University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Monday, December 1, 1980 Vol.91, No.67 USPS 650-640 DAVE KRAUSKAN The crosses at the Calvary Temple at 29th Street Terrace and Louisiana Street served as an unusual perch for these birds yesterday afternoon. Kansan positions now available Applications for business and editorial staff positions on the spring 1891 Kansan now are available in 105 Flint Hall, at the Student Senate office in 1058 of the Kansas Union, and at the office of student affairs in 220 Strong Hall. Completed applications are due by noon tomorrow in 105 Flint. Weather A LITTLE COOLER It will be cloudy today, with a high near 50, according to the KU Weather Service. It will become sharply colder by noon, and the temperature will fall 40 by midnight. A storm of rain today. Winds will be gusty and from the north at 20-30 mph. Vandals fewer in halls and from the north at 20:30 pm. The low tonight will be near 20, and there is a 30 percent chance of light snow. By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter snow. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and unseasonably cold, with a high of 31. After three consecutive years of increased vandalism in KU residence halls, hall directors predict a decrease for the 1980-81 year. Legislature to pick'81 leaders In Templin Hall, vandalism on fire extinguishers this semester has surpassed that of the two previous years, according to Glenn Allen, resident director. But overall, Templin vandalism costs are running about even with costs from the same period last year, Allen said. Vandalism in Ellsworth Hall should be well below the grade for his last year, but Turtle, resident director. Staff Reporter problems. Scott Miller, resident director of Oliver Hall, said that vandalism costs in Oliver were running one-third below the costs for the same period last year. But anxieties about finals could push vandalism costs in Oliver up sharply, he said. See VANDALISM page 6 saw them." Vandalism damage has included a lot of little things like cigarette burns in the carpet, torn furniture and broken chairs," she said. CHRIS SCHNEIDER, contracts committee chairman for the residence hall government, said peer pressure was responsible for the reduced vandalism in Ellsworth. MILLER SAID about $1,200 had been spent this semester to replace broken windows, to make major repairs to a hall elevator and to recharge water in washers that were damaged without cause. reduces an imbalance in when someone sees another person breaking a table or chair, they let them know that it's not all right," he said. The predicted decrease in vandalism has made hall directors and student hall governments optimistic that the funds used to repair damage can be used for hall improvements. "We get the most damage during the big pressure periods around final time," he said. Newly elected members of the 1981 Kansas House and Senate were to convene at 10 this morning in their chambers, then were to break into political party caucuses to choose their leaders for the next two years in the House and the next four years in the Senate assignments. Republicans gained momentum in the Nov. 4 elections, adding GOP seats in both houses, but they still must contend with a Democratic BY KATHY BRUSSELL brigade without cause. Jim Chipman, resident director of Joseph R. Oliver had the greatest vandalism damage of all the residence halls last year. Vandals cost the TOPEKA (UP1) —The names or those who call the shots in 1981's Legislature will be picked today in the climax of a heated fray, which threatens to snatch power from some familiar the next four years. Opportunity importance will be the Rebublicans' nonnaires for House speaker, House majority leader, Senate president and Senate majority leader. McCollum Hall also has had less vandalism this year, according to Mike Johnston, resident United States. Recent studies have produced varying estimates of the number of such victims-2 million, 5 million, 15 million. Quake's aftershock jolts Italy In the Senate, President Ross Doyen, Concordia, has already aligned his troops, not only ensuring that he will keep his job, but will be working with hand-picked associates. Collectively and individually, these leaders can control legislation through committee assignments. Several authorities, including the National League of Cities and the U.S. Conference of Tuttle said that there were only a few residents who vandalized residence halls. Mayors, have suggested that half of all American wives will experience some form of violent abuse during their marriage, regardless of their race or socio-economic status. Pearson Hall, said vandalism in the hall had decreased from $100,000 last year to $6,000 last year, the hall more than $6,000 last year. Arbuthnott served for the past two years as speaker pro tem, a position that entitled him to a special office in the statehouse and a secretary, but kept him out of the legislative limelight. Arbuthnot, a rancher, said last February that he intended to challenge Lady, a Johnson County engineer, because of an "uneasiness" he detected in the House. Rita chain-smokes now when she talks about those days, and her eyes well with tears when she remembers the worst of times—the times he nearly killed her. out. Statistically, Rita Nelson, 42, is only one of an unknown number of battered women in the United States. A badly contested position in the new Legislature will be that of House speaker. One-tier speaker Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, began rallying his supporters before the election to prepare for the long-announced opposition to the veteran repent Person. Bob Arbathan R-Haddam She wears a silver ring on her left hand where her wedding band used to be, and she twists it restlessly as she recalls the night in Fort Knox, Ky., nearly eight years ago. Ralph had been her husband, the man who was supposed to love her. But somewhere along the way, love had ceased to be enough. For 18 years, she had lived in fear of the next beating and with the horrifying knowledge that she had no way out. But Rita is more than a statistic. Panicked residents ran out into the streets and countryside, but many of the 200,000 people left homeless after last week's quake refused to leave their villages. Battered wives face fear, insecurity and isolation By United Press International The strong shock measured 4.3 on the opened Richer scale, far below the 6.8 reading of the initial quake, which damaged or destroyed much of the island, mainly in the central mountains east of Naples. But kita is more than she's a woman who's now living in Lawrence, continuing her education and working her way back to reality after a long, bad dream of torture and helplessness. governor. Republicans outnumber Democrats 72 to 53 in the House and 24 to 16 in the Senate. "Ralph and I had been to a reception, and as usual he had been drinking all night," she said. "On the way home in the car, he started yelling at me and accusing me of being incompetent and an unfit mother. I was scared spitless, but I figured I better not say anything to feed it. See QUAKE page 6 NAPLES, Italy-A Strong aftershock jolt earthquake-ravaged southern Italy yesterday, exactly one week after last Sunday's temblor devastated the region. RESCUE HEADQUARTERS in Napoles issued the latest toll from the quake. It put the number of bodies recovered at 2,915, with another 1,547 dead and 849 injured. The estimated number injured was 7,069. "The minute the car stopped, I got out and ran like crazy into the house. When I opened the door, I accidentally hit our youngest daughter, who was standing behind me. I yelled, "Hey, what is that thing I knew, he came up from behind and grabbed me and started banging my head against the door jam." mountains east of Naples. In Naples and Avellino, people who had risked There were no other reports of casualties, and many of those that were damaged in last week's quake collapsed. banging my neck well, "For the next hour and a half, I was throw all over the room. I can't begin to tell you what all over me. I remember being thrown over the ironing board and it breaking. At one point, he had me on the floor and the punches were going back and forth. My head hurt so bad I hardly knew where I was, and I was semi-conscious most of the time." SHE SHUTS her eyes against the memory, and a shudder runs through her body. returning to undamaged homes rushed out into the streets, many of them screaming in terror when the aftersch泼 hit at 1:42 a.m. CST (8:42 a.m. Italian time.) Police said Giuseppe Forino, 62, collapsed and died from a heart attack after fleeing from his house with two grandchildren in the village of Madonna dell'Arco. HER STORY, she stresses, is not one of physical abuse only, but of being victimized by society as she found herself fighting police, court systems, unsympathetic doctors and ever stereotypes as well as her husband. for instance, after the attack in Fort Knox, when Ralph was in active military duty, Rita went to the base hospital at 3 a.m. The verbal abuse came first. Ralph accused Rita of being a poor housekeeper, a worse cook and an unfit mother, despite the fact that he gambled away most of his earnings and gave her only $40 a week. "In spite of bleeding, multiple bruises and complaints of severe head pain, the doctor dismissed me without even attempting to examine or treat me," she said. "It was two years before I could begin to comprehend what was actually happening. He got me to the point where I was almost convinced I was crazy. If I didn't take a diary and written "When I insisted on medical assistance, he answered, 'Lady, I see so damn many bitter bites each weekend, you're no exception. You go home and either take your lumps or make The incident in Fort Knox was not by any means the first one Rita had experienced. The first cycle of abuse had begun shortly after the incident when she and Hala were living in western Kansas. "After the first two attacks, I was in shock for a long time," it said, running a hand through her short, graying hair. RITA WAS physically run down and pregnant for the second time when her husband first beat her. He had been drinking and she had made the decision to go back to ways to pick up a prescription for their young son. things down, I think he would have convinced me of it." verbal and physical abuse. "I tried to help find," Rita said. "There were no social services in town at that time. Twice I tried to file assault charges with the police, but they would just look at me and say, 'Lady, what do you want me to do about it?'" * The next four years were a series of reruns of verbal and physical abuse. do you with the camera? She cocked her head and gave one of her what-do-you-think-of-that? looks, then dashed out the butt of her cigarette. "If it was on the weekend, they'd tell me I had to wait until Monday because I had to have a lawyer file the charges for me," she said. "Of course, that was baloney. Borrowed data didn't know any differently. I had to take their name." That's called diversionary tactics, by the way. the way. She smiled, revealing the loss of several side teeth—a casualty of years of malnutrition and beatings, she said. Like Rita, victims and researchers of wife abuse are almost universal in their criticism of police response to domestic violence calls. MANY POLICE departments take a hands-off attitude, giving domestic disturbance calls low priority or following a policy of non-arrest in dealing with such cases. Whether the police will make an arrest in responding to a disturbance call depends on the nature of the crime committed against a woman, according to Ron Olin, Lawrence assistant chief or point to it. The case of a misdemeanor, which would include simple assault and battery, we either must witness the crime or have one of three other conditions present in order to make an arrest," he said. "These conditions are that the victim is in immediate danger and therefore the crime will be destroyed or that the suspect will leave our jurisdiction immediately." mentor a felony has been committed, a police officer can investigate and make an arrest on probable cause, Olin said. Aggrieved assault, an attack with a weapon, qualifies as a felony. "Arrests frequently are not the way to handle domestic disturbances," Olin said. "Even if a guy is arrested, he can post bond and be back in four to 12 hours, madder than ever. The woman knows that." A POLICE officer's willingness to make an arrest also depends on whether a woman will take any subsequent action, he said. "We have a great deal of experience with women who want action taken this minute, and then come down and bail out the same man that night, or drop charges the next day," he said. "The rate against pressing charges is four to one at least, maybe nine to one." at leeds, Hayley nile mille ofa, Judy Woolfe, a former volunteer for Women's Transitional Care Services, which runs the Lawrence shelter house for battered women, called the reluctance to arrest "totally unjustified." "Even if nine women don't file charges after an arrest, it's worth the trouble or the work for one." she said. EXPERTS AGREE that the double standard for the arrest of husbands as opposed to third-party assaultants stems largely from the old notion that a man granted a man the right to "chastise" his wife. "Otherwise, women end up with nothing at all, no protection. If you're walking down the street and you are assaulted, the man will be arrested and you will have to be told you don't have that protection in your own home." According to Rita and others like her, this attitude still prevails today, despite the fact that common-law statutes have been obsolete for more than 100 years. In addition, police officers are hesitant to involve themselves in domestic disturbances because they are potentially dangerous situations for the officers, Olin said. Nationwide studies have estimated that 20 to 25 percent of police deaths occur during intervention in domestic quarrels between husbands and wives. In 1978, when a special study was done, Lawrence police made 131 arrests in cases of domestic violence, Olm said. doubled your walk. "Of course, that doesn't include the times we just turned around and walked out the door," he said. See ABUSE page 5 --- Page 2 University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Iraq expected to reopen oil pipelines BEIRUT, LEBANON—Iraq will begin pumping oil through pipelines in Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean Sea to avoid the war-clogged transit route. Iran Sept. 22. Iranjq: Iraqi forces in fighting with Iran. Iraq said its force still held its largest offshore oil terminal, which was surrounded by Iranian naval assaults. shipping hands of the terrorists. There has been no official confirmation of the report from either Syria or Iraq. The two countries broke diplomatic relations soon after Iraq invaded Iran Sept. 23. Iraq has accused Syria of aiding Iran in the conflict. terminal, it was held Saturday that it captured the Al-Bakr terminal after a naval battle in which 11 Trial ships were sunk. The report that Iraq will be increasing its oil production coincided with an announcement that the United Arab Emirates will reduce their output by 80,000 barrels a day starting Jan. 1, apparently to make way for increased Iraqi production and to conserve their own oil wealth. In the pre-Syrian Beirut daily As-Saifi quoted sources in Damascus as saying President Hosni Moussa ordered oil supplies in Syria to prepare for accepting oil from Turkey. The paper said the decision to reopen the pipeline was made after contacts between Iraqi and Syrian officials. The flow of oil is expected to resume in September, according to the agency. An agreement signed between Syria and Iraq in February 1979 stipulated that Syria would receive 35 cents for each barrel of Iraqi crude that crosses Syria. Hostage release may rest on Reagan The 52 Americans held hostage in Iran might not be released until Ronald Reagan is president, because he may be more able to make concessions to Iran, CBS News reported yesterday. The hostages spent their 393rd day in captivity yesterday, with no official word on whether they had been transferred to the Iranian government. "When you they Mine the CBS correspondent Mike Wallace, reporting from Tehran, said the general mood among Iranian officials was that the hostage crisis would not be resolved soon. Wallace quoted the speaker of Iran's Parliament, Hojatoleslam Hashemi Rafsanjani, as saying it was up to the United States to make concessions for the release of the hostages. the release of the hostages! In an interview with Wallace, the governor of Iran's central bank, Ali Reza Nobari, said the hostages might not be released until after Reagan is in inaugurated Jan. 20. Nobari speculated that Reagan might be more able to make concessions then President Carter has been. Uruguayan vote rejecting constitution ORUGUAY MONTEVIDEO Uruguay — The first official results from yesterday's military website indicated that Uruguayans were rejecting a military government-sponsored constitution that could give the armed forces a permanent share of power in the South American country. Turnout for the plebiscite, the first election in Uruguay in nine years, was so heavy that officials kept the 6,171 polling stations open two hours longer than planned. The Gallip Public Opinion Organization of Uruguay said a representative survey of 136 election districts in Montevideo showed opposition to the proposed constitution at 66 percent. Thirty-three percent of those polled favored the constitution. "The results of today's elections are not important to us," Interior Minister Manuel Nunes said before the results were released, and he warned that favoring the "greatest" party would be detrimental. "More important is the fact that the plebiscite was held in an atmosphere of peace and security," he said. of peace and security. There are about 1.9 million eligible voters in the small South American nation of 2.8 million. Citizens faced fines and loss of pension and other rights for failure to vote. for future use. The proposed constitution was drawn up during the past year by the military government in closed sessions. It would give the armed forces the power to participate in forming national security policy. Saudis bid to defuse border tension BEIRUT, Lebanon—Saidia Arabia made an urgent bid yesterday to defuse the border tension between Syria and Jordan before it erupts into another Middle East war. Prince Abdullah bin Abdel Aziz, commander of the Saudi national guard, new inbib Damascus to personally deliver a message from King Khaled to the Saudi government. Government sources said the two talked for three hours. Aziz decided to delay his demenature until today to allow further talks. Diplomatic sources said Aziz might then fly to Amman, Jordan, with a similar letter for King Hussein. The Jordanian cabinet met in Amman to hear a report about the 20,000 Syrian troops and 600 tanks massed on the Syrian border. Jordan's foreign minister denied Syrian charges that Jordan was supporting a subversive movement in Syria. Israel, a neighbor of both nations, watched the situation closely, Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir said. Analysts said the country faced no immediate Prime Minister Menachem Begin briefed his cabinet, but a spokesman said the ministers made no decisions about contingency plans. Saudia Arabia launched its peace mission as tears of a military confrontation between Syria and Jordan mounted. in Damascus, Syria's state of emergency declared on Monday. Arab travellers, quoted by the Qatari News Agency, said troop concentrations were clearly visible on both sides of the Syrian-Jordanian frontier. However, civilian traffic continued to move between the two countries. Supreme Court to act on draft laws WASHINGTON—Supreme Court action on a crucial sexual equality case could end military draft registration or answer some emotional arguments ruining last July in a nine-year-old case, a special three-judge court in Philadelphia struck down male-only draft registration on grounds it discriminates against men by excluding women. The high court is expected to act soon on a Vietnam war-era case challenging the male-only draft laws as being sexually discriminatory. The Philadelphia decision would have forced the government to either stop the present registration program or to include women. Justice William Brennan, however, suspended it until the Supreme Court decided whether to hear arguments in the case or to uphold the finding. The all-male high court could have some difficulty sorting out the strictly legal issues in the case from the philosophical questions. Although the actual results were not clear, it showed that the Opponents of the Equal Rights Amendment have argued that its adoption could mean an equal opportunity for women to die in combat. If women are equally liable