says could be done—find it some place else. Obviously, this is not to say the Student Senate has made any difference in this example that students will realize Senate has a great deal of impact on student affair. "The Student Senate is empowered to formulate such rules and regulations as it shall deem wise and proper for the government of the University." Those simple words extracted from the AF Studen comm servi some merg Senate doing OK job Bu I appreciate the efforts of Student Senate. Bren Abbott To the editor: Wh Chine Assoc from is com V the preamble of the Student Senate Rules and resolutions reflect the fact that the Senate is a friend. Despite this obvious fact, all we hear today is squabbling from the Kansan about every move made by this organization. They consistently cut down members, refute policies, and inflate problems while never advocating counter proposals. Sure, everyone would like to play God, but that doesn't solve anything. We are all on the same side, so let's act that way. There is no room for armchair quarterbacks. Let's drop the editorial paper and look at the accomplishments of our Senate. Such deeds include funding some 75 clubs, protecting and preserving student rights, coordinating and supplying cultural events, providing non-varsity and intramural sports, overlooking and adoring the athletics program, adopting a transportation, insuring higher quality education, and the list continues. If you still put down the Senate, let's stop and imagine a campus without it. We would live in an environment void of student representation, void of student opportunities and privileges, and laden with problems. In short, a dictatorial setting. Do you want that? I don't. It's comical to see newspapermen and critics deflating and demoralizing policies and candidates for their shortcomings, only to see them succeed by the task of solving those problems arises. I believe Greg Snackne and Matt Davies are doing an admirable job in unusually tense situations. Their decisions are sometimes unpopular, but necessary to insure a more stable future. They do duo-preserve legislative body. If anything, the duo deserve a pat on the back, not a kick in the seat. Jim Ramsbottom Belleville freshman University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 Page 5 Budget From page 1 AFTER AN INVESTIGATION of the Chinese Student Association and the Formosan Club, the committee decided there was duplication of services, but because of the antagonism between some members of each group, they could not merge realistically. Court, and the process d not stake have such when would While both organizations are open to all Chinese students, the Chinese Student Association is comprised mostly of students from different colleges and universities. The composition club is composed mainly of students from Taiwan. today is move tly cut inflate counter The committee voted to fund the Chinese Student Association for $272 with the intention that it be shared with the Formosan Club—a group of students we have agreed to, according to the committee. at the deeds ing and ing and avarsity dvising tran-ication, The committee will meet at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday to scholarship Hall to continue final deliberations. The Senate also announced last night that it did not find duplication of services between the Latin American Club and the Latin American Solidarity Club. The first, the committee said, is primarily concerned with cultural issues, while the second, with Latin American economic and social issues. top and live in an on, void ies, and statorial THE COMMITTEE also said it did not find application of services between the Accounting Center and the Office. critics and cancee them those Carol贝尔, editor of the University Daily press and co-chair of the Kansan's bureau to clarify the case (for $250). levils are tense un- more isitative it on the bottom reshman The Kansan has discontinued its subscription to the Assisted Press wire service because of its failure to maintain the Kansan's subscription. commercial rate. The Kansan is requesting money to cover the cost of upgrading its United Press International wire service and adding the Angeles Times/Washington Post news service. Ginsberg From page 1 These poems were written in 1976 during the last year of his father's battle with cancer. He also sang "Father Death Blues," a song he wrote while dying home from Boulder, Celo, and New York. In "Don't Grow Old," Ginsberg pointed out the concept of ordinary breathing, different from the type of breathing and voice inflection he had used in his reading of other poems. Ordinary breathing involves normal breathing while the other involves using more voice inhalation. Before reading "Mind Breaths" Ginberg gave the audience a brief lesson in the art of breathing. He said the audience would be able to understand the poem only if they tried restful meditation. The audience sat on the edge of their chairs, backs straight, and concentrated only on breathing, after which Ginsberg made his final presentation of the night. Ginsberg and novelist William Burroghs will perform in a show tonight at 9 p.m. at the L.A. Opera. THE DANGER OF ALLOWING salaries to lag behind, Conard said, is the possibility of highly qualified faculty moving out of the university community. From page 1 "The Regents are aware of the fact that faculty will deteriorate if salaries are too low," he said. Faculty Conard said that at a few years ago a three-year supply of faculty salaries was propelled by the Bergene Because the Regents universities were losing associate and assistant professors, the Regents requested a 10 percent salary increase for three years, he said. The Legislature approved the increase for the first two years, Conard said, and almost approved the entire 10 percent increase for the last year of the program. KU's peer institutions are the University of Colorado, the University of Iowa, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Oregan and the University of Oklahoma. ALTHOUGH THE PROGRAM aided the faculty, it did not completely correct the salary disparity between KU faculty and similar institutions' faculties, he said. In addition to faculty salary differences, the benefit Laweon show that tinge benefits for eligible faculty have been shown. Peer institutions were chosen by the Regents because of similar programs, traditions and size. THE REGENTS HAVE requested a salary increase in the annual benefit increase two percent for fiscal year 1982. But Worth said any effort by University The former dean of the School of Business, Joseph A. Pichler, left the University last year for a job with the Dillon Co. of Hutchinson for about triple his KU salary, Conard said. He said that the Regents request would mean an increase in faculty pay, but that it would not make up the differences between KU's salaries and its peer institutions' salaries. faculty to increase salaries would have to be concentrated on fiscal year 1983. "I'm also sure it will not keep up with inflation," he said. The report also showed that the average income of faculty members was below that of other students. BUT IF KU DOES not achieve that equality, it is possible that faculty members will form "Regents faculty members experienced a decrease in their purchasing power during the 1970s" while the average per capita income in the United States was about $28,000 increase in purchasing power," the report said. THE LACK OF purchasing power may be one reason KU faculty have been lured into private education. Faculty received up to $4,290 less than professionals doing comparable jobs in the field. Thirteen faculty members have left KU for positions at other universities or in private institutions. Lawrence Rose, FacEx member, said that although a union was not supported by some faculty, the situation was forcing a union to organize. The possibility of a union