to be drafted, they have said, women also could be required to share fully in the dancers of military service. A Supreme Court ruling striking down the present male-only draft registration system would thrust the issue back on the Congress, which would have to choose between stopping the registration or applying it equally to both sexes. Lawrence police are investigating a burglar late last week at Wheels of Fun, 3319 Iowa St. Police believe that someone remained in the building after it closed and stole $1,480 in cash and stereo equipment. On the Record Two cassette tape decks were among the items on display at 8 a.m. Thursday and 12:30 Friday afternoon. One of the cassette deckes was valued and the other at $75, a police report An electrical fire Wednesday in the Spencer Art Museum burned out an elevator motor worth $750, KU police said yesterday. A 73-year-old Lawrence man reported over the weekend the theft of $3,832 worth of jewelry and silverware in the 900 block of East 1st Street. believed to have been caused by an electrical short. No one was injured and there was no other damage in the fire that was The time of the theft was uncertain, and the man told police that the goods were stolen sometime in November, police said. KU police are investigating the theft of $1,040 worth of car sturgee equipment stolen from a car parked in the Tower's lot, 1963 W. 14th St., police said. police said. The theft occurred between 9:30 Tuesday night and noon Wednesday, police said. Workshop to aid holiday blues It is a commonly held belief that people are always happy during the holidays, but holidays can cause crises, holiday shopping, which may deepen in depression. The Coping with Christmas Workshop tries to help people understand holiday depression and how to handle it. The purpose of the workshop is to help people in the exploration of loneliness in their lives and in the understanding of the nature, necessity and value of loneliness, said Beulah Duncan, executive assistant at the Adult Life Resource Center, a section of the KU Division of Continuing The workshop will be held tomorrow from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont will be repeated there at 7 p.m. on Dec. 9. The workshop will feature a lecture on loneliness as well as small discussion groups, she said. Education, which is sponsoring the workshop. Once the three-hour workshop is over, participants should have a better understanding of how important it is to admit loneliness in their lives, she said. These are opportunities to accept lonely thereby lose lonely feelings by helping other people. They will know where to turn in the community for assistance through critical periods of loneliness and will realize that everyone goes through periods of loneliness at one time or another, she said. Gary D. Bryant, associate pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, will lead the workshop. --p. i. n. t. SUA sponsor the Rob Crêpe Lovers Buy One, Get One Free From banana-nut to apple, Village Inn has the widest selection of dessert crepes in Lawrence. Bring in a friend and the coupon below for your free crepe! Now Thru Finals Week Buy One, Get One Free Crêpes Must present coupon. Expires 12-20-80. Village Inn 821 Iowa PARKLAND HOUSE RESTAURANT MOTOR VEHICLE WORKSHOP --p. i. n. t. SUA sponsor the Rob (Ignorance Isn't Bliss) "THE POTENTIAL CRIMINAL & CIVIL CONSEQUENCES OF DRIVING: THIRD FLOOR, CONFERENCE ROOM SATELLITE UNION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2nd-7:00 P.M. Sponsored by: Student Legal Services Steve Ruddick, Attorney for Student Legal Services KU Police Department Community Services, Officer Vic Shore Alcohol Safety Action Project, George Lorey, Outreach Director TOPICS TO BE DISCUSSED: 1. Insurance Requirements in Kansas. 2. O.U.I. (Operating Under the Influence of Alcohol or Drugs) Considerations. a) Police guidelines and procedures leading to arrest b) Tests to determine degree of influence c) Potential loss of driver's license d) Proof necessary for criminal conviction e) Procedures involved from arrest through court action f) Potential Penalties 3. Kansas No-Fault Insurance Requirements & Application * Kansas Comparative Negligence Law 5. Non-Criminal Consequences or i rattic violations a) Potential loss of license—Tips to prevent loss b) Civil liability—Negligence 7. Accident report requirements Paid for by Student Activity Fees OPENINGS FOR SPRING OPENED "The choice selection of food, the maid service, the com- fortable rooms, the swimming pool . . ." Kim Farr, Sophomore Lawrence, KS Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 23 Gabriel's Basketball Buffet On $1.99 all 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 In the Holiday Plaza IN THE HOLIDAY PLAZA Sorah-Out and Delivery 2449 Iowa R. L. Scientifi "Pion 5 Physics scheduled room 13 842-5824 Every home Basketball game 5:00 pm until tipoff Carry-Out and Delivery 842-5824 The VOICE p.m. in SINA The l will m ternati UNI AUDIT product Univer Sign-up to 5 p.m. FELLO Lewis A MINI titled Politic Cities Resea Lineb Gabriel's Lo to in Me lectu tonig the K --- Good Luck Jayhawks! 7 University Dalv Kansan, December 1, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY R. L. BOUDRIE of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory will speak on "Pion Scattering in EPICS" at the Physics and Astronomy Colloquium scheduled for 4 p.m. in Malott Hall, room 136. TONIGHT THE INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL VOICES will rehearse from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall, room 404. p.11 SUA INDOOR RECREATION will sponsor table tennis games at 7 p.m. in the Robinson Gymnasium lobby. UNIVERSITY THEATRE AUDITIONS for spring semester productions will begin at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sign-up for auditions will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the theatre lobby. The KU MODEL UNITED NATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the International Room of the Kansas Union THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FOR BROWN will meet at 8 p.m. in the Gymnasium. A MASTER OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION program lecture titled "From Political Sociology to Political Economy" of the State of Urban Research will be presented by Robert Lineberry of Northwestern University Latin novelist to lecture in Woodruff Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes will lecture on "Writing in Time" at 8 tonight in the Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. The lecture is the second of the 1980- 81 Humanities courses taught by John Cage, with composer John Cage. fuentes has written 10 novels, including "Terra Nostra," 'A Change of Skin," "The Hydra Head" and "Distant Relations." He graduated from the National University of Mexico with a law degree, and the Mexican ambassador to France from 1974 to 1977 Fuentes is a fellow of the humanities at Princeton University. Admission to the lecture is free. --at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. TOMORROW TORRANDO CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in Haworth Hall, rooms 209, 232 and 233. The MARANTHA CHRISTIAN MINISTRY will meet at 7 p.m. in the Javahawk Room of the Union. TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE in basketball in, in Robinson Gymnasium room 122 The KU SCIENCE FICTION AND MEDIA ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Orchestra REBECCA AGHEYISI, chairman of the department of linguistics at the University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria, will speak "African" language in Nigeria" at the Linguistics Colloquy at 7:30 p.m. in Bake Hall, room 207. A SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Student Organization Lecture on "The Legal Aspects of Mainstreaming" will be presented by Dr. John W. KU special education department, at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. THIS SUNDAY, MAKE IT A BUCKET OF CHICKEN FROM COUNTRY Inn 843-1431 We Also Cater For Groups COUNTRY Inn 843-1431 State officials and the Environmental Protection Agency have signed a tentative agreement that allows Kansas to take responsibility for enforcing federal hazardous waste statutes. The agreement, signed Nov. 19, stems from a request by the Kansas Department and Environment and Waste Management over hazardous waste management in the state. "Kansas has had laws regulating hazardous waste since 1975," he said. "These statutes are essentially the same as the federal regulations." Stoltenberg said KDHE had made the request to stop duplication and confusion in enforcement of federal hazard waste laws. Gerald Stoltenberg, director of the division of environment, said yesterday that his office had made the decision to be expected final approval of the request in January. Stollenberg said the federal hazardous waste statutes provided that states with adequate staffing and funds could assume response roles. He told Kansas already controlled the enforcement of federal air and water regulations. Kansas gets OK to enforce waste laws When happy decisions are made . . . Choose a diamond from . . . McQueen JEWELERS, INC. 809 Massachusetts 843-5432 When happy decisions are made . . . Choose a diamond from . . . McQueen JEWELERS, INC. 809 Massachusetts 843-5432 Tonight— Watch Monday Night Football on our Giant TV Screen! No Cover! popcorn, peanuts, hot dogs Denver Broncos vs Oakland Raiders 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS SNOWMEN Tonight— Watch Monday Night Football on our Giant TV Screen! No Cover! popcorn, peanuts, hot dogs GAMMONS SNOWDOGS A classic Marx Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Darwin College, getting his degree from Harvard University. U. Written by S.J. Penman. With it we have Laurel and Hardy's "Oscar" film adaptation. In bawl, you try to move a plane you imagine (30/70 min). B/W: 7:30. Unless otherwise noted; all films will be shown at Wooldridge Auditorium and film prices are $1.00, Friday; Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.30. Mickey Halloween films are $8.25. The Museum of Fine Arts Union, 4th level, information 864-3477. No smoking or reflections at the GAMMONS SNOWMANS Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers 1923 SUA FILMS Monday. Dec. 1 (1948) Roberto Rossellini's return to the neorealist tradition is the story of a black marketster, played by fellow neorealist Daniel Stern. The movie's lead leader for the Nazis but gradually grows into the role. "If anything, the years improved both neorealism and Rossellini's thirty years of Italian Cinema. (139 min.) W.A. Italiani/thoughts: 7-30." Red River Montgomery Cliff, cliffed opposite John Wayne in this film about a rancher and adopted son, eventually famously filmed and suspensively directed by Howard Hawks. "One of the all-time great sisters," Cliff (125 min.) BW: 7:30, BW: 7:30, Room Furn. Wednesday, Dec. 3 General Della Rovere (1890) Tuesday, Dec. 2 Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bete) Jean Cocqueau's lyric version of the famous fairy tale is remarkably imaginative and enthralling, a unique film. "The taste and charm of the film will help you josette Day, Jean Marais 10.90, BWB. French subtiltes, 7.30." counties in early October. EPA officials criticized state officials for not taking immediate steps to remove toxic waste from the river, the waste posed no immediate threat. FIRST America's feet are in Dexter's hands. Dexter Shoemakers to America Dexter Stores in America McCall's The department's request includes a proposal that would increase the size of the waste management staff from four to six members, he said. EPA approval is also required for the staff increase because the federal agency provides 75 percent of the waste management staff's funding. NOW TERM CHRISTMAS OPEN SUNDAYS 1:50 SAT. 9-8:30 SAT. 9-5:30 829 Massachusetts "Industry views state control as an advantage because local officials have a better understanding of the conditions they operate under," he said. "Kansas will benefit because there will be a better application of the law." STOLTENBERG SAID KDHE'S control of the program would have advantages for Kansas. adopt a new regulation similar to the federal regulation that went into effect Nov. 19 before the transfer of control could take place. Stoltenberg said the agreement requires Kansas to manage its hazardous waste program in the same manner as the federal program. could place place. The statute requires that records of waste creation and disposal be kept, Stolttenberg said. A recent disagreement about hazardous waste disposal in Kansas City, Missouri, has led to a lawsuit. He said this would force Kansas to EPA and state environment and health officials argued about the seriousness of toxic waste buried in dumps in Waydotte and Johnson WANTED— SENIORS— Description— A senior who still needs to buy a senior class card. Qualifications— $13.00, payable in cash or check - Nightly specials at local bars for rest of year Benefits- Benefits • Senior class shirt - Senior class parties- - Senior class parties— 1st one Dec. 8 at Gammons - 1 party every week last 6 weeks of year - Supports senior class gift to KU - Supports HOPE award - Supports Commencement Where to apply Info. booth Jayhawk Blvd. in front of Wescoe When to apply 8 a.m.- 2 p.m. Dec. 1,2,3 We are an equal opport. senior class Like a Good Deli Sandwich? Trv the new Stuffed Pig! FREE salad & small drink with any sandwich when accompanied by this coupon. (Six salads to choose from!) THE STUFFED PIG "PURVEYORS OF FINE SAUSAGES" HOUSE: Mon-Th. 11:30-8 Fri-Sat 11:30-10 Sun 12-8 Closed Mon. Good thru 12-19-8. Beh 2210 Iowa Your hair reflects on you. Come to Reflections for all of your hair care needs. $5.00 off on hair design, perms, and highlightng. PLUS 20% off of Nucleic A Products. Good until Dec. 19. with this coupon. THOMAS EISENBERG Heaven A Iowa St Reflections ★ Ridge Ct REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN 2323 Ridge Court 841-5999 A RESPONSE TO MR. HAMMOUDEH The November 18 issue of the Journal-World contained a letter by one Shawkat Hammoudh accusing the Journal-World of some seven years of "inacurate presentation of facts, biased reporting, and emotion-ridden analysis." While reading a Journal-World editorial entitled "Intimidation at KU" Mr. Hammoudh found that he could endure no more and thereupon formulated a rejoinder. The editorial in question described how some 75 to 100 self-styled demonstrators had forced the cancellation of a public lecture by Eud Gol, Israel's consul for information last November 12. Mr. Hammoudh was sorely vexed by the editorial thought that "the free exchange of ideas appears to have been violated again by a group of demonstrators." Actually, says Mr. Hammoudh "The fact is that the anti-Israel persons went . . . to listen . . . out of curiosity and the desire to learn and to ask questions. Not one student mentioned disruption or intimidation." Two paragraphs later Mr. Hammoudh complains of "my very well performed teaching assistantship (being) terminated after I participated in a University-approved demonstration against the appearance of Rabin." a university apperpared misattention against the appearance of Adam. It isn't strange that this "curiosity and the desire to learn and ask questions" that Mr. Hammoudheh attributes to the Moslem contingent and their sympathy with the night of November 12 didn't surface amongst this very same group that April evening in 1978 when former Israeli General and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin spoke in Hoch Auditorium, instead of seizing this opportunity to question the architect of Israel's victory in the Six Day War, "antiselasean persons" contented themselves with disruptive parading and chanting which forced them in silencing Mr. Rabin at least twenty-six times with some of these interruptions lasting three or four minutes. Surely it's a needless to add that "a university-approved demonstration" has never been and is not today defined as a group of ill-mannered drones attempting to drown out a distinguished guest speaker isn't it just as obvious that the participation of any university employee in such a display of hoodumism is ipso facto grounds for dismissal. have grounds for dismissal. When Mr. Hammoudeh accuses the Israeli police of rank oppression and the "extermination" of the Arab populace he once again fails to accompany his indictment with any details; indeed, the circumstantial evidence available indicates quite the contrary to be the case. Consider the following: 1. More minutes quite the contrary to be the case. Consider the fact that the improvement in the Arab minority's standard of living since 1948. 2. That both they are for political office. 2. That both they and the Jewish majority have the same political rights, including the right to vote and run for political office. 3. The existence, in Israel's system of free and compulsory education, of schools for the Arab populace in abah because of instruction is Arabic. which the language of instruction is Arabic. 4. The riot that occurred near Tel Aviv, Israel on Saturday November 22, when an estimated 100 Arab soccer fans felt sufficiently free of the Israeli heel of oppression to storm the field and cause the hospitalization of seven Jewish players, one with knife wounds in his back, after the defeat of their favorites by a visiting Jewish team. (Will the police, by firing warning shots to restore order, be seen by Mr Hammoudhi as practicing oblique genocide?) Mr. Hammouen's answer is not as compelling as Don't the aforementioned facts make it quite difficult to view this charge of Mr. Hammoudheh's as anything in this case because it does not inconsiderable creative capacity? the another expression of his not inconsiderable creativeness. Mr. Hamm德hësh also discerns, through the ingenious haze in which he labors, powerful individuals i.e. the planners of the event" (the right to a public lecture of *Gel* or *Gel* who) "feel the Palestinians and persons opposed to Zionism at KU MOH" (the right to question or express opinions). Obviously these powerful individuals ("the planners of the event") were victims of a short-lived coup d'etat on April 24, 1978 when Mr. Fawaz Turki, the member and member of the Palestine Liberation Organization, spoke in the Student Union Ballroom. My question that evening of Mr. Turki was described by the Daily Kanas as "the only (expression of) antagonism ... from . . . the audience." The brief revolution against the faceless autocrats which made possible Mr. Turki's treason was so thorough that there wasn't a "Zionist hoodlum" in the house. was so through that there wasn't a "Zionist" Mr. Hammoudhow can one avoid concluding that he is at least guilty of "maccurate presentation of facts, biased reporting, and emotion-ridden analysis," the very practice which for several long years had offended him when he allegedly encountered them in the Journal-World. Both Mr. Turki and Mr. Hammoudhshare a willingness to selectively omit and/or shamelessly fabricate the state of mind which is part and parcel of the "anti-Irael" movement. This commitment to distortion or bright falsification becomes more understandable upon recalling that said movement has the cowardly Palestinian Liberation Organization (which regards the planting of bombs in crowded market places or heroism) for its political representative. Every pronouncement by that body's chairman, Yasir Arafat, or some lesser light in the organization affords us yet further evidence that Msrs. Turki and Hammoudh aren't the only invertebrate lians presenting the case against Israel. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr. Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan.Call 864-4358. 