is not in the University's near future, he said, but it eventually may come to that. "I think women's basketball is hindered by the size of the ball and the height of the basket," she said. "Now it is more geared towards males than females." "It's forcing faculty to organize a union to get the kinds of benefits groups can receive only from you we've got that kind of pay." We want that kind of pay. "We're being forced to see that is the way it could go." Washington said she thought that the program was improving and that more money was a way to keep it going. "This is the first year we been able to offer '12 full-ride scholarships,' she said. "We've been very fortunate to do so well in the national team, which has 80 percent of our athletes on full scholarship." Women ONE IMPORTANT way to increase interest would be to make some rule changes nationwide to better accommodate women's basketball, Washington said. From page 1 However, the rules have yet to be changed, and money is still in short supply, so for the time being it looks as if KU will have to continue to play men's basketball and football (or revenue). ADMIRAL CAR RENTAL 2340 ALABAMA 843-2931 Thursday Night At ICHABOD'S OLYMPIA BEER OLY BEER NIGHT CANS 50c PRINCE: shirts, hats, frisbees, posters and a Grand Prize. 1/3 4 Miles North Of The Kew River Bridge check weekday specialists ATTENTION VETERANS I like serving in the Air Force. For me, it is a rewarding and challenging career. After 4 years active duty, I chose to continue my education and prepare myself for a commanding role at Kansan Air Force Base, the University of Kansas and Air Force POTC. In four years, I'll be commissioned as a Second Luteenant and resume my active Air Force career. Since I'm a Freshman and not under contract to the ROTC program, I'm able to continue my Air Force career on a part-time basis as a Staff Sergeant assigned to the 442nd Tactical Airlift Wing (Res) at Richards-Gebaur AFB, Mo. Air Force ROTC is helping me achieve my goal. May it could help you achieve yours. Connie French, KU Freshman FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: AFROTC 108 Military Science Phone 864-4676 AIR FORCE ROTC Gateway to a great way of life. Tonight -1 night only "Johny" featuring John Schlitt former lead singer for HEAD EAST Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Janet Jameson G. P. Loyd's West 925 Iowa, Below J. Watson's Level 2, Main Union, Satellite Shop, Satellite Union ROCK ROLL SMART BUYS IN SMART BOOKS SMART BUYS IN SMART BOOKS SALE! $ .99 $1.99 $2.99 Save 60-90% LESS THAN PUBLISHER'S PRICES Level 3, Main Union HISTORY SOCIOCIOLOGY ART ECONOMICS PHILOSOPHY MATHEMATICS EDUCATION SCIENCE HEALTH SPEECH LEAW ECOLOGY TRAVEL POLITICAL SCIENCE RELIGION BUSINESS MEDICAL ENGINEERING LITERATURE PSYCHOLOGY LANGUAGES MUSIC MORE, MORE, MORE CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF EXCITING BOOKS OREAD BOOK SHOP BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES We are the ONLY bookstore that shares its profits with KU students. COPY WARS ENCORE STRIKES BACK 3¢ Copies • 8½ x 11 Regular • Free Call Encore Copy Cops Lawrence Kansas - Highest Quality ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa—Holiday Plaza 842-2001 University Daily Kansan, September 30. 1980 1 Pockets special treat on bill of fare Mary Klayder makes the transition to Pockets in her apartment before going to the Country Inn. N.Y.C. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Pockets entertains a child by drawing her favorite animal M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. G. M. S. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. M. Pockets rests for a few minutes while waiting for more customers to arrive. Photos and story by KARI ELLIOTT In restaurants one often sees waitresses, cooks, steaming plates of fried chicken and mashed potatoes, dirty dishes and a clown. Pockets, also known as Mary Klayder, Lawrence graduate student, does not perform on a stage but goes from table to table doing magic tricks, drawing animals and talking to the customers. A clown? Well, yes, at least at the Country Inn, 1350 N. Third St., where Pockets the Clown entertain customers each Sunday. Pockets entertains both children and adults, but children 4 to 8 years old are the best age because they are willing to make believe, Klaider said. Tony Cozzi, Country Inn's manager, said customers' reactions to Pockets had been positive. peter “I'm very happy having Pockets at the restaurant. She is well-liked; everybody appreciates her,” he said. Pockets' magic consists of simple, sleight-of-hand illusions. The emphasis in the magic is on involving the spectators, Klavier said. One key to clowning is establishing a relationship. Once a connection has been made, the child is less intimidated, she said. But with this openness, the child may blurt out personal family situations to Pockets. "When I was working in Kansas City, one kid said, 'My sister had to get married.' Another time a boy said, 'My dad beat me before we came here,' " she said. Before working in Kansas City, Klayder was a clown at several pizza restaurants in Denver. She learned magic tricks from her husband, Jim, whom she calls one of the top sleight-of-hand magicians in the United States. He was a full-time magician in Kansas City from 1975 until this past summer. Now he is assistant manager at the Country Inn. Klayder has been clowning for seven years, but it has been only a part-time job. During her five years of performing in Kansas City, she was a full-time English teacher at Barstow School and later at Park Hill North Junior High School. "I don't treat clowning lightly. I want the relationship to be a good and positive experience," she said. In both clowning and teaching, Klayder said she wanted to establish a relationship in which the child was not frightened. During her performing and teaching, Klayder emphasizes the importance of allowing the child to make the decision. She said parents often expected snap decisions from their children. "I ask the kid how old he is, and almost immediately one parent will answer," Klayder said. "This is my pet peeve—parents who talk for their kids and don't let them think and communicate." In addition to her clowning, Klayder is a graduate assistant in the School of Education, and she supervises language arts student teachers. She is completing her master's degree in English education and later may go back to the classroom or into teacher education. "As for clowning, I guess I'll do that forever," she said. "I can't imagine not being Pockets. It just doesn't go away when the makeup comes off." 1 University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 Page 7 Programs lend helping hands By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter "Compulsive, Eating," "Feminist Spirituality" and "The New Maleness" may be the titles of some of the student groups to be formed tonight at a Helping Ourselves meeting in the Kansas Union. The purpose of the Helping Ourselves program is to encourage the formation of support groups that deal with women's and men's issues, according to Barbara Ballard, director of the University Resource Center, one of the program's sponsors. "The primary focus of the program is women, but Helping Ourselfs is also an opportunity for men to get together and work to better understand women's issues or to discuss their relationships with women," she said. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room. A panel of speakers will present information on how to organize and lead support groups. The members of the audience then will divide into two on the basis of their interests, Ballard. Other suggested group topics include male-female relationships, lesbian support, bisexual support, ending and art and consciousness raising. BALLARD SAID EACH group would be responsible for determining its own goals and format. Group members will decide when and where to meet, how often to meet and whether to have a specific leader, she said. A recorder from each group will be asked to submit a summary of the group's activities to the Resource Center after the group has disbanded, and we will keep a file on what type of groups were formed and how long they met. ACCORDING TO Adrienne Christiansen, president of the Commission on the Status of Women, women's support groups were active in the early 1970s, but have since become less prominent. "There's a whole new bunch of women who haven't had the experience of being in a support group," she said. "Helping Ourselfs was started last week." Christiansan said she was in a consciousness raising group of about 10 year in answer to those women interested in being part of a group." THE GROUP DEALT with both personal and political issues and convinced many of its members to join other campus women's groups, she Men's Coalition is an organizational group that promotes "the emotional and cognitive development of men," he said. John Macchietto, a member of Men's Coalition, said he hoped the meeting would include men who were interested in joining support groups. Other groups sponsoring the program are Women's Coalition, Women's Studies, KU-Y and the KU Information Center. Members of the local news media will The officer, who was riding a bicycle, was not injured. The debate will be at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. SUA to hold candidate debate Republican Rep. Larry Winn and his Democratic challenger Dan Watkins aided by former candidate debate on Oct. 31, Ken DeSieghardt, SUA forum chairman, said yesterday. John K. Harper, 18, Wichita, was charged with aggravated assault and two traffic violations in connection with the shooting which was released Saturday on $15,600账款. ask the candidates questions, DeSiehardt said. A 3-YEAR-OLD Topeka boy was listed in critical condition in the pediatricians intensive care unit of Stormont-Vail Hospital in Topeka yesterday, suffering from head injuries and a broken leg he received when he reportedly ran into a street and was hit by a car vested dav afternoon. officer was able to get the car's license number, and the car was traced to "There are a lot of KU students who are registered in the 3rd District," Mr. Muller said. An 18-year-old KU student was arrested Saturday morning after he allegedly ran a KU police officer off the road. Lawrence police said the boy, Christopher Ramirez, Topeka, was with his grandfather on the New York street where he worked. And New Jersey streets in Lawrence. At about 1:15 a.m., Harper allegedly crossed the right-hand lane and headed toward the officer, who was riding on left-hand side of the road, police said. The debate will be the only chance many students have to hear the candidates, he said. According to police, an officer found a stolen bicycle and decided to ride it to the station to turn it in rather than try to load it in his car. As the two were leaving, the boy darted onto New Jersey Street and was hit by a car. The officer noticed the car, police said, and jumped on the bicycle. The On the Record LAWRENCE POLICE are looking for two suspects in connection with a THE CASTLE TEA ROOM Sunday morning knife assault on a 26-year-old Oklahoma City man. The man was treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital and released. phone: 843-1151 Police said one of the men allegedly pulled a knife and stabbed the hitchiker in the ribs. According to police, the man was hikking along N. Second Street and the Union Pacific overpass at 3:30 a.m. he got on a car stopped and two men go out. Police said both men got back in the car and drove away. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Granada Downtown 843-9788 Hopscotch 7:30 & 9:30 R Varsity Downtown 843-1065 The Big Red One 7:15 & 9:15 Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400 1 Resurrection 7:30 & 9:30 PG 2 Caddyshack 7:20 & 9:20 R 3 Fame 7:15 & 9:30 1 2001 Space Odyssey 7.15 & 9.45 2 Dressed to Kill 7:30 & 9:30 Police said they had no suspects. TONIGHT !Rare Event! WRITER POET WILLIAM BURROUGHS will read from their works with POET ALLEN GINSBERG THE THUMBS Adm $4.00 At The Door Only TOMORROW NIGHT THE ELVIN BISHOP BAND —with— LARRY RASPBERRY and the HIGHSTEPPERS $7.50 Advance Tickets Tickets Still Available At The SUA Box Office the Secret FRIDAY & SATURDAY Great Rock With THE SECRETS with THE MORELLS Something New From The Old Symptoms Adm. $2.50 Club Members $2.00 Coming Events OCTOBER OCTOBER 10 JUMMY JE LUMMY VALENTINE And The HEARTMURMURS 11 LYNCH & MCBEEN BAND 11 CLARENCE "GATEMOUTH" BROWN 17/18/19 BLUE RIDDIM BAND 20 JOHN COUGAR 30 KU JAZZ "LAB BANDS" NOVEMBER 2 SPLIT ENZ Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House Spirit house We'll supply all of the materials you need to get started. There's no cost to you. FOR STUDENTS ONLY Join the NEWSWEEK Team! Become a NEWSWEEK Campus Representative. ELE EARN CASH ON CAMPUS - Distribute special student offer cards for NEWSWEEK and INSIDE SPORTS magazines c/o NEWSWEEK Education Program The Newsweek Building 444 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10022 (212) 350-2697 You'll earn generous commissions and bonuses all school year when you If you're interested, send us a note or call us - Distribute product information and posters from our advertisers We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts Watching Your Weight? Hillcrest Medical Center JOHN TO WIN AT THE VISION GAME DIET CENTER 841-DIET "It's a Natural" Save up to 4.00 off film developing (coupon must be presented with film when left for processing) 12 Exposures 110 or 126 Kodacolor Print Film Developed and Printed, now only $1.99 20 or 24 Exposures 110 or 126 Kodacolor Print Film Developed and Printed, now only $3.49 QUICK-STOP PHOTO-SHOP 711 West 23rd The Malls Shopping Center Offer expires Oct.10,1980 841-2778 KODAK-FILM SOCIAL STOP PHOTO SHOP ONE DAY PHOTO FINISHING abil's restaurant The Super Special is Here! NO PARK Nabil's is featuring these Super Specials *SAL & EFFICIENCY IN DINING* *SINCERNELITY IN DINING MATERIALS* *SUWANHAYA TIMECHARGE* 8 & 9TH FEMALE FROM 6:30 AM TO 10:00 PM 8 & 9TH FEMALE FROM 6:30 AM TO 10:00 PM 8 & 9TH FEMALE FROM 6:30 AM TO 10:00 PM Wed: Baked Spinach Parmesan Thurs: Beef ala Turue this week only for $4.75: Tues: Chicken Stroganoff Wed: Seafood Sandoch Parmeson Thurs: Beef ala Turque And these for only $6.00: Fri: Coq au Vin Sat: Roast Tenderloin with Bernaise sauce and mushrooms Ask for Tonight's Super Special and Enjoy! --- THESIS BINDING XEROX COPYING THE PLACE YOUR GRANDFATHER AND YOUR FATHER HAD THEIR THESIS BOUND SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS IT IS PERMANENT BINDING—DOES NOT FALL APART WITH USAGE Old World Quality Handwork Quality leather-like material, closely woven fabric base with Pyroxylin coating. Recommended standard material for use in the school annual and thesis binding industry. CHOICE OF COLORS: Black Maroon Navy Blue GOLD FOIL STAMPING ON COVER AND SPINE OF BOOK FAST DELIVERY OF FINISHED WORK, 4 DAYS OR LESS GUARANTEED OUR CUSTOMERS RECOMMEND US SPECIAL SERVICES AVAILABLE - pockets for maps or engineering drawings - built-up layers to allow for thickness of photographs - stitched binding - processing of mail orders, delivery to Post Office, no charge - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge - delivery of mail orders to major department, no charge OUR CUSTOMERS COME BACK FOR SECOND We offer special "combination discount" if we make the Xerox copies for you. Yes, that's right, a lower total cost if we do the Xerox copies for you. Visit our modern plant at 512 East 9th and see samples of our work. All work guaranteed. 