1 Page 2 University: Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Iraq expected to reopen oil pipelines BEIRUT, LEBANON—Iraq will begin pumping oil through pipelines in Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean Sea to avoid the war-clogged gas pipeline. In fighting yesterday, Iraq said its forces still held its largest offshore oil terminal, desiccated recaptured Iranian naval assaults. There has been no official confirmation of the report from either Syria or Iraq. The two countries broke diplomatic relations soon after Iraq invaded Iran Sept. 22. Iran has accused Syrian of aiding Iran in the conflict. terminar, beigejacket, and Saturday that it captured the Al-Bakr terminal after a naval battle in which 11 Iraqi soldiers were wunk. The report that Iraq will be increasing its oil production coincided with an announcement that the United Arab Emirates will reduce their output by 80,000 barrels a day starting Jan. 1, apparently to make way for increased Iraq production and to conserve their own oil wealth. The pro-Syrian Beirutidat As-Safiq quoted sources in Damascus as saying President Bashar al-Assad official of officials in Syria to prepare materials for acceptance among the Syrian government. The paper said the decision to reopen the pipeline was made after contacts between Iraq and Syrian officials. The flow of oil is expected to resume in early October, and will be delivered to Turkey. An agreement signed between Syria and Iraq in February 1979 stipulated that Syria would receive 35 cents for each barrel of Iraqi crude that crosses Syria. Hostage release may rest on Reagan The 52 Americans held hostage in Iran might not be released until Ronald Reagan is president, because he may be more able to make concessions to Iran, CBS News reported yesterday. The hostages spent their 33rd day in captivity yesterday, with no official word on whether they had been transferred to the Iranian government. CBS correspondent Mike Wallace, reporting from Tehran, said the general mood among Iranian officials was that the hostage crisis would not be under control. resolved soon. Wallace quoted the speaker of Iran's Parliament, Hojatoleslam Hashemi Rafasanjani, as saying it was up to the United States to make concessions for the release of the hostages. In an interview with Wallace, the governor of Iran's central bank, Ali Reza Nobari, said the hostages might not be released until after Reagan is inaugurated Jan. 20. Nobari speculated that Reagan might be more able to make concessions then President Carter has been. Uruguavan vote rejecting constitution Turnout for the plebiscite, the first election in Uruguay in nine years, was so heavy that officials kept the 6,171 polling stations open two hours longer than planned. The Gallup Public Opinion Organization of Uruguay said a representative survey of 138 election districts in Montevideo showed opposition to the proposed constitution at 66 percent. Thirty-three percent of those polled favored the constitution. "More important is the fact that the plebiscite was held in an atmosphere of peace and security," he said. "The results of today's elections are not important to us," Interior Minister Manuel Nunes said before the first round, "the results were released, the nomination was done and the "no" was rolled out." There are about 1.9 million eligible voters in the small South American nation of 2.8 million. Citizens fined and loss of pension and other rights The proposed constitution was drawn up during the past year by the military government in closed sessions. It would give the armed forces the power to participate in forming national security policy. Saudi bid to defuse border tension BEIRUT, Lebanon—Saudia Arabia made an urgent bid yesterday to defuse the border tension between Syria and Jordan before it erupts into another Middle East war. Prince Abdullah bin Abdel Aziz, commander of the Saudi national guard,护国 Damascus to a reasonably delivery message from King Khaled to the Islamic State. Government sources said the two talked for three hours. Aziz decided to delay his denouncement until today to allow further talks. Diplomatic sources said Aziz might then fly to Amman, Jordan, with a similar letter for King Hussein. The Jordanian cabinet met in Amman to hear a report about the 20,000 Syrian troops and 600 tanks massed on the Syrian border. Jordan's foreign minister denied Syrian charges that Jordan was supporting a subversive movement in Syria. Israel, a neighbor of both nations, watched the situation closely, Foreign Minister Yikhshak Zlahkam said. Analysts said the face faced no immediate threat. Prime Minister Menachem Begin briefed his cabinet, but a spokesman said the ministers made no decisions about contingency plans. Arab travellers, quoted by the Qatari News Agency, said troop concentrations were clearly visible on both sides of the Syrian-Jordanian frontier. However, civilian traffic continued to move between the two countries. Saudi Arabia launched its peace mission as fears of a military confrontation between Syria and Jordan mounted in Damascus. Syria's state-run news agency reported that the government WASHINGTON-Supreme Court action on a crucial sexual equality case could and military draft registration or answer some emotional arguments Supreme Court to act on draft laws Ruling last July in a nine-year-old case, a special three-judge court in Philadelphia struck down the law for registration on grounds it denied by excluding women. The high court is expected to act soon on a Vietnam war-era case challenging male-only law duties as being sexually discriminatory. The Philadelphia decision would have forced the government to either stop the present registration program or to include women. Justice William Brennan, however, suspended it until the Supreme Court decided whether to hear arguments in the case or to uphold the finding. Opponents of the Equal Rights Amendment have argued that its adoption could mean an equal opportunity for women to die in battle. If women are equally liable to be drafted, they have said, women also could be required to share fully in the dangers of military service. The all-male high court could have some difficulty sorting out the strictly legal issues in the case from the philosophical questions. Although the actual court decisions are often not clear, it is possible that A Supreme Court ruling striking down the present male-only draft registration system would thrust the issue back on the Congress, which would have to choose between stopping the registration or applying it equally to both sexes. Lawrence police are investigating a burglary late last week at Wheels of Fun, 3110 Iowa St. Police believe that someone remained in the building after it closed and stole $1,480 in cash and stereo equipment. On the Record Two cassette tape decks were among the items that arrived on Thursday and 12:30 Friday afternoon. An electrical fire Wednesday in the Spencer Art Museum burned out an elevator motor worth $750, KU police said yesterday. One of the cassette decks was valued at $450 and the other at $375, a police report said. believed to have been caused by an electrical short. A 73-year-old Lawrence man reported over the weekend the theft of $8,532 worth of jewelry and silverware in the 900 block of East 21st Street. No one was injured and there was no other damage in the fire that was The time of the theft was uncertain, and the man told police that the goods were stolen sometime in November, police said. KU police are investigating the theft of $1,040 worth of car stereo equipment stolen from a car parked in the building. Towers lot, 1603 W. 15th St., police said. The theft occurred between 9:30 Tuesday night and noon Wednesday, Workshop to aid holiday blues It is a commonly held belief that people are always happy during the holidays, but holidays can cause crises, and they can cause depression, which may deepen in depression. The Coping with Christmas Workshops tries to help people understand holiday depression and how to handle it. The purpose of the workshop is to help people in the exploration of loneliness in their lives and in the understanding of the nature, necessity and value of loneliness, said Beulah Duncan, executive assistant at the Adult Life Resource Center, a section of the KU Division of Continuing The workshop will be held tomorrow from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont will be repeated there at 7 p.m. on Dec. 9. Education, which is sponsoring the workshop. The workshop will feature a lecture on loneliness as well as small discussion groups, she said. Once the three-hour workshop is over, participants should have a better understanding of how important it is to admit loneliness in their lives, she said. They also should accept loneliness and not deny feelings by helping other people. They will know where to turn in the, community for assistance through critical periods of loneliness and will realize that everyone goes through periods of loneliness at one time or another. she said. --- Gary D. Bryant, associate pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, will lead the workshop. Crêpe Lovers Buy One, Get One Free From banana-nut to apple, Village Inn has the widest selection of dessert crepes in Lawrence. Bring in a friend and the coupon below for your free crepe! Now Thru Finals Week --- Crêpes Buy One, Get One Free Must present coupon. Expires 12-20-80. Village Inn PROCESS HOUSE BEST AIRLINE MOTOR VEHICLE WORKSHOP (Ignorance Isn't Bliss) "THE POTENTIAL CRIMINAL & CIVIL CONSEQUENCES OF DRIVING: THIRD FLOOR, CONFERENCE ROOM SATELLITE UNION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2nd-7:00 P.M. Sponsored by Student Legal Services Steve Ruddick, Attorney for Student Legal Services KU Police Department Community Services, Officer Vic Shore Alcohol Safety Action Project, George Lorey, Outreach Director TOPICS TO BE DISCUSSED: 1. Insurance Requirements in Kansas. 2. O.U.I. (Operating Under the Influence of Alcohol or Drugs Considerations. a) Police guidelines and procedures leading to arrest b) Tests to determine degree of influence c) Potential loss of driver's license d) Proof necessary for criminal conviction e) Procedures involved from arrest through court action f) Potential Penalties 4. Kansas Comparative Negligence Law 3. Kansas No-Fault Insurance Requirements & Application Kansas Comparative Negligence Law 6. Non-Criminal Consequences of Traffic Violations a) Potential loss of license—Tips to prevent loss 7. Accident report requirements Paid for by Student Activity Fees OPENINGS FOR SPRING OPENED "The choice selection of food, the maid service, the comfortable rooms, the swimming pool . . ." Kim Farr, Sophomore Lawrence, KS Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 23 Gabriel's Basketball 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 $1.99 all the pizza you can eat 2449 Iowa Every home Basketball game In the Holiday Plaza Courts Outside Delray On 5:00 pm until tipoff --- Carry-Out and Delivery 842-5824 R. L. 1 Scientific "Pion S Physics schedule room 136 The VOICES p.m.in SUA sponsor the Robi The K will m ternatic UNIV AUDITI producti Univers Sign-up to 5 p.m The FELLO Lewis H Gabriels A M MINIS titled Politica Cities Resear Linebe Good Luck Jayhawks! The 81 H u l e ctur La to in He Unive and Fran Fu Mex lectur tonight the Ka Fue cludin Skin,' Relat University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY R. L. BOUDRIE of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory will speak on "Ploan Scattering in EPICS" at the Physics and Astronomy Colloquium scheduled for 4 p.m. in Malott Hall, room 138. TONIGHT TONGHAN The INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL VOICES will rehearse from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in Murphy Hall, room 404. SUA INDOOR RECREATION will games at 7 p.m. in the Rolls-Royce gymnasium. UNIVERSITY THEATRE AUDITIONS for spring semester productions will begin at 7 p.m. in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall. Sign-up for auditions will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the theatre lobby. The KU MODEL UNITED NATIONS will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the International Room of the Kansas Union. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet at 8 p.m. in Lewis Hall. A MASTER OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION program lecture titled "From Political Sociology to Political Economy" State University of Urban Research State of Urban Research will be presented by Robert Lineberry of Northwestern University Fuentes has written 10 novels, including "Terra Nostra," "A Change of Skin," "The Hydra Head" and "Distant Relations." He graduated from the National University of Mexico with a law degree, and was the Mexican ambassador to France from 1974 to 1977. Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes will lecture on "Writing in Time" at 8 tonight in the Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Latin novelist to lecture in Woodruff TOMORROW The lecture is the second of the 1980-81 Humanities Lecture Series. The first one was given by R. S. Barker. at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet from 6:30 to 9 p.m. in Haworth Hall, rooms 209, 232 and 233. REBECCA AGHEYISI, chairman of the department of linguistics at the University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria, will speak at the annual conference in Nigeria" at the Linguistics Colloquy at 7:30 p.m. in Blake Hall, room 207. Fuentes is a fellow of the humanities at Princeton University. The MARANTHA CHRISTIAN MUSEUM, in the Nikolayevsky房 of the Union Admission to the lecture is free. "Kansas has had laws regulating hazardous waste since 1975," he said. "These statutes are essentially the same as the federal regulations." TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE all men mormon, in Robinson Gymnastics room 229 The KU SCIENCE FICTION AND TECHNOLOGY GROUP is located at 7:00 p.m. in the Bedroom Room of the University of Chicago. A SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Student Organization Lecture on "The Legal Aspects of Mainstreaming" will be presented by H. R. Turnbull, a medical education department, at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. apper wri ttle said KDHE had made the request to stop duplication and confusion in enforcement of federal hazardous waste laws. State officials and the Environmental Protection Agency have signed a tentative agreement that allows Kansas to take responsibility for enforcing federal hazardous waste statutes. Gerald Stoltenberg, director of the division of environment, said yesterday that his office had made the request in February to have a final approval of the request in January. The agreement, signed Nov. 19, stems from a request by the Kansas Department and Environment and Waste Management in the state. Stoltenberg said the federal hazardous waste statutes provided that states with adequate staffing and funds could assume responsibility. Kansas already controlled the enforcement of federal air and water regulations. THIS SUNDAY, MAKE IT A BUCKET OF CHICKEN FROM COUNTRY Inn' 843-1431 We Also Cater For Groups COUNTRY Inn R43-1431 Kansas gets OK to enforce waste laws When happy decisions are made . . . Choose a diamond from . . . McQueen JEWELERS, INC 809 Massachusetts 843-5432 McQueen JEWELERS, INC Tonight— Watch Monday Night Football on our Giant TV Screen! No Cover! popcorn, peanuts, hot dogs Denver Broncos vs Oakland Raiders 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center GAMMONS SNOWVIVI GAMMONS SNOWMONS a classic Mark Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Davin College, getting a job as a teacher U written by S.J. Perilanm. With it we have Laurel & Hardy's *Daisy* and *The Blues* in boxing. You can imagine they try to plan a game you can imagine (30/70 min) B; W: 7:30. Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers 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 film are $2.00; Tickets available online or by location information 684-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. SNA FILMS Red River (1948) Monday, Dec. 1 Montgomery Cliff *cliffed* opposite John Wayne in this film about a rancher who drives cattle across a dusty river. Beautifully filmed and suspensively directed by Howard Hawks. "One of the all-time great," 125 min. BW: 7-30. Foom Room. Tuesday, Dec. 2 Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bete) Jean Cocoeau's lytic version of the famous fairytale is remarkably imaginative and enthralling, a unique film. "The taste and charm of the film is immensely well-hallowed, with Jesse Gaby Jean Maries (81), B.W.B. French subtilities, 7:30. Roberto Rossellini's return to the neorealist tradition is the story of a black marketer, played by fellow neorealist director Vittorio Beccari on Black Screen. The character gradually grows into the role. "If anything, the years improved both neorealism and realism," Dobbs, Tibetan, years of Italian Cinema. (139 min.) &W.Italian/stablishes: 7-30. Wednesday, Dec. 3 General Della Rovere counties in early October. EPA officials criticized state officials for not taking immediate steps to remove toxic waste from sites. State officials argued that the waste posed no immediate threat The department's request includes a proposal that would increase the size of the waste management staff from four to 16 members, he said. EPA approval is also required for the staff increase because the federal agency provides 75 percent of the waste management staff's funding. 一二三 Dexter Shuemakers to America America's feet are in Dexter's hands. Dexter Unwrapping America McCalls NOW THRU CHRISTMAS OPEN SUNDAYS: 1-5 M-F 9-8:30 SAT. 9-5:30 629 Massachusetts "Industry views state control as an advantage because local officials have a better understanding of the conditions they operate under." he said. "Kansas will benefit because there will be a better application of the law." STOLTENBERG SAID KDHE's control of the program would have advantages for Kansas. adopt a new regulation similar to the federal regulation that went into effect Nov. 19, before the transfer of control could take place. Stoltenberg said the agreement requires Kansas to manage its hazardous waste program in the same manner as the federal program. could take place: The statute requires that records of waste creation and disposal be kept, Stoltenberg said. He said this would force Kansas to A recent disagreement about hazardous waste disposal in Kansas City, Kan., was not a factor, he said. EPA and state environment and health officials argued about the seriousness of toxic waste buried in dumps in Wiyandotte and Johnson WANTED— SENIORS— Description— A senior who still needs to buy a senior class card. Qualifications— $13.00, payable in cash or check Benefits— Benefits— • Senior class shirt - Nightly specials at local bars for rest of year - Senior class parties— - Senior class parties — 1st one Dec. 8 at Gammons - 1 party every week last 6 weeks of year - Supports senior class gift to KU - Supports HOPE award - Supports Commencement Where to apply— info. booth Jayhawk Blvd. in front of Wescoe When to apply— 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. Dec. 1, 2, 3 We are an equal opport. senior class Like a Good Deli Sandwich? Try the new Stuffed Pig! FREE salad & small drink with any sandwich when accompanied by this coupon. (Six salads to choose from!) THE STUFFED PIG PURVEYORS OF FINE SAUSAGES Mon Th. 11:30-8 Fri Sat. 11:30-10 Sun 12-8 Closed Mon. Good thru 12-19-8. Behind Safety 2110 Iowa Behind Safety Your hair reflects on you. Come to Reflections for all of your hair care needs. $5.00 off on hair design, perms, and highlighting. PLUS 20% off of Nucleic A Products. Good until Dec. 19 with this coupon. I O A Iowa St. Reflections 23rd St. Ridge Ct Iowa St. Reflections 23rd St. Ridge Ct. REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN Hall Court 841-5999 2323 Ridge Court 841-5999 A RESPONSE TO MR. HAMMOUDEH The November 18 issue of the Journal-World contained a letter by one Shawkat Hammouche accusing the Journal-World of some seven years of "inaccurate presentation of facts, bias reporting and emotion-ridden analysis." While reading a Journal-World editorial entitled "Intimidation at KIPMr. Hammouche found that he could endure no more and thereupon formulated a rejoinder. The editorial in question described how some 75 to 100 self-styled demonstrators had forced the cancellation of a public inquiry by Ehud Col, Israeli's consul for information last November 12. Mr. Hammouche was solely vexed by the editorial thought that "the free exchange of ideas appears to have been violated against a group of demonstrators." Actually, says Mr. Hammouche "The fact is that the anti-israel persons went . . . to listen . . . out of curiosity and the desire to learn and to ask questions. Not one student mentioned disruption or intimidation." Two paragraphs later Mr. Hammouche complains of "my very well performed teaching assistantship (being) terminated after I participated in a University-approved demonstration against the appearance of Rabin." a University-approved demonstration against the appearance of Rabbi Isn't it strange that this "curiosity and the desire to learn and to ask questions" that Mr. Hammoudhe attributes to the Moslem contingent and their sympathize with the night of November 12 didn't surface amongst this very same group that April evening in 1974 when former Israeli General and Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin spoke in Hoch Auditorium, instead of seizing this opportunity to question the architect of Israel's victory in the Six Day War, "antiselamite persons" contented themselves with disruptive parading and chanting which succeeded in silencing theMR. Rabin at least twenty-six times with some of these interruptions lasting three months. Surely it's needless to add that "a university-approved demonstration" has never been and is not today defined as a group of ill-mannered women attempting to drown out a distinguished guest speaker! Isn't it just as obvious that the participation of any university employee in such a display of hoodlumism is ipso facto grounds for dismissal. more grounds for dismissal. When Mr. Hammoudheh accuses the Israeli police of rank oppression and the "extermination" of the Arab population he once again fails to accompany his indictment with any details; indeed, the circumstantial evidence available indicates quite the contrary to be the case. Consider the following: 1. The marked improvement in the Arab minority's standard of living since 1948. 1. We marked improvement in the Arab minority's standard of living since 2003. 2. That both they and the Jewish majority have the same political rights, including the right to vote and run. for political office. 3. The existence, in Israel's system of free and compulsory education, of schools for the Arab populace in which language of instruction is Arabic. 4. The riot that occurred near Tel Aviv, Israel on Saturday November 22, when an estimated 100 Arab soccer fans felt sufficiently free of the Israeli aid of oppression to storm the field and cause the hospitalization of seven Jewish players, one with knife wounds in his back, after the defeat of their favorites by a visiting Jewish team. (Will the police, by firing warning shots to restore order, be seen by Mr. Hammoudh as practicing oblique genocide?) Don't the aforementioned facts make it quite difficult to view this charge of Mr. Hammoudheh's as anything theft that is not unreasonable creative capacity? another expression of his not inconsiderable creative capacity. Mr. Hammoudhhee also discerns, through the autogenous base in which he labors, powerful individuals i.e. the "planners of the event" (the public lecture by Mr. Col) who "feel the Palestinians and persons opposed to Zionism at KU should have no rights or express opinions." Obviously these powerful individuals ("the planners of the event with no rights or express opinions of a short-lived coup d'etat on April 24, 1978 when Mr. Fawaz Turki, an author and defender of the Palestine Liberation Organization, spoke in the Student Union Ballroom. My question was asked of Mr. Turki was described by the Daily Kansan as "the only (expression of) antagonism ... from ... the audience." The brief revolution against the faceless autocrats which made possible Mr. Turki's trade was so thorough that there wasn't a "Zionist hoodam" in the house. History has so through that there wasn't a "Zolahim" Mr. Hammoudh how can one avoid concluding that he is at least guilty of "inaccurate presentation of facts, biased reporting, and emotion-ridden analysis," the very practices which for seven and nine had so offended him when he allegedly encountered them in the Journal World. Both Mr. Turki and Mr. Hammoudh share a willingness to selectively omit and or shamelessly fabricate the mind which is part and parcel of the "anti-Irael" movement. This commitment to distortion or bright falsification becomes more understandable upon recalling that said movement has the cowardly Palestinian Liberation Organization (which regards the planting of bombs in crowded market places heroism) for its political representative. Every pronouncement by that body's chairman, Yasir Areafat, or some lesser light in the organization affords us yet further evidence that Msrs. Turki and Hammoudh aren't the only inveterate liars presenting the case against Israel. William Dann 2702 W. 24th St. Terr. Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358. Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 A list of things to do Thanksgiving break is over and now the 1900 fall semester will soon be history—or geography or calculus or biology. As hard as it is to believe, finals are approaching yet again. To be sure, the next few weeks will be busy ones. Many instructors will be assigning term papers or final projects and perhaps having a test. Let's not forget that this all happens right before finals. And let's not forget to do the holiday shopping. And let's not forget plans for the next academic semester. And let's not forget plans about that trip during the semester break. And let's not forget about the chilling winter season that will soon be with us. It is all too simple to forget something. Therefore, making a list of things to do each day may make life more organized, if not easier. And crossing off items on the list often makes one feel like something has been accomplished. A list wouldn't be a lifesaver perhaps. Yet that little extra something might make the next several weeks just a little less hectic and a little more bearable. Cities' survival on the line as Republicans cut taxes Part of the Republican Party's plan to convert the economy from a lumbering heavyweight to a supple middleweight is to cut taxes 10 percent a year for the next three years. Two of the cities to watch to find out if the plan works, assuming it is presented to and approved by Congress, are Detroit and Houston. Detroit's unemployment rate is running at about 18 percent and its inflation rate at about 20 Those two cities are at the extreme poles of the economic picture. TED LICKTEIG CARLTON BURNS percent. As an indication of the frustration felt from those figures, its murder rate is 47 for every 1,000 citizens. In a study completed earlier this year, Detroit was ranked with 11 other big cities as "most depressed." The voters have reacted by placing two socialists on the city council. Detroit has not been helped by the Michigan State Legislature, either. In 1969, Detroit's present mayor, Coleman Young, helped pass a compulsory arbitration law for municipal employees who are represented by unions. The city's police and firemen have invoked the law in several negotiations and have become the nation's highest paid in each category. As a result, the city will pay out $50 million this year, in what could be considered unjustified wages. The population, almost 50 percent black, will buy about $140 million more than about $140 million more. Meanwhile, back at the ranch, Houston's unemployment stands at about 5 percent and its inflation rate at about 12 percent. The city resembles a shooting gallery much less than Detroit. Houston's murder rate is 26 for every 1,000 citizens. In the same study earlier in the year, Houston was ranked with 11 other big cities as "least depressed." Houstonians' income has risen 16.1 percent during the last five years compared to 11.1 percent for the nation. 13 December. The population of Houston, the fifth largest city in the nation, and Detroit, the sixth largest, also have reflected the state of the economies of the cities. Since 1960, the population of Detroit has decreased 9.3 percent, while Houston's has increased 3.6 percent. the health of the cities' economies can be traced to the major industries of both. The auto industry, centered in Detroit, is in its worst state for energy industry, centered in Houston, is booming. Houston also benefits from the national space program in the form of government subsidies. It is the nation's largest producer of chemicals and fertilizer, the third largest home for construction companies and is headquarters for more than 800 of the nation's million-dollar corporations. The rest of the city reflects a strong capitalist atmosphere. Each day, one page of the Houston Post is devoted to oil and gas news, and one-fourth of the total bookshelf space at bookstores is occupied by books on business. Finally, there are no zoning laws in the city. Conversely, Detroit has had to lay one-third of its police force, and Chrysler has had to approach Congress on its shock absorbers for loan guarantees. Houston's future for its oil businesses appears to be good from a political perspective. President-elect Ronald Reagan has said he does not like the windfall profits tax, which was imposed earlier this year by Congress on the oil companies. If he has trouble making up his mind, George Bush, a resident of Houston, surely will help him decide whether to prosecute the repeal of the offshore gas law for three reasons if the most recent census figures are verified. The new representatives elected will, no doubt, be sympathetic toward the energy industry. The future does not look as bright for Detroit. Regardless of whether the tax cut stimulates business, Detroit obviously is in need of help. Because Detroit is going to live and die by the auto industry, it is the responsibility of the automakers to use the tax cut to put the extra revenue to a profitable use for their city. The final issue of the fall 1980 Kansan will be published Dec. 8. Therefore, those writing letters to the editor should submit them by 3 p.m. Wednesday. The Kansan welcomes your letters to the editor, but space and time requirements mandate that letters be submitted in the next few days if they are to be published. Deadline on letters nears 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 a graduate student, 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. Thank you. The University Daily KANSAN Letters Policy (USPS $654) 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 for lawrence, Kansas students. Mail to USPS, Attn: Postmaster, address 101 W. 27th St., Kansas City, KS 64103. Student subscriptions are a $2 semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kansan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas. Lawrence, KS 68045 Indiger Business Manager Coral Beer Holler Earl Strahler Managing Editor Cypress Hughs Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Kyle Pippen Associate Campus Editors Dan Munday, Mark Spencer, Chryse Wilcoome Assistant Campus Editors Gene Myra Associate Sports Editor Jason Weaver Associate Sports Editor Kevin Milla Entertainment Editor Ellen Iwamoto, Leslie Feagley Bob Schob Mangan Redmond Loch Winstanham Wire Editors Yeyu Chen Terry Turner Gail Eggers, Ellen Iwamoto, Tummy Turner Chair Photographer Carly Todd Photo Desk Assistant Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, Scot Hecker Staff Photographers Dave Kruss, Drew Torres, Robert Poole Amy Holloway, Fred Markham, Susan Schoemaker, Blake Gumprecht Scott Faust, Fred Markham, Susan Schoemaker, Blake Gumprecht Editorial Cartoonist Joe Bartos Staff Artists Michael Wunach, Bret Bolton, Johnie Richardson, Leona Lee Staff Artist Kevin Koster Retail Sales Manager Neva Plumer National Sales Manager Barb Light Campus Sales Manager Tracy Coon Campus Manager James Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Judy Selter Advertising Makeup Manager Judy Selter Photographer Brian Watkins Tearheads Manager Nick Ogleby General Manager and News Advisor Rick Munster Raman Advisor Chuck Chowitt LAME DUCK LIBERALS RIGHT WING CONSERVATIVES CAPITOL HILL A new "King of the Hill" RICHARDSON KANSAN 82 Letters to the Editor Fans' cup fighting childish, dangerous To the editor: We have all been to the KU football games and have seen the cup fights that occur at nearly every home game. Someone in the upper section throws a plastic cup at someone in the lower section. Next thing you know, people must duck to escape the barrage of plastic shots. Many people don't realize that these cup fights are not only childish but also dangerous! I am speaking as a cup fight casualty who's alive to tell about it. When I'm writing this letter, my black eye is swelling under the five stitches that I received at Watkins Hospital. I should live with the effects of someone else's lack of self-control, someone else's immature actions. I know of others who have been hit by these cups. May my experience is the most extreme. Yet I want people to be aware of what can happen when a little fun gets out of hand. If this letter doesn't make people stop and think, if it is too impractical to demand that immature jokers grow up, it might be necessary to disarm them. We could say, "Don't throw the foam or paper cups. Fans who want KU cups as souvenirs will find them in the Kansas Union—six for $1." Barb Ehli Leawood sophomore Moslem protest To the editor: I am writing in response to the article "Moslem demonstrators disrupt presentation by Israeli consul," which appeared in the Nov. 13 issue of the Kansan. I first would like to state that I am not against any organization that wishes to voice its opinion. However, I also must add that I am deeply disturbed by the event that took place on the evening of Nov. 12 in the Satellite Union. As a result of that disturbance, by about 75 Moslem students, the scheduled lecture was moved to a private home. Consequently, these Moslem students-who, I must add, are guests in this country-deprived other students of their right to attend a public lecture. I think these abuses need to be brought to an end. In my opinion, a reasonable reason—No student should have his personal rights violated by anyone because of his race, sex, religious views or national origin. Tina Wolff McCollum dirty To the editor: I am not writing in response to any Kansan articles; I want to bring to your attention the unsuitable conditions in one of our residence halls. McColum Hall simply is not cleanliness exists not only in the public areas and indoor rooms but also in the cafeteria. I realize that because of our warm autumn, there will be more than our share of files, gnats and roaches, but how much can one stand? We have had our hall sprayed for roaches twice this semester, and each time roaches are found on the walls, in our closets and on our clothes AFTER the spraying. Flies usually are seen collecting around spilled food and overgarbage cans. From my own experience, I find that my feet stick to the bathroom floor soon after we come back to clean it. I've seen people mopping the cafeteria floor. They don't clean the floor. They smear the dirt with water and let it dry. One can see the streaks dried on the floor. This is not just laziness on the part of the worker but also on the part of his or her supervisor. There is uncleanliness in the food preparation area of our cafeteria, too. Again, the floors are dirty. I have found hair in my entree and bugs in my salad. The list goes on. Unusually large amounts of oil are spilled, as well as served to the amount of state Kanawa, not familiar with the laws of the state of Kansas, but in other states, an employee is not permitted to wear shorts while working. I see this often. I have made efforts to bring these problems to supervisors. Our house manager has been quick to respond to our bug complaints. However, the food supervisor is ignorant to our food problems. Are these conditions found in the residence halls? I certainly hope not. These unsanitary conditions make it difficult to live here. I don't want to come across as a "clean freak," because I'm not. I just think that this hall's sanitary standards are being stretched a little too far. Wendy Kendrick Chicago sophomore Death wish To the editor: to the editor. In response to Brett Conley's Nov. 14 editorial, "President doomed during zero year," I would like to offer the following advice to the author. Fear, the instructor of hate, is the product of fear. The creator of love, is the product of knowledge. In plain English, there is enough hate in the world to go around and then some. Now, I don't know what your reasons are for wishing that Reagan die in office. To tell the truth, I really don't care what they are. Reality is far too important to all of our futures to make room for a person who would appreciate that. Perhaps you would have the decency to crawl under a rock the next time you get such a hurtful urge that you openly wish for another human's death. Brian M. Farley Overland Park senior Kansan attacks On Nov. 14, after a typical day at school, I came home and sat down to read a newspaper. What did my roommate hand me? A Kansan! My roommate replied, "This is the new Kansan." "Oh, well," I said to myself, "things could be worse." Sure enough, they were. I could cite several examples of journalistic buffoonery in this edition, but Brett Conley's article, "President doomed during zero year," was a classic example of poor taste. I can understand that most of the columnists and cartoonists on the Kansan despise Ronald Reagan. However, while it's one thing to dislike someone of a different political ideology, it is another thing to respect someone irresponsible and lacking in character, it's highly contradictory to the paper's liberal "altruistic" orientation to advocate the president-elect's untimely end. Unlike the Kanass, which seems oriented to attacking rather than to creating solutions to the problems it addresses, I proposed a remedy regarding its present existence. Go underground! The paper certainly is low enough. Besides, underground newspapers are more popular and exciting to read. Also, it will save thousands of KU students the $2 per semester fee that they presently are forced to pay. Therefore, probably will go unbeeded. Thus, to express my dissatisfaction with the Kanass, I now would like to take the opportunity to hereby figuratively cancel my subscription. (It won't do any good, but it does make me feel better.) Layne Tait Los Altos, Calif., senior Journalistic sewer To the editor: Every time I get to page 4 of the Kansan, I find in the lower left or right hand corner at least one letter that lambens the latest editorial-setting low in the quality of editorial writing displayed by one of the Kansan's columnists. But then, when I glance upward at the rest of the page, I find to my chargin an editorial that makes the lamentation obsolete. Just when one thinks a columnist has reached the final step down the ladder into the dregs of the sewer that is journalism, another one loses his footing and falls in over his head. Ab "Our part of what not feel take he want it nothing "In pressi and w The a attem more A w restra her hu order "Fri by the inform needed Rita shock comm "R "Are A WO assista said. "The provide she is choice. This was the case last Friday when I all too optimistically cast my eyes on Brett Conley's musings on the zero-year presidential jinx and its possible ramifications for the current president-elect. I must say, he did get off to a reasonable start in his recount of indisputable facts that everyone knows about the untimely deaths of some of our past presidents. And however he succeeded to the speculation no less than five slither paragraphs of it, he lost his footing and, with a disconcerting gurge, slipped the rest of the way into the bubbling muck. Allow me to remind the gentle reader of Conley's last words, uttered just as the molten sewage (most of which he himself had one way or another just produced) was closing over his head, and I quote: "So, for those people who wanted to see anyone but Reagan as president, things look good. Maybe with a little belief in old Indian legends the governor will get a job and will all be saved." I trust the two ambiguous propositional phrases in that last sentence didn't prevent anyone from divining its intended meaning, but if they did, consider yourself lucky. If someone, say I, were to pronounce a solemn curse to the effect that, beginning with Brett Conley, a Kansan columnist would die during his term on the Kansan editorial panel once every 20 years. I would consider it less than tasteful for even his worst enemy to begin dobling over his impending death. But for that enemy to take his drool and spread it across a five paragraph space for 10,000 to 20,000 people and indeed all posterior to see—I believe the word is barbaric. Will the bubbles marking Conley's entry into the journalistic dregs embolden yet another columnist to jump in after him? Look elsewhere on this page and find out for yourself. Eric Brende Topeka sophomore Morbid column To the editor: Although we've always considered the Kansan's opinion page a forum of left-wing extremism, we are shocked and outraged at Brett Conley's editorial of Nov. 14. His hope that the "zero-factor" brings a quick death to President Reagan is disgusting. Conley is obviously a sick person. His morbid thoughts are un-American, unpatriotic, unhappy with the unfair administration like the Kansas. We would hate to lower our standards to those of a jerk like Conley, but we find it awfully tempting to wish death to him and his like. Maybe then, as he puts it, "we will all be saved." Haney M. Sweda Jacksonville, Fla., senior David L. Tepoorten Richmond, Canada, sophom Free speech loses To the editor: After three years of needless confrontations and, finally, a changing of the guard, we recently seem to have found ourselves with a KU administration that has at least some understanding of the necessity of protecting free expression on campus. So what happens? This time it's not the administration but students who have grossly infringed on one of the University's most important principles—the right to speak and be heard. Those who disagree with the Israeli consul should be given ample opportunity to question him and make their disagreements with his government known. But to intimidate him to the point that he must leave the campus