512 EAST 9th St. at New Jersey 843-4600 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 A. C. D. Bailey still fails fire code test A state fire inspection officer said yesterday that fire code violations on the fourth floor of Bailey Hall found by two fire inspectors last week were the same violations the state fire marshal's office found there last February. The officer, Paul Markley, said the two inspectors acted on a letter from a person complaining of fire hazards on Balley's fourth floor. He said that the inspector had instructed the curate and that the fire inspection office had written a letter last February WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES Markley said the violations included blocked fire exits, locked fire doors and hanhazardly scattered papers. to the KU facilities and operations department ordering that the violations be corrected. The University of California, Los Angeles WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES The Birds of Patagonia - Dr. Phillip S. Humphrey Director, Museum of Natural History University of Kansas October 1 7:30-9:00 P.M. $1.50 Museum of Natural History, Dyche Hall Tom Anderson, director of facilities and operations, said yesterday that he had been director for only 30 days and was unable to send it to the hotel last February. Markley said he would send another letter to the department this week. Road to be closed for construction Part of Sunnyside Avenue, the street that runs east and west in front of Robinson Gymnasium, will be closed Thursday through Saturday because of construction, a spokesman from KU parking services said yesterday. The street will be closed from Sunflower Road to Illinois Street beginning Thursday morning and ending Monday at noon, the parking official said. Drivers wanting to go west on Sunnyside Avenue can gain access to it by going west on 17th Street and turning right on Illinois Street. The parking official said access to J zone parking lot would not be affected by the construction. Mention the word "Midwest" on the East or West coasts and people conjure images of a distant land in the Atlantic, Ronald Reagan is not far behind. Survey defines Midwest stereotype By BRAD STERTZ Staff Reporter In the eyes of the East or West coast beholder, middle America is the seat of ultraconservatism and the home of rural homeowners who would make the somber couple in Grant Wood's painting, "American Dream," unbearable to stake the committee at a positive-thinking convention. A portrayal of the Midwest as a skyline of steeps, hoeatsacks and slos is a stereotype that James Shortridge, associate professor of geography, found common in all areas outside the Midwest. SHORTRIDGE HAS DONE a study to find out what and where college students thought the Midwest was. In surveys with 3,000 students in 31 states, Shortridge found that most saw the Midwest as almost exclusively rural and confined solely to the Great Plains. "In the academic sense, the Midwest is not all corn- or wheatproducing, but is also industrial because it is theoretically centered on Illinois and Indiana," Shortridge said. "However, most of the people surveyed saw the Midwest as beginning in Missouri and Iowa and ending in Kansas and Nebraska, thereby giving the area its rural image." Shortridge said he found that students viewed the Midwest as the most American section of America. He also found in his survey that people used terms such as rural, agricultural, small-town, friendly and conservative to describe the region. what I expected to find was a degree of ignorance about the diversity of the area, and I did," Shortrice said. "I've run into people who thought of the Midwest as being totally dry, flat and dusty," McNellis said. "But I think Karasas is as pretty as just about any other state, with things such as the Flint Hills to offer." A KANSAS resident all his life, John McNellis, Lawrence junior, said he could see several minicons- tries in the area and had about Kansas and the Midwest. Because people view it as an old-fashioned rural area, Shortridge said, the Midwest has gained an overly conservative image. But in the future, Shortridge said, he sees the Midwest's image undergoing a "positive revival" in which urban residents will prefer the openness of the area over the crime and congestion of the cities. GETTING USED TO a more relaxed lifestyle was difficult for city dwellers such as Jim Verdrio, Queens, Queens, an artist, who is raised at the real differences between people in Kansas and New York. "I expected some differences, but what I saw was a totally strange environment from the one I had been in back east," Verdrame said. "I felt like I had and having people actually walk up and say hold to me on the streets." Eddie Bishop, Millinocket, Maine, senior, said he expected Kansas to be a good deal more conservative than New England. "People's viewpoints out here as compared to back home are much less liberal. Back east, subjects like nuclear energy draw much more interest in them than those like liquor by the drink still being debated, whereas in the east, such issues were settled in the 1800s," Bishop said. Neighborhood plant tries to preserve historical district Seventh Street through Central Park from Kentucky to Tennessee streets could be closed permanently if a comprehensive plan for Old West Lawrence is accepted by the city commission next week. The Old West Lawrence Neighborhood Association voted Thursday night to approve the plan, developed by the city's Youth Staff and association representatives. "Our focus was to control the flow of traffic around the neighborhood." Dennis Constance, association president, said. Residents of the neighborhood, which extends from Kentucky to Michigan streets and from Sixth to Ninth streets, will have until Sunday to register complaints or suggestions with the planning staff. Approximately seven blocks of the neighborhood are registered with the state historical society as a "historical district." The plan asks for more trees to shield the houses from traffic pollution and noise. The plan also asks for tennis courts, more play equipment and more trees for Central Park. SUPPORT A WINNER The plan will be considered by the city commissioners next Tuesday if no significant changes are made. GEORGE BRETT FOR PRESIDENT bumper stickers available at the If the commissioners approve the plan, it will be used by the Commission and the planning staff as a guideline in land uses and future development. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crewton Road, B34 3826 Melbourne, Australia Tel: (03) 9547 8500 It's COORS' LITE ★ WEIGHT Night at the HARBOUR LITES Tuesday, September 30 40c 6-8 p.m. Count your pennies 50 $ ^{c} $ 8-10 p.m. 60° 10-12 p.m. Count your pennies while you're counting calories! HAIR ADVENTURES Formerly Fantastic Sams Mon Fri 9-6 Sat 9-5 Tues Wed Thurs 9-8 Our name has changed but our professional - adult style $12.00 - perm $40.00 - Henna Lucent $20.00 - luminize $20.00 - color $26.00 staff is still the same. We - luminate $20. (includes cut) still honor coupons for $2 off from the People Book. 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Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTELRESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAILPASSES TRAVELINSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS KANSAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 Watch for the Buffalo! Time Out Terrible Tuesday at the Beat the Tuesday Blues and get there early or you'll lose. SPECIAL PITCHER PRICES TONIGHT 9-10 p.m. $1.50 8-9 p.m. $1.25 10-12 p.m. $1.75 take TIME OUT TIME OUT 2408 IOWA NEW BEER SPIRITS WINE BENNETT Retail Liquor DISCOUNTS 9TH STREET CENTER Next to How In Wall BILLING ST. to have a good time. Next to Hole in Wall 846 ILLINOIS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 8420722 THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $2.00 OFF ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Mon.