without speaking is intolerable. Is truly free speech EVER going to come to KU? Tim Miller Lecturer in Religious Studies University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 Page 5 lils in iio loo'they and to a to ame mely ever, theer theery nethery obtenny werer the er of er lowenley way ker his her this in old n let his t his ing its ing its leolern Brett brett very 20 very 20 like he like his like he sleep all ad ry into entherewhere Abuse From page 1 " our policy is to enter the situation, disarm the parties and separate them to hear their side of what happened. We know that a woman may not feel free to talk in front of the man. But it doesn't matter and she still insists she doesn't want to talk, because it's not in dancer, there's nothing we can do." nomore Kean- ing ex- breat Brette that the presidenti- cily a are un- caretied Kansan. those of y temp- Maybe A WOMAN'S motivation for refusing police assistance is of no interest to the police, Olin said. "The opportunity for safety is what we try to provide," he said. "For whatever reason, even if she is acting out of complete fear, it's her choice." phomore ontations recently KU ad- derstan- expres- t the ad-ssly infr-important heard. li consul question with his him to the outspeak- come to Rita said that a woman was often in a state of shock after a beating and would be unable to control herself. "Frequently, the woman is just as intimidated by the police officer who makes no attempt to inform her of her rights and the course of action needed," she said. us Studies "Instead, she is quickly left with the impression that the police officer will do nothing, and when he leaves, she is in double jeopardy. The abuser is now more incensed by her futile attempts to get protection and she feels even more helpless than before." A woman can apply to district court for a restraining order or a protective order requiring her husband to stay away from her. Getting the order enforced, however, may be difficult. “Restraining orders are overrated,” Olmán said. “A restraining order is not a law, it is an order of the court. An individual who breaks it is charged with contempt of court. We cannot arrest a violator unless another crime is committed, in which case he will have to return to court." ALTHOUGH A restraining order technically can't be enforced until after it has been broken, it may make the police somewhat upset. The woman is also living home, said Rose Marinos, a lawyer for Kansas Legal Services. That "willingness" does little to help a woman who is repeatedly attacked by a man and can not afford it. The reaction is predictable, she added "Praise say restraining orders are civil matters and must be enforced by the courts. Courts say they can't act until the police have made an arrest, but summons is issued. It's a Catch-22 situation." Filing criminal charges is not necessarily effective either, the woman says. A woman can file charges of assault and battery on either a misdemeanor or a felony level, Jean Shepherd, assistant district attorney, said. Of the cases actually filed with the district attorney's office, the conviction rate is good, she said. But a conviction requires evidence of some crimes addressed to the assault or pictures of the injuries. MANY LAWYERS are unwilling to handle civil or criminal cases for abused women, Rita said. Despite her history as a battered wife, Rita wound up getting a "no-fault" divorce-her lawyer said that it would be quicker and that the judge would look more favorably on her if there wasn't a big fight. During her divorce proceedings, Rita requested that the court order counselor for her and her husband "in an effort to preserve the home and family." She said, "The counselor was just as chauvinistic and male-centered as Ralph. I thought, 'My God, I'm being buried alive again.' In the direct opposite of what I wanted to do'." Friends and family of the battered wife soon turn away from her, either because they don't know how to help or are scared themselves, Rita said. "The doctors usually gave me nerve pills and sent me home," she said. "Stress had taken its toll over my whole body, but they'd ignore the bruises and tell me it was psychosomatic." EVEN MEDICAL professionals offer little hope, she said. "The one time a doctor in my home town would talk to me about it, he said," Rita, "I see a lot of people like you. Sometimes the only time a person like that finds peace is when she in her car That sort of reaction is devastating to a battered woman, who already has a low opinion of herself and probably feels as if she is guilty of causing her misery. Rite said. "In the beginning, it's conditioning," she said. "You're brought up to feel you have to depend on a man, that the man's there to protect you and "If you're from a religious family, you have it drilled into you that marriage is for keeps, and that it's a sin to get a divorce." it's the woman's place to be in the home with the kids. A COMMON PLAY of an abusive husband is to isolate his wife from outsiders, thereby increasing his power of intolerance, Rita said. "The worst times came after I started talking to other people," she said. "He felt he was losing control. Finally, I even stopped going to church. He never physically tried to stop me, but if I went, he'd do something to make life miserable for weeks." Regardless of the emotional state of a battered wife, however, the degree to which she is economically dependent on her husband ultimately determines her ability to leave. A woman who has been a housewife all her married life usually has little or no training for a job outside the home. In addition, she may have children to care for, and she knows that she would have no immediate source of income if she left her husband. Rita, however, was neither poor nor uneducated. when she and Ralph married, he had graduated from the University of Kansas and she was saving up to go to a design school in New York. At one point, Ralph was earning $48,000 a year, but spending only $400 to $500 a month on his family. Rita said. "The larger the family income, the greater the tendency to blame the battered wife for her own predicament, and the more difficult it is for her to extricate herself from the situation," she said. "Money talks, and the abuser uses it prowess to buy his innocence. My husband used money as a whip, setting it up so I could get funds, only for food or clothing, a day at a time." AFTER A WOMAN has been subjected to battery failure, she reaps a learned-helplessness. "Then she turns to public agencies, and the reaction of professionals is to discount what she's saying and put her down more, often because they can't deal with it themselves." "She's continuously exposed to comments about being incompetent and stupid," she said. "She's threatened that if she goes to her parents or friends, they'll be in jeopardy." Even if a woman manages to get a job, often she earns only minimum wages and is forced into poverty. "Everything works against the woman to tell her she's helpless," she said. "Even if avenges are not possible, it can be done." legal and social institutions are beginning to take important strides toward understanding and helping the battered woman, but changes are not coming fast enough, Rita said. First the public must be made aware of the problems involved in the battered-wife syndrome, and then it must be taught how to deal with those problems, she said. or her part, Rita is completing her degree in counseling at KU and is continuing to research the subject cf wife abuse and its possible solutions. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Paalms 2:1 and Acta 4:25 —The greatest Oak Tree you ever saw, the largest that ever grew, once upon a time was condensed and compacted in the shell of a little acorn. The power of life that the Almighty put within it enabled it to be used as a weapon for its own defense and to itself to its greatest and anomynity and serve man, bird and beast. We suggest that the First Psalm of The Bible, God Almighty's Book revealing Himself to man, might be likened to the Acorn in which is condensed and compacted the great Truth of God revealed by the greatest Tree — THE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PSALM5. Every message of every Psalm can be easily related or connected to one or the other messages of the First Paragraph. The Psalm is also a source of those who delight to meditate and walk in The Law of the Lord, or the curse upon the unpunished who do not so. Consider the Second Psalm, the opening words of which is the question at the top. The "heathen ragers" are named as "people who imagine a vain thing, kings, and rulers, who set themselves in opposition to God's Lawe and His Anointed, His King, his reign, principally laws and king, and put down the rebellion." The heathen are warned to submit to God's King, make peace with Him, or perish when His wrath is kindled but a little! "Clouds arise, and winds blow, by orders from God's Thrown to Heaven," says Watts. "Not only do he sails to the ground within his reach, but Father's permission," and therefore it must be "commanded by God on orders from His Throne." Whenever terrible and shocking catamites befall, naturally men begin to cry: why? why? why? O why? And doubtless we do well if sincere, for The Word of God says "You shall not search the earth of kings to search it out." If you believe The Bible, and will read The Bible and note the context of such words as BCAUSE, WHEREFORE, THEREFORE, etc., in time you can find just what the whole word is the whiten." And you can read far until you find the God making explanation with "BCAUSE." In the third chapter of Genesis: "And The Lord God saith unto the serpent. Because . . ." and the next word Because is infirmed in what was supposed to be "Unto Cain God said: If thou doest not well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well, sin littah at the door: "Abraham "did well," and note to the place of "Because." Because is written for thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son; That in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thee, and in thy seed because I will bless thee; BECAUSE THOU HAST OBEYED MY VOICE." {"the curse shall not causeless come," the Scriptures "they may infer also blessings shall not causeless come"} P. Q. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 SAVE $1.70 Monday Gladness WHY BE MAD WHEN YOU CAN BE GLAD Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get 2 LARGE Cokes for only $5.40 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get 3 LARGE Cokes for only $6.65 Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery!! Open 'til 1:00 A.M. Every Night! 507 W. 14th (at the Wheel) DRINKS WANTED We Pile It On! SAVE $2.50 THE EYE OF GOD C. H. Hodgson Carlos Fuentes Mexican Novelist Humanities Lecture "Writing in Time" Monday, December 1 8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium BURNT WATER STORIES BY CARLOS FUENTES CARLOS FUENTES BURNT WATER CARLIS FLETTERS TRANSLATED FROM MARYLAND PRINT Carlis Fletcher's gifts bring warmth to the hearts of children and families. The author is a pioneer in raising children of First Nations people, and her work has been made possible by the world of women's writing. A collection of her works is available on her website. A memorial to her from the time he was strongest man, she remembers him for his love of the world, his kindness and courage. In 1978, a memoir of her life was published, making her one of the most famous women in Canada. She lives in Montreal, where she owns two children's books. Born in New York, she is all their experiences, and all their dreams. All of them are here now, all of them are part of the great adventure that will take place in this book. Her greatest gift is an awareness of the great opportunities that lie ahead for her and her children. Carlis Fletcher's papers are an enduring reminder of the great opportunities that lie ahead for her and her children. Carlis Fletcher is provided by her grandmother, a former educator, a former school principal, a former teacher, and a former minister. Author of: - Death of Artemio Cruz - Burnt Water - Hydra Head - Change of Skin - Terra Nostra - Aura Available at: Level 3, Main Union OREAD BOOK SHOP OREAD BOOK SHOP BEST QUALITY BEST PRICES BEST TRADEMARK YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES BEST QUALITY • BEST PRICES • BEST SERVICE YOUNG KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store Level 2, Main Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union harris tweed . . . the finest and most durable handwoven fabric in sport coats for both men and women . . . . the classic gift for Christmas 1980 from Mister Guy, lawrence's finest contemporary traditionalist open nightly till 8:30 Dec. 1-23 MISTER GUY 920 Mass. MADISON ST. ANDREW MUSIC CENTER MISTER GUY Stage 6 University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 Elderly rights group formed Two KU associate professors of social welfare are helping to form a senior chair of the Center. The two professors, Ed Dutton and Ann Weick, both senior citizens themselves, say they are especially interested with problems faced by the elderly. The senior citizens' group will be designed to find gaps in existing programs for the elderly and will try to find ways to fill those gaps, Dutton said. The founders of the group say that their group won't be as radical as the Congress, but they do that has staged strikes, sit-ins and has gained much publicity nationwide. Instead, the group will act as an advocacy group and will help or in- fluence other groups. "One function might be to encourage agencies already providing services for senior citizens to include some additional needed services," Weck said. Most senior citizens face transportation problems and problems with driving. support not provided by other programs. Dutton said. For instance, the group would try to start support groups like the Ring-A-Day program, where members call for help. Each person's day to check on them, he said. Dutton said that about 40 people attended the group's organization, making it a 'huge success.' "We're not another service agency, Weck said. "We want to provide ad- ditional services." THE GROUP will not seek government funding if it can find other funding, Dutton said. He said he envisioned a new program that self-supporting volunteer organization. "Even though our concern is specifically for elderly issues," Weick said, the group is formed by people of all ages. "We all need to be aware of and concerned with the needs of the elderly." A sub-committee of the group will meet next week to decide what issues it will focus on, Weick said. TRAVEL CENTER TRAVEL CENTER WINTER PARK (plus air) 3 nights - condominium - 2 day lift $115.00 STEAMBOAT (plus air) $90.00 4 nights lodging - 3 day lift CANCUN - MEXICO 3 NIGHTS until Dec. 11 $198.00 after Dec. 14 $317.00 Sat. departures until Dec. 13. After Jan. 11, Sunday departure 7 NIGHTS $484.00 INCLUDES: Round trip air from Houston transfers & hotel taxes. CORPUS CHRISTI (plus air) $23.50 per night Best Western on the Beach In-room steam baths - whirlpool - sea food restaurant. SOUTH PADRE ISLAND (plus air) $171.00 Tiki (condo) overlooking the Guil- Polynesian restaurant & lounge. 6 nights + 6 day car rental PORT LAUDERDALI (plus air) Beach Club - Cabana Rooms Dec. 14-Jan. 4 3 nights $48.00 7 nights $120.50 3 nights $30.00 Jan. 5-Jan. 31 7 nights $99.50 Includes transfers, discounts for extractions, tours, shopping and restaurants, plus souvenir. BAHAMAS - NASSAU (plus air) 3 nights $77.00 7 nights $173.00 Includes transfers, discounts for extractions, tours, shopping and restaurants, plus souvenir. INTERNATIONAL (round trip air) London via TWA $495 Frankfurt via Brasilii $534 Miami to Caracas via Vieja $284 L.A. to Tokyo via Northwest Orient $735 Miami to Rio de Janeiro via Verlag $801 New York to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia via Pan Am $1220 SUPER SAVER ROUNDTRIP AIR Dallas $ 70.00 St. Louis $ 78.00 New Orleans $108.00 Atlanta $130.00 Chicago $133.00 Denver $180.00 Las Vegas $180.00 Los Angeles $208.00 Washington $208.00 Phoenix $217.00 New York $235.00 Miami $243.00 San Francisco $254.00 Boston $261.00 Seattle $293.00 * All rates per person, double occupancy & subject to change. Reservation restrictions may apply. Linnae Custer, Joanna Elmer, Beatriz and Brian J. Rayd SKY The next year, vandalism costs were again on the rise and increased by more than $21,000 in 1977, according to housing office figures. Vandalism costs have risen every year since. Last year, vandalism cost halls $41,434. Vandalism on the KU campus overall has remained about the same for the past two years, according to Jenne Longaker of the KU police department. From Aug. 28 to Nov. 15, 79 inpatient longacks caused an estimated $6,733 in damages to mailboxes, blue emergency phones, signs, walls and sidewalks, she said. CANCUN - MEXICO 3 NIGHTS until Dec. 11 $199.00 after Dec. 11 $317.00 Set, departures until Dec. 13. After Jan. 11, Sunday weekends. INCLUDES: 7 NIGHTS $484.00 Round trip air from Houston, Airport & hotel taxes. KU vehicles also were hit by vandals, causing approximately $3,483 and 156 injuries. VIEWS OF TAHUNA USA 841-7117 If the vandalism and improvement fund is not spent on vandalism repairs, the money can be used for hall improvements that residents want, Wilson said. When the vandalism and improvement fund was set up in 1973, vandalism costs were about $150,000. Vandalism declined and a reached a decade low of $12,928 in 1976. Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd Street, Lawrence 9:30 AM - 8:30 PM, 8-20:00 Sat - Save this phone number Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too. Call 864-4358. Vandalism "Most residents have made a real effort to cut down on vandalism," she said. At least two members of the residence hall system have questioned the practice of classifying needed hall repairs under vandalism. Paul Nance, assistant resident director for Hassinger Hall, said he had the same concern. Nance said he was not sure just what the office of housing, is responsible for the maintenance of the hall, considered vandalism. From page 1 "A lot of things they charge to van- gether," he said, "it's actually the result of we work together." J. J. Wilson, housing director, said determining whether needed hall repair was the result of wear-and-tear or vandalism, "was necessarily a judgment. Most damage to hall however, resulted from vandalism," he said. ACCORDING TO housing figures, 7.7 percent of the more than $300,000 1979-80 housing budget was allocated for building and equipment repairs, while 6.2 percent was allocated for repairs during 1980-81. Hashinger had spent the least amount of vandalism repairs of all the hails for the last four years, according to housing figures. damage to residence halls comes from the Vandalism-Special Improvement funds that were designed to discourage vandalism, according to Wilson. Each resident housing contract includes an $18 fee that goes into funds for each hall. Halls are funded according to the number of residents they can house. The money to repair vandalism Quake From page 1 At the Vatican, Pope John Paul II rescued rescue workers and said, "We ask that the generosity of hearts and the solidarity of an entire society may correspond fully with the demands of the moment." In many mountain villages, freezing temperatures and heavy snowfall added to the misery of tens of thousands living in tents, caravans and other makeshift shelters. Terrified women and children fled into the muddy fields early yesterday when the aftershock hit. In the village of Balvano, where a church collapsed on 300 worshippers last Sunday, a score of screaming and weeping women rushed out of the police station where they had been taking refuge. 10 HOWEVER, THE panic in most cities A5TA Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Deadline for Orders Dec. 15 Chocolate Kiss 4. 5 oz. Chocolate Kiss Delivered With Each Order THIS WEEK Wednesday 106* PARTY with the CLOCKS The observatory has registered more than 14 aftershocks since Saturday night. Cheap Pitchers All Night On All Four Nights December 10 EDDIE SMAW - FREE 8 THE DERS & MORELLS 2 & 13 THE SECRETS REGGAE WEEKEND Thursday, Friday, Saturday BLUE RIDDIM BAND with CARIBE Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-5930 Tawrence Opera House Tower House Free Concert sponsored by Fellowship of Christian Athletes Tues. Dec. 2 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room Union EVERYONE WELCOME TO ATTEND! H MATTHEW 10:8 chaRis Headmasters Scientific Hair Analysis Hair Reconditioninguttations Long Hair Design Programs • Complimer Braids • Skin Care and Make-up Lessons • Brow Free Demonstrations For and villages quickly subsided. Experts at the observatory on the slopes of Mt. Vesuvius, about 10 miles southeast of Naples, issued a statement saying that the aftershocks were a normal occurrence after a major quake and that there was no danger of another major temblor. Classes • b Manicures • Pedicures • Party Styles • Guaranteed Home Hair Care Prod at Gift Ideas • Grance Line • Special Kids' Heat Styling Tools Brushe Every Wed. Open Evenings Till 8 Made For Your Convenience ay Prices Problem-Solving App. Friendly, Helpful, Professionals Any And All Welcomed Gift Certificates Available Happy Holidays To All The Staff At HM 843-8808 EMERald CITY ANTIQUES, USED FURNITURE LARGE SELECTION JUST NORTH OF THE BRIDGE 809 Vermont --- COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNSTONE TELPHON 855-7291 GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE R BENJAMIN 7:15 & 9:00 Mat Sat & Sun 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 843-1065 VARSITY JOHN TAYNE TELEPHONE AVAILABLE THE PRIVATE EYES 7:30 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 HIWHEECH ST Some films you watch, others you feel. DONALD SUTHERLAND MARY TYLER MOORE Ordinary People TVXL 7:15 & 8:20 MAT SAT 11:30 & 2:10 HILLCREST 2 THE ELEPHANT MAN Ev. 7:15 & 8:25 Mat Sat & Sun 2:15 HILLCREST 3 TEL 123 456 7890 TELPHONE 855-8400 HILLCREST 3 FIVE AND TWO VIRTUAL EVENTS SINSY SPACEK 7.30 & 9.30 HILLCREST CINEMA 1 1317 AND 1014 TELEPHONE 212-6400 CINEMA 1 FILMSTUDIO & CINEMAS 40 W. 920 Sat & Sun Mar 2 20 "At last" Mr. Wang CINEMA 2 4:30 PM - 7:30 PM ZIP: 1A1E-00D-DAH1 Walt Disney's Song & South THE WONDERLAND 7:30 only Don't Miss the Fun! CHEVY CHASE Caddy shack 9:35 only C. H. SMITH Officials searching for survivors were found alive Saturday. Three people were found alive Saturday. Glusepee Zamberletti, the government commissioner in charge of overall rescue operations, told a news conference in Napies that the government's plan for evacuating villagers from the stricken mountain region to requisitioned hotels in coastal resorts was already under way. ZAMBERLETTI SAID that persuasion, and not force, would be used to evacuate the 126 villages most severely damaged by the quake. KL Throughout the stricken area, villagers with relatives living and working in Germany, Switzerland and other European countries, their homes to live with their relatives. The placed ternal team But in many cases, relief workers reported a stubborn resistance by the villagers and peasants to be moved away from their native areas, fearing it would mean postponement of plans to rebuild the villages. Five annou Assoc nounc There is a difference!!! NEW PREPARE FOR: MCAT · DAT · LSAT GMAT · GRE · OCAT VAT · SAT Schedules Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact 8112 Newton Orrentland Park, KS. 68208 (913) 341-1220 Educational Center Canton & Mayer U.S. Corp. HOW TO WEIR AT THE LOBNO CENTER DIET CENTER By the "weigh" - how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa --- M Th 8:4 kinko's Sat 10:5 Fri 8:4 Sun 12:5 Xerox copies 2½¢ 8½ x 11 white It's the end of the semester and Kinko's is here to help. —Theses —Resumes —Chaas notes —Reductions —Binding —Passport photos 900 Vermont 843-8019 monday madness Our drivers carry less than $10.00 Limited delivery area *1800 Damone Pizza Inc.* Fast, Free Delivery Call us 841-7900 1445 W 23rd St. 841-8002 610 Florida --- $5.50! Monday only. 16 oz. cup of vanilla ice cream plus 2 cups of Pepsi One coupon per pizza $10.00 Fast, Free Delivery 1445 W. 23rd St. 841-7900 610 Florida 841-8002 DOMINO S PIZZA DOMINO'S 9222 010919 6301-2 University Daily Kansan, December 1, 1980 Page 7 KU tops conference in UPI selections The Kansas Jayhawks, despite a 4-5-2 season, placed more players on the United Press International all-conference team than any other team in the Big Eight. Five Jayhawks were on the team that was announced last week, one more than was on the Associated Press team. The AP team was announced two weeks ago. The player added to the UPI first team was senior defensive back Joe Tumpick, a second-team AP selection. The first-team selections of both wire services were freshman running back Kyle Back Serretti, senior flanker David Verser and senior noseguard Stan Gardner. Bell, who set a conference record for a freshman with 1,114 yards, was named the AP offensive newcomer of the year. He edged Iowa's top defenseman Dwynne Ducktie, fielding 1,gainled 1,323 yards. In a landslide vote, Nebraska lineman Toby Williams was named the defensive newcomer of the year. the year. In a closer race, Nebraska's head coach, Tom Osborne, edged KU's Don Bambridge by one vote for coach of the year. Fambrough, in the second year of his second term as KU's head coach, won more games than KU had since the 6-5 1974 season. In 1977, 1978, and 1979, the Jahvahwars were 7-25-1. KU's five selections on the UPI first team was one more than conference champion Oklahoma, runner-up Nebraska and third-place Missouri bad. On the AP first team, Missouri had five selections and KU, Oklahoma and Nebraska had The Jayhawks, however, came up short on the UPI second team, placing no one. AP chose senior defensive tackle Jeff Fox and Tumpf for its second team. Fox, who was KU's only selection on the AP academic team, was a UPI honorable mention. Nebraska led the brain team with eight selections, including quarterback Jeff Quinn. To qualify for the team, an athlete needed a B average in his classwork and must be among his peers. KANSAS CITY, Mo.—As the biggest running back in the National Football League at 280 pounds, Pete Johnson of the Cincinnati Bengals was beginning to wonder how he had become so By United Press International Johnson was healthy for the first time in six weeks yesterday but stood on the sidelines for almost the entire first half against the Kansas City Chiefs. He had missed the previous five games, all Cincinnati losses, because of a sore knee... Johnson, a former Ohio State All-American, made a brief first-quarter cameo, carrying the ball twice for 9 yards in the Bengals' lone touchdown drive of the half. But he then returned to the bench as Coach Forest Gregg shuttled Archie Griffin, Charles Alexander and Deacon Turner in a futile attempt to establish a ground game against the Chiefs. Johnson, however, came off the bench in the second half to rush for 105 more yards, setting up a goal. But the defense held him back. Big Bengal fullback runs past Chiefs "I was getting really frustrated," Johnson said. "I was getting worried. I was wondering if he was ever going to put me back in there. I was standing on the sidelines it's frustrating. Bengala to a 20-6 victory over the Chiefs. It was Johnson's second 100-yard game of the season. Jonnson carried the ball seven times for 29 yards in a 14-play, 62-yard drive that resulted in a 1-yard TD pass from Jack Thompson to Demonte and the Bengals in 13-13 lead with 9:18 left in the game. "Maybe they were resting me, maybe they didn't want to get the fat guy tired. I too big to run. I'm too fat to run. Isn't that the press what a bumming day is?" But I keep getting yards." After Nick Lowery booted his second field goal of the game of 40 yards to pull Kansas City within a touchdown at 13-4, Johnson put the game away in overtime. 57-yard touchdown run, with 1:50 remaining. It was only the fifth rushing touchdown of the season for the Bengals. Kansas City linebacker Thomas Howard trailed Johnson the final 10 vards. It was Johnson's fourth score of 1980. "If I hadn't scored in that one, I knew I would have taken some abuse from my teammates." Johnson said. "Getting caught from behind by a linebacker? I don't know if they would ever let me live that one down. He wasn't going to stop me on that one. "But I'm supposed to get caught from behind because it's so big, because I'm so fat, right? But I don't. Once I get through I'm gone. Just watch me." ttle 7 Yesterday's Games Los Angeles 36, New York Jets to San Diego 22, Philadelphia 21 S. Louis 22, New York Giants 2 Minnesota 23, New Orleans 20 San Francisco 21, New England 17 NFL Results Thursday's Games Chicago 23, Detroit 17 (OT) Dallas 51, Seattle 7 Pittaburg 23, Miami 10 Minneota 23, New Orleans 20 San Francisco 21, New England 17 Los Angeles 38, New York Jets 13 Sea Dillen 22, Philadelphia 21 Atlanta 10, Washington 6 Baltimore 22, Baltimore 24 Cleveland 17, Houston 14 Pittsburgh 23, Miami 10 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 15 words or fewer $2.35 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 $2.75 10 words or fewer $6.50 $8.50 $9.50 $10.50 $10.50 $10.50 $10.50 $10.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS 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. 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. 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 844-1588. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ANNOUNCEMENTS Hillel לולא Hillel invites you to meet: Rabbi Marc Fitzerman of Ohev Shalom in K.C. Alcove D Kansas Union Cafeteria A Hillel lunch; Wednesday, Dec. 3 11:30 - 1:00 ENTERTAINMENT TRAVEL CENTER TRAVEL CENTER Domestic & International Reservations • Airline • Escorted Tours • Hotel/Resort • Ski Packages • Car Rental • Group Rates International Student Specialists 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, KS 9:30-5:30 M-F 9:30-2:00 Sat. 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St, Lawrence, KS 9:30 AM-M 9:30-2:00 Sat. 8 days nights at a luxurious Brownswood Campground located in Apt. 153 at Apt. Aceh Highlands 7 days nights at a luxurious Brownswood Campground located in Apt. 153 at Apt. Aceh Highlands Discounted additional days Free mountain picnic Free transportation SUMMIT SKI ASPEN/ SNOWMASS $189 per person Charter bus option $85.00 FOR MORE INFORMATION C $189 PLEASE OPTION 5838 CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 864-5835 AFTER 6:00 FOUR OTHER TRIPS AVAILABLE FOR RENT Perfect for 4 students. Large to bus route. $112.90 each per month. Large 4 bdm. duplex. central air conditioning, all appliances. Call 853-5730 or 853-2704. *streethome Townhouses Renting now. Other townhouses, 10/8th bath, attached, attached garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern way home towns, 20/12th, Kasey, 743-1977. 2. bedroom apt, and small efficient apt 3. bedroom apt, and small efficient apt 4. comfortably. Reasonably priced. Call us at (800) 796-1234. Apt. and rooms for rent newly remodeled building and downtown. No phone. Phone 814-500-3500. No phone. Spaecious, 2 bdm. apt. for 7 to 4 people. Brown and white. 10 bedrooms and downstairs. No pets. Phone 844-656-9010. For fall or spring, Naisht Hall offers you the best of dorms. In addition to food and good clothing, it weary maid service to clean your room, make your bed, and much more. If you're looking for a home or an apartment like this, Naisht Hall, 1800 Naisht Drive, 843-8559. *ff Villa Capit Apts. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bdm- apts. apts, available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet. quiet辅导. Quity 42-670 for block 3 or any time on weekends. For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out part of rent. Call 842-4185. tf 3 bdrm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-7333. tf NEW DUPLXE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE APARTMENT LIVING, YOU CAN ENJOY the AFFORDABLE DUPLXES OFFER, FEATURES INCLUDE: GARAGE, CURRIGUARD, GARAGE, FULL BATH, WALK-In CLOSSETS, SEPA- TURES, PIPE WALLS, TWO OR THREE STUDENTS. MUST SEE WISCONSIN STREET FOR MORE INFOR- mation. TO OFFER, MAY 9 @ 5 P.M. NEW DUPLXE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE APARTMENT LIVING, YOU CAN ENJOY the AFFORDABLE DUPLXES OFFER, FEATURES INCLUDE: GARAGE, CURRIGUARD, GARAGE, FULL BATH, WALK-In CLOSSETS, SEPA- TURES, PIPE WALLS, TWO OR THREE STUDENTS. MUST SEE WISCONSIN STREET FOR MORE INFOR- mation. TO OFFER, MAY 9 @ 5 P.M. Roommate to share house. **1116/mo.** +- utilities. Available Dec. 15. 182-0438. For rent now or in December, townhouse, Haskell, east side of street, Carpet, district dryer furnished 1½ baths pay water, shower, $60 deposit per person, y/y contract, $50 deposit per person 2 bdmr .15% bath, 1½ bath, living room, pool, 4-6 p.m. 841-9788. + else. Call 12-81 + else. Call 841-9788. Like new—1. barm. accr. across from school 8. barm. across from school 2. barm. furnished mobile homes. Quiet location. No children or pets. Reference rates. 8075 or 842-0182. Jawhack school. 12-8 STUDIO - sublime at Meadowbrook for rev. upgrades. Water, heated tub, and nudged, water and cable paid $204, $811, $736, $576, $498, $439, $399, $369, $339, $319, $299, $279, $259, $239, $219, $199, $179, $159, $139, $129, $119, $109, $99, $9 DON'T WAIT till the last minute to find a house to rent. Townhomes will be ready for you in Jan. nished, conveniently located in your town, townhome day! You can rent your townhome today! Your phone number is 812-1234. 12-8 NEW 4-PLEX available for second semester. Newly added kitchen and COMPLETLY FURNISHED. Centiously located at 9th and Indiana, within 10 minutes of the airport. 4855 (a.m.-p.m.) or 841-1212. 12-8 Fo. Sublease: Two bdmr, completely furnished apt. With fireplace. All utilities paid except electricity. Available after 12-54pm. Contact Jim at 74-6043. No call after 12-11 Sacratius b. larmt, in Trallidge.Ga. and Ireland, 1895; in Cormack.Ca. and tennessee, of tennis courts and poob. Call 749-1942. Brand new 3-bedm. duplex in super local location in New York City; prices $255, $817-907 day, $845-904 evening. House for rent—beautiful home with 3 berms, garages, and a large kitchen partially furnished in a great neighborhood to KU and shopping mall. Room by room, utilities and驻 post. 842-448. references. 12-3 Sublease bdm. 2aptm. (4 beds) $80 per per room. $35 per bus route. 941-9788. 12- 8-8. Sublease one bdm. apt. starting January finally furnished. Water paid. Deposit. Central heating. $210, 748-2114. After **490** and **890**. Room. $55/mo. $85 dep. 1/ usilites. 1333 Kentucky. 843-7040. Randy or Steen. 12- Roommate to share luxury condominium, close to campus, close to campus; $140/month. #81-016 Must sublease nice 2 bdmr. apt. Close to campus. Off street parking. Call 841-7131. 12:29 Christian Campus House has a few open rooms. Call 842-6529, between 9:00-5:00. Subsite studio apt. *Fully furnished* Lo- saite studio apt. *Fully furnished* Mo- call 3471 or 841-5255 Large, furnished one bdmr. apt. on bus route; $210/mo. 749-2419. 12-5 2 or 9 berm, insulated, remodeled home, all appliances, unfurnished, fence yard, out building, AC, walk to escape rooms, adults adults need only apply. $300.84-0783.12 Available Dec. 22, 21手机 app. 110/nro. guage utilities. On bus route. 841-1625 of Buc- ron. Need to sublease: 2 bdrm. apt. 5 min. from campus. Laundry facilities, dishwasher,洗衣机, safety door, Water & Waste Bath Available. Available. Mfg./gross. Call士 at 841-125 already, 24-30. Sublease on bdm. full bath at 9%. blocks from campus. No deposit. Call 749-1662. 15-8 Available Jan. 1, L'uxurie duplex, Madison, dbls, appliances, dbls, kitchen $40, $65-85, or dbls, appliances, dbls, kitchen $40, $65-85, or dbls, appliances, dbls, kitchen $40, $65-85, or from campus. No departure. Room is large, 3 berms, unfurished ap. in an old house at 1400 Tenn. Avail- largest livingroom, kitchen and bedrooms large. Rentals paid by iordland Call Jennette at 844-750-2600. Female Roommate to share 2 bdrm. fur- rent. On bus route $115.00 paid 84-7817 12-8 Sapacious bdmr. for male in apt with two students. Free December 25, 2018. 14--you need $13/mo. plus 1 3 low utilities 5 min. to campus. 433-858-4584. 12-8 Studio for sublease at Meadowbrook. Furn- ished before, 841-7538. Available after 841- 8928. There will be two openings in the Kolomna Community living group for spring semesters. The program is based on education obtained at the Kumum University Ministries Center, 1204 Oread, or call 843-489-7265. MEDADBWBOOK TOWNHOUSE available on bus route. Phone 841-3600. Kbps guest. On bus route. Phone 841-3600. Kbps Must sublease 2 bdmr. apt. Jan. 1 to before January 30. Must be on K-12 route. New carpet 841-0938. FOR SALE Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them! Makes sense to use them! As study exam preparation. "New Analysis of Western Civilization." Crits Mall Books Store and Oed Book- store. Alternator, starter and generator specialties: AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-909-908, AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC. 843-909-908. WATERED MATTEES $38.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 70, 65, 55, 45, 35, 25, 15 *** PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. proof positiv, laminated in hard plastic. For design purposes only. Stamped envelope to: DBJ Productions, dept. K Box 523, Tempe, Arizona 8123. 12-4 MATTRESSER, Orthopedic sets from $39. FURNITURE, one-bed block west of 91st and Furniture, on block west of 91st and Vintage clothing and老店 ole "junete" at junete.com. 960 W. 14th St., 323-2324. 308 W. 6th, 11-5 Tues.-Sat. 323-2324. tjunete.com 1978 VW Rabbit, black with black interior, 50,000 miles. Very good condition mechanically and physically. Michelin tires. 120 miles. Must sell soon! Call 841-3653 or 842-972. Must sell soon! GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOTHES Euro- leather leather jackets. 49-814. Clacks. Call 650-732-1645. Honda Mopar for sale. Good condition. Mopar $35. Call 841-6842 after- evenings. Alfus by Page in-dash AM/FM/UK Audiovox speakers model Tryxox Audiobook speakers model Tryxox More old stuff than one commonly has to handle. The number of odd bits of Sterling and pottery this week. Emerald City. Just north of Johnstown in N. Lawrence. Open Mon- Sat; 5-90. 12-5 1975 Suzuki GT-750. Must sell now. Good condition. 843-80-1260 or 1301 Louisana #1b. * Must sell: Tame Monk monkey, 14 inch gold camera, cassette recorder 14,12-8 Keep trying! 1978 TR7 excellent cond. full sun roof, low elevation. Excellent interior conditions. Inquire inquiries only. Baldwin 904-316-1564 Rectangular bumper pool table. Excellent Basketball court with all balls in bails 841-8331 5 p.m. 12-5 2-year-old townhouse, 1344 sq ft. 8 bdm; 2-bathroom apartment; 600 sq ft. Lawrence, Assumable; 600 sq ft. Found piccled in Wescoe last Thurs. Call 864-515 and identify. Technics 45 watt receiver and a pair of Acoustic Research book shell speakers 12-S FOUND Found a set of keys SW of the River 842-6736. (about 2 weeks ago) 12-3 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES/ ORDERLIERS: Will you share your work with the students? Our customer organization, Kansas State University, will provide nursing home residents? Our consumer organiz- ation, Kansas State University, will provide nursing home residents? Our consumer organiz- ation, Kansas State University, will provide nursing home conditions and your opiont on the care of your student. Your correspondence will be kept confidential. Please call us at (804) 723-6150, Mass St., 92, Lawrence, Kansas 60044, Mass St., 92, Lawrence, Kansas 60044. OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer, year, round Europe. S. Amer., Australia. All. fields. $500-1200 monthly. Slightseeing. Free Info Box $55 - Box $K91 Corona Delit I-8 at A 6905. $1500 to $3000 monthly工作 off-shore and on-call. Employees must provide presence necessary, work one quarter net tax paid, list of company hire, sample pay table, list of companies hiring, sample pay table, and position description. Dept. 22, P.G. Box 12-5 Miscellany Floor Need singers, good voices will receive HIJQH say '842-8993. Call for appointment.' Student assistants needed in records department at 12-50 noon, 12-50 per week during school year and full time during school breaks and after school hours. At 12-50 maker Center, 1506 Engle Road. Postdoctoral applications in analytical chemistry of drug substances and microbial samples, in pharmaceuticals and biopharmaceutics are in pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics are in Pharmaceutical Chemistry. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60444. Industry and biological sciences are invited to apply.生物科学 are invited to apply. Employment Employer Deadline for Applicant is December 3, 1980. 12-3 Part-time help to do light shipping, filing, and typing. Flexible schedule approximates a week's work. Apply for a week at Don's Speed Junction; mile north of highway 24-40 junction. Henry's has opening for 3 persons noon Apply in person. In person Quiries only. 12-4 Jayhawk yearbook needs a morning secretary, must be able to type and monitor office duties. Supply 300 A4, Applications at yearbook office, 121B Kansas Union, 12-3 NURSES: Psychiatric nursing provides unique personal growth. We offer excellent bringe benefits including $1247 or $1496 months, plus shift rent and monthly occupancy. We include weekend duty only once a month. Full Time or Part time hours: 4. Excellent continuing educational program, holiday and sick leave. BCIs life and career credit. We welcome your application. Call Nursing, Owasawatonic State Hospital, Owasawatonic, Kansas. We encourage our employees encouraged. LOST $5.00 REWARD for CHEM 150 notebook. I lost it between my room and Muhry Hall, Wed. Nov. 19 it is red, asks Chemistry on it, written with Nexi, asked for and black ink Cell. 12-3 7404 ask for OA NOTICE A reorganization meeting for GSKQ will be held Thursday, July 31st at the International Room in the Union. It will address the issue of Gay and Straight Relationship in the International Call of our Congress there. 