-Sat. Sept. 29-Oct. 4 Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer THE NEW YORKER DINO ITALIAN PIZZA IS THERE LIFE AFTER MACHO? Find Out At The MEN'S COALITION MEETING Wed. Oct. 1 - 7:30 p.m. Pine Room - Kansas Union For Further Info Contact John at 843-8267 or 841-4389 ViM Meisner Milstead Liquor Featureting one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza - PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL INFO• •FIELD TRIPS•GUEST SPEAKERS•MORE• ATTENTION PRE-PHYSICAL THERAPY STUDENTS FIRST MEETING: ORGANIZATION PLAN 1ST FIELD TRIP TOUR DEPT Thursday Oct. 2, 7:30 p.m. Watkins Hospital Cafeteria FUNDED BY STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center 1851 Grosse Pointe 172842 0801 presents OKTOBERFEST POLKA St. L. or -featuring- BRUCE PFIEFFER and his POLKA BAND *tickets* - tickets * $4.50 in advance $5.00 at the door OCTOBER 3 8:00-12:00 KANSAS UNION BALLROOM Beer, Pop. & Popcorn FREE! University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 Page 9 Scorecard Sports Calendar 7:35 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Seattle Mariners at Royals Stadium (KMZB AM. KKKX.FM) 5:30 p.m. - Volunteer team south of Missouri vs. Southwest Missouri at Springfield, Mo. 7:30 p.m. - Kansas City Royals vs. Seattle Mariners at MEMC KAKK-KFM FY - Men's golf team at Air College Athletic Institute in Colorado 5:00 p.m.-7:30 kpm. City State University at Royals Blvd. (MKEM) at Royals Blvd. (MKEM) Sports Quiz 3:30 p.m. Men's tennis team vs. Emory State University at Alten Field house courts 5:00 p.m. Men's cross country at Missouri Today's question— Q One man holds both the record for the longest pass interception return and the longest kickoff return. He set both records in the same season and still is. What record does he do is the man and in what year did he set the records? Thursday's answer— In 1977, KU beat Washington State, 14-12. The next year, Kansas upset UCLA, 28-24, and last season KU beat North Texas State, 37-18. All of the victories came in Memorial Stadium. The UPI Top 20 and records in parishheses. Auburn (38) (4) 604 Ohio State (38) 578 Nebraaska (38) 542 Southern Cal (34) 412 Texas (34) 425 Pittsburgh (34) 401 Norte de Georgia (34) 392 Georgia (4) 322 Missouri (34) 254 UCLA (34) 236 North Carolina (3-4) 196 Oklahoma (1-4) 124 Miami Fla. (1-4) 124 Penn State (3-4) 72 South Carolina (3-1) 72 Arkansas (3-1) 55 Stanford (3-4) 54 Florida Sk. (3-1) 53 Baylor (3-4) 52 Florida (3-4) 25 NEW YORK (UPI)—The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 college ratings after four weeks, with first-piece wins East W 99 L 57 Pct. GB New York 99 97 438 638 Baltimore 92 61 611 611 Montreal 89 72 534 18 Milwaukee 83 75 527 17 Detroit 81 74 318 17 Chicago 77 78 419 21 Toronto 74 92 412 35 A AMERICAN LEAGUE Major-league Baseball | | W | L | Pct | GB | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 92 | 64 | 590 | 12 | | Oakland | 80 | 74 | 510 | 18 | | Texas | 73 | 82 | 474 | 18 | | Chicago | 66 | 88 | 425 | 22 | | California | 65 | 98 | 378 | 23 | | Total | 509 | 397 | 1478 | 33 | Baltimore (Flanagan 15-13) at Boston (Renko 4-8) 6:30 p.m. Onkland (Keough 18-13) at Chicago (1 front 8-19), 7:30 p.m. Detroit (Wilcox 13-11) at Toronto (Todd 4-1), 6:30 Today's Games Baltimore (Flanagan 13-13) at Boston (Renko p.m. New York (Tiant B-9) at Cleveland (Waits 12-14). 6:35 p.m. Oakland (Klein 18-13) at Chicago (Trout 8-15) Seattle (Honeycutt 10-17) at Kansas City (Leonard 19-11), 7:35 p.m. Minnesota (Williams 5-2) at Texas (Clay 2-3), 7:35 p.m. W W L Pct GB Montreal 81 70 561 Philadelphia 86 70 561 Baltimore 82 70 561 St. Louis 72 85 462 New York 72 85 462 Newark 65 93 414 Philadelphia 65 93 414 23 % NATIONAL LEAGUE W 8 W L Pct GB Houston 87 87 361 24 Los Angeles 87 99 578 18 San Diego 85 73 316 8 Atlanta 80 75 316 8 San Francisco 83 62 417 18 Cleveland 81 62 417 18 Milwaukee (McClure 4-8) at California (Ferris 6-1) 9:30 p.m. 87,110 p.h. Chicago (McGlothen 11-13) at Philadelphia St. Louis (Forest 11-9) at Montreal (Gullickson 8,4) @ 5:20 p.m. 8-5), 6:35 p.m. San Diego, Cerritos 9:18) at Cincinnati (Price 6-3) Atlanta (Matula 11-13) at Houston (Ryan 10-9). 7:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Robinson 6-0) at New York (Falcone San Diego (Curta 9-8) at Cincinnati (Price 6-3) 7:05 p.m. Los Angeles (Reuss 16-7) at San Francisco (Hargesbeimer 4-6), 8:35 p.m. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one tie two ties three ties four ties six ties eight nine ten 15 min. forever $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6.00 $6.50 $8.00 $9.00 $10.00 $11.00 $12.00 $13.00 $14.00 $15.00 $16.00 $17.00 $18.00 $19.00 $20.00 $21.00 $22.00 $23.00 $24.00 $25.00 $26.00 $27.00 $28.00 $29.00 $30.00 $31.00 $32.00 $33.00 $34.00 $35.00 $36.00 $37.00 $38.00 $39.00 $40.00 $41.00 $42.00 $43.00 $44.00 $45.00 $46.00 $47.00 $48.00 $49.00 $50.00 $51.00 $52.00 $53.00 $54.00 $55.00 $56.00 $57.00 $58.00 $59.00 $60.00 $61.00 $62.00 $63.00 $64.00 $65.00 $66.00 $67.00 $68.00 $69.00 $70.00 $71.00 $72.00 $73.00 $74.00 $75.00 $76.00 $77.00 $78.00 $79.00 $80.00 $81.00 $82.00 $83.00 $84.00 $85.00 $86.00 $87.00 $88.00 $89.00 $90.00 $91.00 $92.00 $93.00 $94.00 $95.00 $96.00 $97.00 $98.00 $99.00 $100.00 AD DEADLINES ERRORS to run Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday Wednesday 5 p.m. Perfect for 8 students. Close to bus route duplicates, carries and maintains all appl- liances. 2-3 hrs of travel. The Kaans will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Hillel קולט invites you to a . Bagels & Lox Brunch All You Can Eat! Sunday, Oct. 5 12:30 pm $2 for Hillel Members $4 for non-members Lawrence Jewish Community Center 917 Highland Dr. Hanover Place Townhomes Now Leasing Want to learn more about the Bible or fellowship groups? Visit www.saltbuffalo.org. p.Martinsburg, W.Va.; Salt Lake City, U.S.; The Salt Block 75c schooners of cold Coors every Monday at LOUSE'S BAR, 1089 Mass. ff ENTERTAINMENT These all new and contemporary townhouses are located between 14th and 15th on Kentucky St.; only 3 blocks from KU and downtown! Hanover Place offers 2 bedrooms with study area, 1/2 loft, openers, fully equipped kitchen, wall-to-wall, carpeting, window coverings, all this and more for only $395 per month. For more information call 841-1212 or 842-4855 a.m. 5.p.m. 3 Bedroom Townhouse Renting now! I1g You'll like it on the Upper East Side. Southern Parkway 100 West 42nd Street, Suite 100 Looking for something on Sunday's? TREY THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 LOUSE. 912-7. Open from 5 p.m. till 3 a.m. Memberships available. "Partying is our business." 9-30 Outdoor Rutter Skates. Mick's Bicycle Shop is closing out its entire stock of Jogger and Mountain Bike shoes, so if you need the financial retail price. If you thought you would be buying them now, your choices are all available but now is your chance. All sizes available but not priced. THE DEAL something you can't afford to purchase and Spring, 813-7097, 10-3 HORIZON is in the only Lawyer band to include both male and female vocals This weekend at Bot- ton's Music Hall. This week in Sunflower Calebethum's closest attendance, the 12th grade students at BACK HOME省将 national with the Fábrica Thunderbite Red Hot Rhyton剧 August Wed. & Fri. 6:30 p.m and Sat. 10:00 August Wed. & Fri. 6:30 p.m and Sat. 10:00 FOR RENT For rent, nice apt, for men, next to campus for a week's work out part of rent of Ref 841-4835 Apt. and rooms for rent. new remodeled building and downtown. New per- fice 814-500-6921 814-500-7931 3 barm townhouse, on KU bus route 8, 19th ave and tennis courts $400月费. 81-653-558 eff 3 bdm. township with burning freireace 16. 843-7233 Will take 5 students 2500 6. 843-7233 KUMC duplexes—newly refurbished 2 150-326-4178 210-326-4178 Beautiful housing! Call 913-381-2878 www.kumc.com For rent 3 bdm, apt., $290 a month, all season. Call 845-768-4485 from 8-5 forask for Jul Call 845-768-4485 from 8-5 forask for Jul 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt 3. kitchen/apt, and comfortable, comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 618-340-5555. For fall or spring, Naimith Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of an apartheid room. You can rent a service to clean your room and, bath, full schedule of activities looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you want, we can help you HALL, 1600 North Main St., Naimith Hall Graduate student needs person to share two bdm house. $150 $1Utilities. No deposit. Near campus 2 Bdm. apt. Compatible for laptop 3 Bdm. apt. Compatible for 841-252, 841-579 up 6 p.m. 9-50 Sublease nice, clean one bdrm. apt. Willing to grant a single month rent security deposit 30%. One mile from Clinton Lake Martina and swimming beach—Two extra nine houses—big yards—Trees—Two berms—with chairs and barns—Barn two—with chairs and wood heat—748-9933 and 748-1058. 8-10 Near campus 2 bdm. apt. Also large single room 481-1601, evenings 843-9472, 843-1601, evenings 843-9472. New and contemporary 2-level duplex. Available immediately. 2 bdrms, study, garden, garage, office, garage, garage, centric unit. No pets. For more information call 812-4455 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 9-30 Spacious. 2 bdrm. apt. for 2 to 4 people. Large kitchen and downstairs. No pets. Phone 811-796-5000. Alternator, starter and generator specialists AUTOSPARK ELECTRIC 843-905-3600 $300 AUTOSPARK ELECTRIC 843-905-3600 Nice 1 & 2 bdrm. apts. Clean, on campus, all utilities paid. Semi-furnished $130/mon. Call 841-7653 Ask for Tom. APARTMENT FOR RENT (Cedarwood) phone 249-250 and ask for Suzan. 10-2 phone 249-250 and ask for Suzan. 72 Chevy Station Wagon $400 or best offer. Work. Call 814-461-466. 401 ill. jl. 10-8 SURGICAL PANTS—THE REAL THING, no more trying to steal them from the hospital; they are designed to be very comfortable. Colors are blue, green, red and yellow. The pay rate is $40 per day unconditional guarantee, if not COSTS, send them back. Medicare adds 4% taxes. mail tax, check money, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, letters, calls, FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them*1. As study makes sense to use them*.2. As study makes sense to use them*.3. As study makes sense to use them*.4. As study makes sense to use them*.5. As study makes sense to use them*.6. As study makes sense to use them*.7. As study makes sense to use them*.8. As study makes sense to use them*.9. As study makes sense to use them*.10. As study makes sense to use them*.11. As study makes sense to use them*.12. As study makes sense to use them*.13. As study makes sense to use them*.14. As study makes sense to use them*.15. As study makes sense to use them*.16. As study makes sense to use them*.17. As study makes sense to use them*.18. As study makes sense to use them*.19. As study makes sense to use them*.20. As study makes sense to use them*.21. As study makes sense to use them*.22. As study makes sense to use them*.23. As study makes sense to use them*.24. As study makes sense to use them*.25. As study makes sense to use them*.26. As study makes sense to use them*.27. As study makes sense to use them*.28. 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As study makes sense to use them*.852. As study makes New excellent quality bedding - orthopedic room furniture. Furiture. 100 New York St, 843- 217-9566. MATTHEW JERSEY, Orthopedic sets from $39. ALEXANDRA BURKE, Furniture set, one block west of 90 and Low- way E. Free to good homes 2 male kittens—12 wks Call: 641.9421281 after 5 p.m. 10-1 WATERBED MATTEESSES, $38.90, 3 year guarantee; WHITE LIGHT, 750. Mass. @ 45% CAR AND T V. 1972 Chevro. Nova Sikh elk- milion, 40 years old. Will sell for best of three years old. Bang and Olufsen Beovox S-75 speakers Absolute mint condition. 81-245. 10-19 off. 173 Chev. Monte Carlo. condition to cust. Just reainted. $1500 渍. Just reainted. 6-12 10-2 '66 VW Bug. Runs good. Call Borys 864- 3086. 9-30 Sacrifice -Low mileage 1974 Triumph 500 3284 4089 needies Very much minor repair. 4089 4089 needles Gibson Firebird elec. guitar, excellent condition. 841-1590 or 843-9573. 9-30 Golden retriever puppy 12 weeks, male, shorted, wormed, friendly and bai 841-588- 360 1980 Honda Hawk 400. Excellent condition. Must sell. Info: 841-9674. 10-2 Motobeele bicycle frame, nomade model Motobeele crank included, extremes Call 864-6933, extremes 10-3 LOOK! Motobike Grand Touring 12 speed motorcycle for racing. Mai 841-5637. Need money for racing bike Guitar. Yamaha FG-160, with case. Mint condition. Best offer over $150. 842-8229. evenings. T.I. 59 with printer, Master library, leisure large cards, and other extras. 334-684 334-684 1973 Triumph Spike, low miles, good condition $1500 $841.1790 10.3 Louis guitar. Good condition. Will sell for half price. Very cheap! Call 841-1634. 10-6 1975 B-21 DATSUN. 76 YAMAHA 650 and 1975 B-30 DATSUN. 84 dryer and dryer set. 842-2002, October 1. FOUND Found Charcoal-grey kitten with gold eyes behind Walt Library late Thursday Night. Call Jo at 749-5393. 10-2 HELP WANTED Quadriplease needs live in attendant. Room 16105. Employer: Fairchild. Equa- tion Opportunity Employer #43-21321. Sirlin Stakehouse is looking for peronable, teacher. Applicant must be a graduate of April 15th Iowa Street between 2-5 and 6th Avenue. Call 312-207-4294. Noon hours, Monday; Wednesday, Friday Monday; Thursday, 6 and 11am; Sunday, Maryland's Restaurant, 6 and 11am AIRLINES FLIGHT ATTENDANTS TICKET AGENTS RAMP & BAGGAGE PERSONNEL CUSTOMER SERVICE RESERVATIONS AGENTS CLERICAL POSITIONS individuals interested in applying with these airline companies must be career oriented, have a good knowledge of the job requirements, and be in good health. For further information on how to immediately apply directly to airlines, please visit www.aerolibrary.com. Major airlines are now hiring for the following op- Please indicate briefly your background, what positions you are interested in applying to and why you want to apply to that you may possess further information as to what steps to take so that possible interviews might be arranged by these airlines. All major employers are EQUAL, OPORTUNITY EMPLOYERS. 3885 SOUTH WASATCH BLVD. SUITE 101 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84109 LOST ATTEN: AIRLINES APPLICATION INFORMATION PROGRAMMER The University of Kansas Lawrence campus Office of information technology business management data processing professional on a basis of business applications development. The person selected will develop applications in developing COBOL systems with a focus on computer science and munifications skills. Knowledge of IBM, OS, MS, and UNIX programming will offer this individual excellent professional growth and career opportunities as well as a computer-wizard position in a computer-wizard business environment. Director of Information Systems, P.O. Box 2040, University System, P.O. Box 2040, University of Information Systems Wanted: Experienced House Painter. Stu- der's need: 10+ years of experience. Must be wil- illing to work at 20 hours 3.5-4.25 to Contact: Decorative Image Painter 841-6788 10-1 Needed: Nude female models for art classes. Nude female models inquiries only. Connie Chamber 866-4601. 10-1 THE JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK is looking for a short-term bookkeeper to work with students taking phone calls and scheduling appointments for senior students. Send resumes to Kim Bettel or Jim Adams for information. 10-3 Left 181 Concordia High School Class Class 215 Reward union return. Please phone 644-551-651 Reward union return. Please phone 644-551-651 Old female colleen, brown with white collar. Village tag (cpl.) Call 842-6891. 