12-4 PAID STAFF POSITIONS ADVERTISING NEWS-EDITORIAL The Kansan is now accepting applications for the spring semester of student staff. Many of these are paid, part-time positions; many require some newspaper experience. Application form available at Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities 220 Strong Hall and 120 Secondary Center. Completed applications are due in Dean Lebengood's mailbox, in Room 105 Flint Hall by 2 p.m. Tuesday, November 7. Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people with academic background,色 sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry PERSONAL FOX HALL SURGERY CLINIC -abortions at 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth Control. Counseling. Tolus Baglion. For women with ovarian cancer. For 40 w. W 108. St. Overland Park, Kanaa 40 w. W 108. St. Overland Park, Kanaa SKI VAIL! Alum has new condos. for rent. 9-bbd-1842 Alum has new condos. for rent. 653-Caspi Cacillo. 303 - 478 - 6190 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTHH PREGNANT 843 - 4821. tf SINGING MESSAGES for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. tf LOUISI'E'S WEST DRINK AND BROWN Tongue after 6 $4 - gourmet $3 - girls All the cool Coco you can drink. TZ & Michigan L Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got you covered. Our four-hour course is no problem too small, no time too late. We'll teach you how to quantify your needs in 102 Massachusetts, Guangzhou by any age, and by any class. Partially fundable. Student Activity fees. 12-8 This Christmas give yourself and your family a wonderful gift. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure! Let Swellia teach you how to proud to own and proud to give. Excellent quality at reasonableness guaranteed to please you. Why accept any lower price than we offer? Give us a guarantee Gift Idea Leather Billfolds For Men & Women Baby Face Holiday Plaza M-Th 10-8 Sun 1-5 BAG SHOP We Buy used furniture. Phone 841-4244. 12-8 Send a Singing Santa. 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THE ROAD VICTORY over an almost exclusive junior college transfer team from Nevada-Reno was expected, but the 91-73 blowout was not. There were a lot of other happenings Saturday that differed from what some pessimists expected. KU would not have enough players left to start the game, the pessimists said. Victor Mitchell, junior college transfer center, was fat, too slow, overrated and would be a bust, they said. The team could not depend on junior forward David Magley because he never started to play well until late in the season, they said. If Darnell Valentine or either of the centers, Mitchell or Art Housey, got into foil trouble, KU's chances would be shot, they said. Well, seven players was plenty. Magley had KU's first two baskets and a career-high of 18 points. Mitchell may be fat, but too slow and overrated he wasn't. Valentine, Mitchell and Housey all spent time on the bench and ended the game with four fouls. AND, KU BEAT Nevada-Reno 91-73, and all the way. The Wolfpack challenged KU for the first 13 minutes of the game, and with seven minutes to play in the first half, KU had only 27- The next five minutes all belonged to the aywaks. Booty Neal stepped in for Valentine, who was on her way back from the beach. three buckets from outside and KU outscored two points, the margin at halftime, the score 47-32. The Wolfpack challenged again in the second half, pulling as close as 9 points, but the Jayhawks were always able to hold them off, because of absence of Valentine, Housley and Mitchell. KU held Nevada off with the shooting of Tony Guy and Magley. Guy finished with 22 points on 10-for-14 shooting and Magley was 7-for-9 from the field and scored 18 points. OWENS HAS OFFEN TALLED Guy a chemistry man and indeed it was Guy who pulled the Jayhawks together when Valentine was on the bench Guy had nine assists to go with his 22 points. "We functioned extremely well as a team, especially in the first half," Owens said. "In the second half we sort of lost our inspiration. We didn't mean to blame and I think it helped us get aggressive again." KU was sparked early by Magley, hardly expected to be an early season team scoring leader, judging by his performances early in his first two seasons. Magley scored the majority of his first two season's total points and he scored three of KU's first four baskets and had 12 points at halftime. Part of the reason for his start was his heated shoulder, Owens said. "MAGLEY HAS HAD A great six weeks of practice," Owens said. "In his first two years he had shoulder problems, but his shoulder is completely healed now. He is shooting the way that we thought he would when we recruited him out of high school." The entire KU team shot well in the season opener, hitting 53 percent of its shots. Valentine had the toughest time, hitting only 4-10, but he came out on top as the team's second on the team to John Crawford's eight. Crawford was the only starter for KU who did not score in double figures. He hit three field goals and was perfect on three foul shots for nine points. Victoria Mitchell started in his major college debut and hit 6-9 shots and three free throws for his total of 15 points, certainly not enough to make a standage in junior college, but still a good showing. Mitchell has been much maligned about his weight, which appears to be more than the 250 pounds that he is listed at in the roster, but Owens has said that Mitchell's weight was not important if he could do the job. Saturday, he did the job. "I have had confidence that Victor would play well and be did." Owens said. WITH THE RECENT knee injury to sophomore forward Kelly Knight and the departure of sophomore guard Ricky Ross, Owens found himself with only seven players that last week that those seven would get most of the playing time for KU. He proved that at Reno. The only two substitutes Owens used until the last two minutes of the game were Neal and Housey. Housey has had an ankle injury and has had little practice time but he was able to score 6 points on 3-04-1 shooting and, more importantly, grab six rebounds. "The seven who played most of the game did well," Owens said. "Those seven know they will play a lot. They are a mature group, all seniors and junior们 now that we have lost Kelly." Owens said after the game that his only regret about his substituting was that he did not play the game. "My only disappointment is that I didn't get Booty more time," he said. "He has worked hard in practice and he earned playing time. David played so well that I just couldn't get him in." OWENS SAID HE was pleased but not surprised with the composure his team showed in playing its first game on the road, the first time a KU team has done that since 1966. "That comes from having a veteran ball man," he said. "With juniors and seniors you can have a lot of fun." The Jayhawks will return to Lawrence with little rest for a Monday night game at Allen Field House against Pepperdine. Owens will be seeking big 3000 square victory at KU. Pepperdine returns six letterman and two starters from last year's 17-11 team. One of those 17 came against KU at Malibu, Calif, home of the Waves. The Waves will be led by Royin "Bond" Bom, a 5-foot-2 guard who scored 13 points a game last season. They also sport a 7-foot center in Brett Anderson and a 6-foot left guard who averaged 6.4 points a game last season. Assistant coach Bob Hockill steered Peppardine in its first game Friday, a 118-9 victory over Hastings, Neb. College. He was impressed with the fundamental play of the young team, Owens said. "They shot a record for a Pepperdine team," he said: "They execute very well on offense. Coach Hilt recruited them and was impressed with their skills, but they are a very young team and a very strong team." UNF GRAPHIC ALL CAMS Colorado W 0 PCT W 1 O 1.00 Kansas State 0 0 .300 0 1.00 Kansas State 0 0 .300 0 1.00 Oklahoua 0 0 .300 1 1.00 Missouri 0 0 .300 2 1.00 Iowa State 0 0 .300 0 .600 Oklahoua 0 0 .300 0 .600 Nebraska 0 0 .300 0 2.00 Oklahoma 71, Arkansas 83 Oklahoma 94, Westernern 82 Arkansas 81, Missouri 73 (Great Alaskan Shootout) Womeln 62, Nebraska 59, OT Kansas 91, Nevada-Reno 73 Kansas Shake 72, Northern Iowa 54 Missouri 73, Colgate 67 (Great Alaskan Shootout) Idaho 74, Nebraska 54 MISSOURI Massachusetts 14 Akron—Anchorage 53 Great Alaska Shootout) Pepperidge at Kansas South Dakota at Kansas State Iowa State at Vanderbilt Temperate's Game Tony Guv Tomorrow's Game Oral Roberts at Oklahoma State FG FT REB PF TP Magley 79 44 3 18 Crawford 54 4 2 18 Milchell 60 34 5 4 Michelle 104 37 7 15 Valentine 612 57 4 12 Vaughan 417 52 7 15 Housey 34 0 0 6 Summern 0 0 0 4 M.Knight 0 0 0 4 Worrell 0-1 0 0 1 Worrell 0-1 0 0 1 Worrell 0-1 0 0 1 | | PG | FT | REB | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Martin | 69 | 11 | 9 | 2 | 8 | | Johnson | 69 | 12 | 9 | 2 | 8 | | Palm | 6,11 | 7,13 | 6 | 3 | 19 | | Palm | 6,11 | 7,13 | 6 | 3 | 19 | | Paterson | 6-11 | 11 | 0 | 1 | 4 | | Belloumiens | 2-4 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 4 | | Gosnell | 5-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 4 | | Stucken | 2-4 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | | Digher | 6-11 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | | Bailen | 1-2 | 0-2 | 4 | 1 | 2 | | Turner | 12-4 | 1-2 | 3 | 4 | 2 | | Turmer | 17-47 | 17-47 | 37 | 20 | 73 | Javhawks make fifth road victory tournament championship Kansas Nevada-Reno By PATTIARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Against Wayland Baptist, Woodard popped for 32 points, Scott for 17 and Claxon for 16. KU had a 36-27 halftime edge and came out shooting in the second half. Playing on the road has been so good to the KU women's basketball team, that they may not want to come home. So far, Kansas has played four games and taken four by more than convincing margins. The latest victories came in Plainview, Texas, in the Queen's Classic. KU won the tourney Saturday night by whipping host Wayland Baptist 80-58 behind the shooting of Lynette Woodard. Woodard, Megan Scott and Tracy Claxton paced the Jayhawks the entire tournament, scoring in double figures in each of the three games. Scott opened the tournament Thursday by scoring 25 points to lead KU to a 108-83 rout over Delta State. The Statesmen have won the AIAW national title three times. Chris Stewart added KU was seeded second in the tournament, Wayland fourth. Top seeded Stephen F. Austin University was upset in the opening round by Wayland, Kansas was ranked ninth in the Associated Press' preseason poll, but was picked to finish fourth in the country in this week's issue of Sports Illustrated. Delta State tried to run with the Jayhawks, a tactic that proved to the Statesmen's disadvantage. Even though the game was close in the first half, KU's conditioning proved valuable. Delta State couldn't keep up with the Jayhawks in the second half, and KU exploded. The rout put KU in the semi-finals, where Oregon was waiting. Only five Jayhawks score 102-95, a loss to Oklahoma. Head Coach Marian Washington said the game was important to her team because it proved KU superior. KU shot more than 50 percent in the finals and outrebounded Wavland 47-32. That was the first close game KU won this season. Beside the two mismatches in Texas, KU whipped both Nebraska and Creighton in the opening weekend. shooting match between Woodard and Oregon's Bev Smith in the closing minutes. Woodard won 5-4. **AU** played the entire tournament without senior forward Shera Lebrata, who injured her knee in a scrimmage before the season began. But Claxton, a freshman from New Haven, Conn., has filled in admirably for Legrant, scoring in double figures in all of the leading scored in her first collegiate game against Nebraska, when she and Woodard both had 23. Woodard, who is chasing Carole Blazewiak to become the leading scorer in women's basket-stealing. The game against Oregon came down to a of the 413 she needed at the beginning of the 2006 season. Blaziewski, Blaziewski had 3,299 career points. The senior from Wichita is averaging 28.6 points a game, ahead of last year's average of 28.3, but still off her average in her sophomore season. She leads women and women, in the country with a 31-point average. Wayland Baptist will get another shot at the Jayhawks tonight when the two tangle again in Plainview. The teams have met four times, with the series tied at two games each. KU has won the last two contests. Last year's score was 91-58. But KU had to forfeit that game when the AIAW ruled that Shyra Holden, KU's former center, played while inelegible. have a Christmas ball at francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts 843-4191 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 bounce it yourself or take the tip . . . for Christmas MacGregor • X10L basketball 36.95 $25 off team price! • Last-Blit construction • molded channel seams • deep pebble-grain finish • tanned in "touch" "Sporty things for sporty people . . . for Christmas" PARTY SUPPLIES ZERCHER PHOTO "Where cards and gifts abound" OUR FRIEND IS YOUR FRIEND We have someone for you to meet. He's soft, plush, and a very good listener. Come into the Zercher Photo nearest you and get acquainted. 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The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas KANSAN Tuesday, December 2, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 68 USPS 650-640 BEN RIOT EDIKansen stal A An old bathhouses was one of the items found in Potter Lake after Facilities Operations' workers drained eight feet of water from the lake last weekend. Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities Operations, said yesterday that the water was siphoned into a drainage sewer so a rock wall lining part of the lake could be repaired. Other items found in the lake included a pay telephone, a parking meter, a bicycle and a manhole cover. This is the first time the lake has been drained since 1958. IBM dismisses copier chemical hazard By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The IBM Copi II, a machine widely used on the KU campus, uses a chemical that recently has been discovered to cause genetic mutations in bacteria and rotent cells. However, the levels of possible human exposure to the chemical, trinitrofluorone (TNF), are so small that they are "hygienically insignificant," according to E.L. Fairfield, IBM director of information at IBM headquarters in Armony, N.Y. IBM reported last April that it had discovered the possibility of TNF as a mutagen. The environmental Protection Agency since has asked IBM to provide more data on the chemical, and the company is complying with the request, Fairfield said. GOVERNMENT STUDIES DATING back to 1982 have established TNF as a suspect carcinogen, a possibility that still concerns the EPA, Fairfield University, and the FDA, exclusive proof of carcinogenic properties in TNF. "The issue here is whether the users of the product containing the chemical are exposed to hazardous levels of that chemical." he said. "If you wear the copier, I don't believe there's any danger." The coin-operated Copier IIs can be found in several campus buildings, including Watson Library and Green, Learned and Wescoe halls. According to Gene Puckett, KU purchasing director, the machines are provided to the University on the terms of the state copier contract. There are two places in the Copier II where TNF can be found. Approximately 45 grams are embedded in the copier photoconductor, a sheet of photo-sensitive material in the machine. Much smaller amounts also get into the machine's used toner reservoir. Puckett said. According to the Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances, published by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, TNF is highly toxic, rating 5 on a toxicity scale of 6. It takes only 47 milligrams of TNF to kill an average person. However, there is almost no possibility that a attacker could have a fatal amount of TNF and arriving to Failed. Only IBM maintenance employees normally come in contact with the photoconductor, Fairfield said, and they wear gloves for protection. The useon器 is put in a sealed plastic bag for disposal, and Fairfield said he treats civicmen wore gloves for handling that as well. Of the 45 grams of TNF in the photoconductor, 99.7 percent of it remains in the photoconductor throughout the photoconductor's life, Fairfield said. "The virgin toner, the toner that goes into the machine originally, contains no TNF and does not pose a danger to library employees handling it." he said. makes the image on the paper. It is roughly comparable to pen ink." SMALL AMOUNTS of TNF also have been found in the air surrounding the copier and on the copies themselves. Approximately fourteen-thousand TNF units that are TNF is fused onto a page by the copying process. The toner is the substance that actually "The TNF won't smear on the copies like newprint type. "Fairfield said. "You'd literally run into an oldsnap." The amount of TNF in the air around the copier is approximately one-billionth of an ounce per cubic yard, Fairfield said. It is such a small amount that it can be measured by even the most advanced methods. IBM has continued to test the chemical since the Copier II was introduced in 1970. "We keep in close touch with the EPA, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health," Fairfield said. THERE HAVE been no employee complaints about TNF TO OSHA's area office in Wichita, according to Lionel Olson, senior OSHA industrial hygienist. we "deal usually in gross exposures, nothing like them," we're talking with the NTN. "Oil exposure." A sense of perspective on these matters is necessary. Fairfield said. Past not remembered Mexican novelist says "The chemical is hazardous, but human beings are just not exposed to it in significant enough amounts for it to harm anyone in any way," he said. By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter In the 1980s, Western nations should rediscover their pasts and learn to tolerate other cultures, Carlos Fuentes, a well-known Mexican novelist, said last night. "We shall either know each other or destroy each other," he said. Fuentes, a diplomat and essayist who has written 10 novels, said Western society lost its ability to learn from the past as it rushed in the pursuit of technology and happiness. FUENTES' LECTURE, the second in which Fuentes taught that a contained many references to philosophers and He spoke in Woodruff Auditorium to an audience of about 300 people, mostly professors and researchers. Fuentes, a native of Mexico, said that as European, Western and communist powers conquered Third World nations, they also debased themselves. That debasement is illustrated in Daniel Defoe's "Robinson Crusoe," he said. Robinson Cruse, the first capitalist hero, was marooned on a god-forsaken island in the Third World. TO SURVIVE, Crusoe conquered the island and Friday, a native he found there. In the process, Crusoe enslaved Friday and forced his culture on him, Fuentes said. "In the end, the novel showed that the only thing that is more important than being a slave is freedom." In today's world, conquering nations is much like Cruise conquering Friday. Colonized people are assured that happiness and peace await them in the future, he said. But for the conquered people, that future never comes. Fuentes said. He recited an imaginary dialogue between a conquered roan and his conqueror. "We will be happy in the future," the conqueror said. brucer of us said "All of us?" the native asked. "No, first the white men, the property owners, will be free." lave a sacerdote. "Perhaps, the conqueror said. 