3d-1 REWARD Last my black loose leaf note 8-19 South of Allen Flat 814 - 649-661 GOLD WRSTWATCH black band, lot on body, metal earrings, gold medal metal value Engraving on back. REWAH belt buckle Engraving on back. NOTICE DRINK AND DROWN every Monday night $25 for dinner at McDonald's on 6th$10, $15, $20 $30 for lunch at McDonald's on 6th$10, $15, $20 NOTICE TO ALL MEMBERS OF THE MUNICIPAL BANK OF CHRISTINA membership card gets you $1.00 highbills all night long. Only at your place, the PLACE, "LOUISE WHERE "Partying is on" 9-30 The Wheel Breakfast Special! 9-12 Daily! Eggs, Bacon, Ham, Toast and Honey Brown Phil Carpenter from the U.S.G.S. will present a lecture entitled "Hydrological Aspects of May 18 Mt. Saint Helena Eruption" to 30 May 18 t in the *Apolina* room 10-1 Nichols Hall PERSONAL LOUISIE'S WEST HAPPY HOUR. Everyday dinner includes $15 pitchers, $12 and Mick partying with $1.50 pitchers. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions Control, Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For control. Counseling. Tubal Ligation. For control. Counseling. W100. 419 W. 100th St. W100. 419 W. 100th St. Overland Park, Kansas, Iowa. HAPPY HOUR at THE CLUB LOUNGE. Eve- nues 2:35 p.m., Thursday, backgammon and the Thursday, backgammon and the atmosphere of the Club Loome. 508 locust. 842- 242 Patty Loome. LADIES ARE SPECIAL (especially at the Club Lounge on Wednesday nights!) Drinks are only $100 for ladders every Wednesday. The club offers a variety of options at Club Lounge, 508 Locust, 82-942-997, 9-30 SUPER TGIF at THE CLUB LOUSE. 3 for drinks from 7 to 8 p.m. every Friday. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 847.1491 9.30 FREE! SUA In keeping with her tradition of bringing amusements to the TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK AND DROWN at the CLUB LOUSE. All guests only $2, only ladies only $3. Drink and drown at a club! THE CLUB LOUSE. 508 Locus. Our businesses available "Part-9" is our business. TGIF AT LOUFS BAR with $125 pouch- Friday from 2 to 6) be Three-Alfond "of Friday from 2 to 6) be Three-Alfond "of go it. ASTA Singing Telegraphs, 841-619-119 Take a back after classes at LOUSE'S BAR, 1009 Mass. Afternoon specials every day until 6. Singing messages for all occasions. Deliv- ing messages of encouragement *ASTA Singing* Telegrams, 841-619-600 Green's Ligur has 1976 German Piersporters and 194a Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignons. In copying driving you BATT? Don't KAT! On a Nintendo console, the MKMK is faster. The MKMK is better. CHRIOPACIFRATE—investigate the natural history of *Chiroptera*. Johnson, Mosch *Chiroptera*; 9th ed. and 10th ed.; 2013. Head Start needs you to volunteer to work with low income children ages 3-5 as a teacher-aid for two hours, one morning a day and then to campus. Call 10-62515 for information. Psychic Personality Readings, 25-50, 843- 941.4, 1-9 p.m. 10-3 Want to learn to play SCRABIBLE name? Call Emily 863-6935 or 863-6479. 10-11 Come play Ping-Pong with SUA. Tuesday. Call SUA 618-3472 for more information. Call SUA 618-3475 for more information. 9-30 Miss your Winfield T-shirt this year? Ninth National Fast-picking Championships! Beautiful silk screen design, only $50.00. Includes Marathon Mesh. FI 31500, indicate color and size. Green's Liquor has ice cold Strong kegs and excellent tapping equipment. 10-3 Personnel Administration Majors: Join Shire Room in the Administration Building in the Union Tours. 30 at 3 a.m. **GREENES**="The selection of award winning wines" foreign and domestic. 10-3 Sigma Nu & The Wheel present the $2h and the $4h of the Sigma Nu. All Campains, the Sigma Nu Campain, the Congratulations! Happy Birthday! I Leave and deliver for your roommate, lover, and friend of mine. FOR A GOOD TIME—Come to a Oktober- berrief. Attend our $450 in advance. $5 at the door, Spon- sored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, Inc. Connent 8345-0337 Fire Beer, Pop, and Beverage. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Meet us on Friday night at 7 in LINN-HOLLEY Hall. "WORLD AWARENESS" will be the topic of a study led by Yvonne Keefer at the Museum of Science and Technology at 7 i.m. Call 814-8003 for transportation: 9-30 AM for booking inquiries to fly via private plane to Milwaukee weekend of 27 Jan - 29 Feb at 858 round trip Call 814-4664. Keep trying! HORIZON -Lawrence's own hot brass band on Friday and Saturday night 10-2 Bottom's 8 CONTACT LENS WEARERS. Save on brand name hard or soft lens supplies. Send for lens covers, boxed sets, and boxes. Box 7453. Phoenix, Arizona 85011 10-25. Sigma Nu. And the Wheel present the 8th annual Daisy Mak look alike event. Oct. 1 - Dec. 9. Signa Nu House. All Carried out 1-3 p.m. TUSKILA NIGHT in Blue, Grape Night at the Museum. 8 p.m., 213-460-3500, Stuart Valley Drive, W. 24th, W. 25th, 26th Street. *AIDE COME TO THE MOUNTAINS NIGHT* AT THE HARBOR LITES. All Auckland long- backers from 75th to 19th century HARBOR LITES. 110. Manchester. *First Class Dive.* 9-30 LUCILLE—Please call—Tom. 10-3 Portraits, Passports, ID's. resume, color- ing materials. service available. Wesley Studi Studio, 749-1611 HORIZON, the hot brass sound in entertainment, is a delight for all ages and Saturday night. Be alert! 16-3 Want to hire a tutor? See our list of available tutors. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall. 10-2 THE BIKE GARAGE-Complete professional bicycle repair. Fully guaranteed and reasonably priced. Garage specialty-"Tune-ups" and "Total Overhaul."马犬 841-2781-76. SERVICES OFFERED COPIES 2 $ ^{c} $ 6 EAST 9TH 841-6221 TYPING-EDITING BINDING-PRINTING HOURS 8 AM—8 PM MON-SAT Tutors. For student referrals, list your name with us. Student Assistance Center. 121 Strong Hall. 10-2 Instant color passport photos. Immigration. labor. portraiture, resume, portfolios, slides: color & B/W. Wom 641-7254. 9-20 Job interviews prepared by a personnel pro- fessor and based on the head start on the fall interviews. EINSTEIN'S TUTORS Expert assistance CS. HENNESSEY'S composition, typing Randy M. composition, typing Randy M. Sieno wants to do typing in her home $1 per cura. Lillevie West. 843-706-9030. 9-30 I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476, if ... Accurate, expressed typifier IBM correcting Selective. Call Donna 842-7244. if i Experienced, professional tutoring. Spanish English as a Foreign Language 749-0594 *at*r*r* 4 p.m. 10-16 TYPING Experienced ttyper-term paper, Mrs. Wright, expressed interest in the manuscript. Mrs. Wright corrected *482-354*, Mrs. Wright, Jr. corrected *482-356*. Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms. Epilogue, 128; reprint editions, 12-8 Jamie Hani, 841-2172. OEM 812-2001 MARVEL COMICS ENCORE COPY COP Experienced K. U. typist IBM Correcting Technician K.U. typist Sunday, evening and weekdays. Sandy, evening and weekdays. Typetrader IBM P妃/Era Quality Welcome, editor'ing layout Call Joan, 842 welcome, editor'ing layout Call Joan, 842 Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with Bettie, 842-6697 after 5 and weeks if until. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra 841-4980. (f) Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations. Received 5 papers in selecting selects, Barb. after 5 p.m. 842-2310. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast treat. secure. IBM ipe 1036. 842-250-7777 www.ironfence.com Exp. typist would like to do term papers, dissertations, etc. Call Gayle at 825-103- 649. WANTED Buying gold. Paying $50-410 for men's clothing at the Men's Club, 2120 W.惠利, Holiday Plaza, 8262-928-300 Roommates at the Jaywalker Towers as soon as possible. All utilities paid. Call 748-365-823 Male Roommate to share 2 bdm. arr. Furni- mate $100 + 1½ utilities. 841-109. 40-24 GOLD- SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling ear. we pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741. 542-2868 10-68 Female roommate to share 2 bdms, unfur- rent apartment, 18 ft x 20 ft, center center $98 monthly, 1.5 electricity rate RESEARCH ASSISTANT PROGRAMMER 1st position for developing programmable search. Applicant needs excellent communi- cations and conduct seminars in programming. Background requirements include either 1) a bachelor's or master's degree in hea- th science and at least two years of experience design- ing, testing, or managing $10,000 to $18,000. Application deadline: 10 november; application to Computer Applications Uni., University of Computer Applications Unit, University of The Bureau of Child Research, 913-565-4800. employment opportunity / affirmative action SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! 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: Dates to Run: ___ To RATES: 1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4 hours 8.25 8.50 8.75 9.00 8.25 8.50 8.75 9.00 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 AD DEADLINE to run: Copy due: MONDAY . Thursday 3 p.m. THURSDAY . Tuesday 3 p.m. NAME:___ ADDRESS:___ PHONE:___ --- --- Page 10 University Daily Kansan, September 30, 1980 Retirement alters Riggins' life By MATT SEELEY Sports Writer The Washington Redskins had been beaten badly at home, the story goes, and John Riggins was upset. So upset was Riggins with the losing performance of himself and his teammates, that he walked out of a packed JFK Stadium, with soiled football uniform and all the fans. No locker room, no press and no shower. One of the NFL's premier running backs, the ninth leading rusher of all time, just hopped on a bus and rode around the nation's capital to vent his frustration. That episode, believe it or not, is now a part of Riggins' glory days: Days of plowing through holes that the "Over-the-Hill-Gang" seemed to open at will, with their custom-cut-tuff Super Bowl material, day free of contract squabbles. DAYS LONG GONE by. Today, John Riggins, the former KU running great, is lost in the fog of a contract controversy. His employer, the Washington Redskins, maintains that Riggins has retired from football. Riggins also has retired. But he cannot be in and the employee cannot agree on how he retrained. The Redskins' front office said Riggins left training camp unexcused and was, therefore, placed on the "left camp-retired" list, making him ineligible to play for any NFL team this season. Riggins contends that he gave the team notice he was retiring, then retired before camp started and, therefore, should have been listed as "voluntarily retired." "So how do you retire voluntarily and live?" he asked. Sigmund said. "They're saving you can't." At issue is Riggins' contract. When he signed with the Redskins in June 1976, the contract specifies said he would play at least every game for the fifth year, 1981, to be an option year. Now Riggins wants a $500,000 guaranteed contract for the 1981 season. The Redskins, however, have a policy of not re-negotiating contracts. "HEY, I WANT to play. It doesn't matter where, I want to play." Riggins said last week after the KU old-timmers baseball game. "I think the Redskins have a wait-and-see attitude. They've let it be known that I was waived by them and want to see how other teams will react." Riggins acknowledged that his chances of coming to an agreement this year are slim. The 6-foot-4 fallback is one he has played on, and he's playing weight of 230 pounds. "I'd say returning is fairly remote at this point," he said. "I've had no contact with the Redskins in quite some time." If Riggins does sit out this season, he would be the property of Washington. "If you retire and decide to come back and play," he said, "you have to play with the team you left. It's one of the things players have to live with." "It's obvious the Redskins don't want me to use them for a home, but I'd still like to play there. I like the city of Washington." The years in Washington were free of contract hassles, but Riggins isn't new to the job. AFTER HIS season season at KU in 1970, Riggins was the No. 1 draft choice of the New York Jets. Dischenanted, however, with the Jets' pay scale- Joe Naimar, ranked 27th among NFL quarterbacks and league leader with 28 playoffs. He also competed compared to Riggins' $67,500—Riggins played out his option in 1975. "I played the last two years in New yea- ture," he said. Riggs said on the of the 74 and 75 seasons. He signed with the Redskins as part of Head Coach George Allen's "thefuture-is-now" movement. During the next three seasons he established himself as a runner with bull-like strength. Last season, with Allen long since fired, Riggins was the Redskin offense. His 1,153 yards rushing and nine running touchdowns accounted for 50 percent of Washington's running yards and half of its rushing touchdowns. Today, Riggins' rushing game has turned into one of waiting and watching. "I miss the players the most," Riggins said. "But I don't like getting hit hard, I don't like worrying and I never have liked practices." RIGGINS "RETIRED" life is spent near his *Lawrence* home, fishing, hunting and working out, just in case. He is taking an economics course at KU. He has seen his former teammates play once this season and was not impressed. "I saw them against Dallas and they looked fat considering it was the first game of the season, on Monday night and all the usual talk of Dallas," he said. "The pressure's really on them now." Counting their loss Sunday to Throughout Riggins' professional career he has been associated with many great players and coaches, commented about three of those people. Oakland, the Redskins have slipped to 1-3. On George Allen: - `Moticulous. He was cautious of every detail. I never understood him and didn't agree with his coaching philosophy. He plays a defensive game with no offense. For me, that's a no-win situation.` "He didn't get along with a lot of people. I guess that's why they got rid of him. I wouldn't be surprised, though, but I think he's in New Bay within the next couple weeks." On Weeb Ewbank (former head coach of the New York Jets): *“Oh. Weeb. He was cagely, but he didn’t get guy. That made him my kind of coach. "They (the Jets) made him general manager at the same time he was president. They have been one great general manager because he sure wasn't a good coach." AU BEN BIGLEY/Kansen staff - "One great quarterback. A lot of John Riggins, former KU running back and baseball player, watches the action in the recent KU baseball Old Timmers game and talks about his forced retirement from professional football and the Washington Redskins. stuff was written and said, but I really couldn't appreciate him until I wasn't with him. I never realized the great talent he was until I was with somebody The future of John Riggins is much like this season, fumbling in the arms of an NFL owner. BUY OR SELL SIVER, GOLD & COINS Class Rings Antiques-Furniture Boysd Coin & Antiques KU changes its offense FAMBROUGH, HOWEVER, cannot be displeased with tailback Kewinn Bell, who had his first 106- runs in the Nationals. He gained 103 yards in 12 carries. KU had only 154 yards of offense in Saturday's 17-9 loss to Louisville. KU has had only one touchdown all in three games, scored only 10 points in three games. Monday-Saturday 9 am-5 pm "I had to be impressed with Bell," Fambrigh said. "He got a lot the hard way. He was fighting to get that extra yard." Kansas coach Don Fambrough will try cutting down the Jayhawk offense this week in an effort to break the team's wiliness streak. Freshman quarterback Frank Seurer did not fare well as bell. Seurer, who was sacked seven times, became starter for Saturday's contest. 731 New Hampshire "At some point you have to start all over again," Fambrough said after yesterday's practice. "We're going to cut our out defense down. There may be too much there. We might look as the season progresses." Applications For: GAMMA OMICRON BETA JP. SEC. OR SOCIETY JR.-SR. HONOR SOCIETY Are Available in 220 Strong Hall DAVID NEELY is 33 today! Deadline is 4:30 p.m. Oct.15 Ride his bus and give him a kiss! 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