'Maybe.' THE DIALOGUE was imaginary, but Foenites said the conqueror's attitude was evident when the United States interfered with Chilean sovereignty. The French tried to oblige Eastern European countries. influence Eastern Europe. He said, "When conquering a people, he said, major powers try to force their culture and their distorted conception of time on those people." "For those people, the time of paradise was in the past," he said. "But after the Enlightenment (in Western philosophy), paradise was in the future." "The West has been obsessed with future and with infinite perfectability. They call the past irrational and barbarous." ITS ABILITY to forget the past has made the West successful, Fuentes said, but it also has made possible Soviet concentration camps and the bombing of Hiroshima. The bright future that the philosophers of the era brought to the institution has arrived, Fiesente said, and happiness has arrived. "We have seen the future, and it doesn't work." he said. man can only progress if he ceases to admire thee. The man says, "he said," and "if he sees that the true glory of God" Western countries still can progress, Fuentes said, but they must progress by accepting other cultures and by remembering and learning from their own pasts. Excessive heat in Lewis Hall damages residents' property Staff Reporter By RAY FORMANEK A malfunctioning heating system caused a heat wave that swept through Lewis Hall during Thanksgiving break wilting plants, melting candles and killing fish. The malfunction occurred sometime between Tuesday night, when the hall closed for last week's vacation, and Sunday afternoon, when the building reopened to allow Joe Willmon, assistant housing director. The blowers on the heaters have all been turned off, which has made the temperature bearable, according to Geri Lamer, Olathe junior and resident assistant at Lewis. "The windows are all open Sunday," she said yesterday. "Today the windows are closed and all the lights are off." IF SUMMER IS NOW WILL MON SAID he first learned of the problem yesterday morning from a student desk worker at the hall. He said he arrived at the hall about 8:30 to work for an employee who had called in sick. "When I arrived, the desk worker and other students started telling me about how hot their rooms were." Willimon said. TRACY STOVER, a Valley Center freshman who lives down the hall from Jennings, said she lost all her plants and her bedspread ruined by wax. "I had a candle inside a glass," she said. When I came back from vacation, it was all lit up. "The thermostat in the aquarium was at 120 degrees. I came in, she said." All the fish were moving. Stover said the heat had spoiled about $15 for dinner. He her refrigerator and curied posters on her wall Residents said their rooms were so hot that candle wax had melted and spilled onto counters "The refrigerator was on, but everything in the freezer was melted," she said. "It was like the Bahamas in here," Lauren Jennings, a hall resident, said. "Candle wax was all over the place, and my stereo is ruined," she said. Jennings, Prairie Village freshman, said the heat had evaporated three inches of water from her aquarium and killed all her fish. Willmon then he placed sheets of paper at the hall desk for residents who suffered damage to their computers. Communication problem for transfer students See HEAT page 5 By PAT WEEMS Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Valarie Horton, Kansas City, Kan., senior, came to KU last year thinking she would transfer 61 credit hours. But she soon found out that only 49 hours would count toward her KU degree. Horton said her Kansas City City Kansas Community Justice counselor told her all her answers. "One thing that neither my counselor nor my adviser told me was that I would have to take a music theory placement test," she said. "That later proved to be one part of my trouble." "Maybe if they had told me when I graduated, I could have brushed up on my theory. But I didn't know I had to take the test until I received information about the enrollment information two weeks before I enrolled." HORTON SAID that might not have happened when the checker into KU$ transfer program procedures. "Most students assume the adviser knows everything. Maybe if my adviser or counselor had told me, I would have been prepared to lose some credit hours, my time and money," she added. Horton also said she never saw KU's equivency, which could have saved her four long hours. The placement test lost Horton eight music theory hours. She also lost four hours of music history, a course her adviser, Glenn Trent, had said she shouldn't have any trouble transferring. She lost even more time when she was sometimes in piano in inpoa to a freshman after her music audition. COMMUNICATION BETWEEN community colleges and the University is not the problem. Transfer program communication is. "The articulation is there, but the problem is the students to take advantage of what we offer," said Alton Davies, president of Kansas City Kansas Community Junior College. "We work hard to get the information out to the students, but it is difficult because 99 percent of them are illiterate." "Every time a new community college catalog comes out, the courses are re-evaluated and sheets are made up and preemptly sent out," said a graduate evaluator of the office of admissions and records. "The transfer information is readily available to students," Walker said. "All they have to do is ASK. KCK and 25 other Kansas community colleges receive a sheet listing their courses and the KU equivalents every year. Jen Walker, the KCK juice transfer counselor, agreed with Davies. Henley has found that problems sometimes arise when a student changes majors or decides to try for a double major and assumes the courses will transfer. The only way the counseling office learns that a student is planning to transfer is when the student comes in and talks with a counselor, Walker said. IF AN EQUIVALENCY sheet is not available at the school, then the student or an administrator can write KU and get one from the office of admissions and records. Individual school sheets also are made up and sent to the schools, she said. "If the student doesn't make the effort, the team will be planning to go to KU or anywhere else," Walker said. The counseling office asks students with 40 or more hours about their graduation or transfer plans in October of each year. "If the student doesn't come in, communication problems begin because the counselors have no way of knowing whether the students need help or questions answered," she SEVERAL OFFICIALS from Kansas community colleges said there were sure to be communication lapses between counselors and some students, but all thought their programs adequately served the needs of transfer students. Johnson County Community College has eight full-time counselors, and there is little reason for lack of communication between students and counselors. Norberg, JCCC articulation coordinator. all JCCC counselors and department heads receive the equivalency sheets. "Department heads are given the sheets so that when they change or revise courses, they are kept aware of what four-year schools are doing," she said. They also have a section on transferring procedures in the school orientation booklet, a workshop on choosing a four-year school and weekly visits from area college counselors. One student now attending KU said she had no problems transferring credit hours here. "I liked going to my counselors, because they were so friendly and went on," said Kay Brenner. Lenga each took a photo. ALLEN COUNTY Community Junior College in Iola and Coffeyville Community Junior College in Coffeyville have advising programs similar to KCK's. The school's small enrollment helps counselors and advisers know each student's plans, said Hugh Haire, dean of students at Allen County Community Junior College. "For the number of students we have, our advising program has been pretty effective for the "There really is no communication lapse between students and the advisers, because in working with fewer than 20 kids, most of the time we need and if they will be transferring," Haire said. Allen County's enrolment is 420 full-time students. About 40 faculty members advise. "There are times when we have some dissatisfied students who come back from KU with grips about a class not transferring, but that rarely happens," he said. Similar programs also are offered at KCK juco. FOUR-YEAR SCHOOL representatives come to campus in the spring, so students have the chance to learn about transferring if they want it. The campus at Coffeville Community Junior College. KCJ Juco also has a college day program for transfer students in the fall. See COLLEGES page 5 "But again, students have to find out if, or take their biology 101 class they plan on taking will transfer." Teachers advise the students during each adhere before the sheets are given to each adhere before. Community college transfer students See COLLEGEES page 5 "Often an adviser forgets his manual, but I have one and can usually be located during enrolment," Walker said. "Sheets for each student are printed up then because of the enormous cost." Kansan positions now available Completed applications for business and editorial staff positions on the spring 1981 Kansan are due at noon today in 105 Flint Hall. Application forms are available in 105 Flint, at the Student Senate office in 105B of the Kansas Union and at the office of student affairs in 220 Strong Hall. Weather COLD It will be mostly cloudy and unseasonably cold today, with a high only around 29, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be from the northwest at 15 mph and will shift to the southeast by this afternoon. Cloudiness should continue through tonight, with a low of 24. Winds will be southerly at 10-15 mph. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and milder, with a high between 42 and 45. Page 2 University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Christopher to explain U.S. response Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher is preparing to return to Aligers, Algeria, to clarify what the United States can do to win the release of the 52 American hostages, officials said yesterday. of the State Department official said the U.S. response to Iran, which Christopher will explain in greater detail to the Algerians, was a statement of what the president and the executive branch could do and what they were constitutionally prevented from doing. For example, ordering U.S. courts to drop all civil suits against Iran would be beyond the presidential powers. But President Carter could restore a degree of sovereign immunity for the Iranian government once the hostages are freed. John Trattner, a State Department spokesman, said yesterday that the United States, despite its attempts to get information through the Swiss Embassy in Tehran, still had no confirmation that the hostages had been transferred to government control as the Iranian Parliament ordered on Nov. 2. Italians dealing with quake aftermath NAPLES, Italy—Army troops began shooting stray pets and farm animals yesterday to prevent the spread of disease in southern Italy's ravaged quake zone. Officials said that thousands of survivors who refused to leave their villas were hampering an urgent evacuation operation. The hammering an earthquake generates another series of aftershocks rocked the region, sending a new wave of fear and panic through many of the 250,000 to 300,000 people left homeless by the worst earthquake in Italy in 65 years. the worst earthquake in Italy in 2005 year, Snow and violent rainstorms eased in the regions leveled last week, offering faint relief to the refugees leaving the area for temporary shelter with relatives or in government-provided hotel rooms and apartments. The official death toll from the Nov. 23 earthquake that struck 210 towns and villages east and southeast of Naples stood at 2,915; 1,547 were missing and presumed dead. Another 7,698 were listed as injured. In Luxembourg, Italian Prime Minister Arnaldo Forlani told leaders from Common nation markets that the quake was "worse than a devastating war," and that the cost of reconstruction would be at least $12 billion during the next two years. In the United States, the House gave quick approval yesterday for $50 million in relief for victims of the quake. The bill, backed by President Carter, was passed by voice vote and sent to the Senate, which is expected to act today. Leader warns Poland of subversion WARSAW, Poland—Communist Party Leader Stanislaw Kania defended Poland's reform movement yesterday but warned of groups that have infiltrated the nation's independent labor unions in hopes of overthrowing the government. Kania, speaking on the opening day of a two-day meeting of party leaders, said that groups linked with "imperialist subversion centers" had entered some branches of the unions and wanted to overthrow the state. some branches of the unious and vained "A sharp class struggle is under way. These forces want to dismantle and overthrow Polish statehood," Kania said. "It is a counterrevolutionary attempt." attempt. In the address, which later was broadcast nationwide, Kania said there was no retreat from the reforms brought about by the labor turmoil. "We must defend it." he said. must deter it, he said. Kania also thanked Poland's East Bloc neighbors for their understanding during the crisis and revealed that the Soviet Union had pumped $1.3 billion into Poland in recent months to keep the troubled economy afloat. into Poland in months honors of the Meanwhile, NBC News reported that the Warsaw Pact, led by the Soviet Union, might begin maneuvers soon in or near Poland, ostensibly at the invitation of the Polish government. The maneuvers, which could begin in three to seven days, would be designed to strengthen the hand of the Polish Communist Party, but Western intelligence officers said the possibility of the maneuvers heightened fears of a Soviet move into Poland, NBC said. Romanian mining explosion kills 49 arraea where there have been explosions. The explosion in the Livezen pit in the Valea Jiulni coal field near Petrosani in south-central Romania occurred Saturday, reports reaching the Yuzgoslav capital said. BELGRADE, Yugolavia—A methane gas explosion in a Romanian coal mine killed 49 miners and injured 28, reports said yesterday. The mine is in the region of Aragonese provinces. tugdah Capital Capita President Nicolae Ceausescu has traveled to the Valea Judiu mine west of Bucharest several times during the past several years to talk miners into ending labor unrest. Reports in Bucharest newspapers said yesterday that a special commission of Communist Party and government officials had been formed to investigate the cause of the disaster and to "adopt techniques and organizational measures needed for strengthening the safety and Although the blast occurred Saturday, the official Romanian media did not report it until yesterday. The official Romanian news agency Agerpesr said Ceaucasus and other top Romanian officials were notified immediately on Saturday about the disaster. Medical teams were rushed to the mine, and rescue squads pulled the dead and wounded from underground. Court to decide on draft registration WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to decide whether registering only men for the military draft is constitutional. The justices will hear, probably in March, the government's appeal of a decision that struck down draft registration as discriminatory against men. the government contends that all-male registration is necessary to preserve the military's flexibility in stationing troops, because Congress intended that "all potential conscripts," whether or not destined for combat assignments, should be capable of combat. Women now are barred from combat roles, an issue that is not directly before the court in this case. The decision in the case will shed further light on the legal equality of the sexes and is likely to determine whether there will be a draft. In other actions yesterday, the court agreed to consider whether the Department of Education could bar sex discrimination in employment by schools receiving financial aid for specific problems. The Court also ruled that the government should not impose an age discrimination suit against the government is entitled to a jury trial. the court declined to hear an appeal by Chrysler Corp. of an order that it must recall 208,000 cars to fix emission control systems. It was the first contested recall under the 1970 Clean Air Act. the court also let stand the dismissal of a libel suit by New York lawyer Robert Bassett, who represented the Gunner Jobe, "about the posthumous McCarthy era of the 1960s. Federal aid sought for cigarette war It recommended that the government make courses designed to help people stop smoking tax-deductible. The report also urged the government to "deglamorize" cigarette advertising, ban distribution of cigarettes to minors and urge employers to give bonuses to workers who quit WASHINGTON - A Surgeon General's report issued yesterday said all cigarettes, alcohol and nicotine content, were health risks and suggested federal help for those who smoke. The report also said consumers should be told to consider carbon monoxide levels in addition to tar and nicotine and warned that simply switching to a low-yield cigarette will do no good if the individual smokes more. Inhales more deeply or starts to smoke earlier in life. When people burns pesticides, the number of deaths caused by death and disease and is responsible for about 320,000 deaths each year in the United States, the report said. About 35 percent of the adult population now smokes. The report suggested a goal whereby fewer than 25 percent of adults will be smoking in 1990. Jordan vows to crush any Syrian attack The study is a follow-up to a Surgeon General's report on disease prevention released last year. DAMASCUS, Syria—Jordan vowed yesterday to destroy any invading Syrian troops, and the United States said it was considering shipping ammunition and spare parts to Jordan to defuse the threat of another Middle East war. By United Press International Arab diplomatic sources said Syria had increased forces on its Jordanian frontier to three divisions—about 50,000 men—supported by 1,000 Soviet-made Jordan would never be the first to fire. However, there were also reports of Jordanian reinforcements on the border. Jordan's Prime Minister Madar Badran reacted sharply to the reports in an address to Parliament. He warned, "If any man from any force sets fire to the building or land will be transformed into a fire that will eat all who would attack it." The Kuwait news agency reported from Amman that Badran also said In Washington, U.S. intelligence sources estimated the Syrian concentration at 30,000 troops and about 1,000 tanks. State Department spokesman John Trattner said the United States and Jordan had been discussing the possibility of selling more spare parts and ammunition. He would not give details of Jordan's request but said it did not include early delivery of 100 tanks Jordan is scheduled to begin receiving in 1982. Legislature picks new leaders "We are watching the situation closely and call upon all involved to act. We will be told that we have denied that discussion of U.S. arms supplies would inflame the situation. One U.S. official said any additional sales would be limited. TOPEKA (UPI)—Senate Republicans yesterday lined up behind Senate President Ross Doyen and his hand-picked legislative generals who held four years of GOP dominance over election-weakened Senate Democrats. Unopposed, Doyen was selected unanimously in a GOP Senate caucus for a second and probably more powerful four-year term as president. Doyen's power was boosted when independent-minded Sen. Norman Gaird ran against him in a post-of-the majority leader's post in an election power play. When the session convenes Jan. 12, Republicans will have a 24-16 edge over Democrats, welding three votes more than two years as a result of the Nov. 4 elections. Gaar was offered the chairmanship of the committee, which he accepted. Sen. Charlie Angell, Plains, was nominated for Senate vice president. Gaar attributed his fall from power to new, more conservative rural Senate members and what he called Doyen's "problems of sex." In the Kansas House, Overland Park Park. Wendell Lady quelled a long- EMERALD CITY ANTIQUE. USED FURNITURE LARGE. SELECTION JUST NORTH OF THE BRIDGE Xerox kopies 2½ € M.Th 8-8 kinko's Sat 10-5 Fri 8-6 Sun 12-5 It's the end of the semester and Kinko's is here to help. running campaign by his former speaker pro tem and was nominated by Republicans for another term as House speaker. The nomination by Lady's party won a challenge by Rep. Bob Arbuthot, R-Haddam, whom Lady defeated 40-32. House Majority Leader Robert Frey of Liberal was pegged again for the No. 2 GOP spot, and House Minority Leader Fred Weaver of Baxter Springs nominated the support of his fellow Democrats for another leadership term. —Theses —Resumes —Class notes —Reductions —Binding —Passport photo Republicans now dominate House Douglas. During the last term, the Republican's majority is down. "It (the future for Republicans) looks good unless we destroy ourselves from within," Lady said after his nomination. The U.S. concern with the potential widening of Middle East conflict is part of a coordinated process with several other governments, including Saudi Arabia and Iraqi courage. Syria from further increasing tension in the Middle East. "Our central aim is to prevent more instability in this troubled area," he said. 843-8019 U. S. officials said they believed the Syrian troop movement was designed to underscore Syria's anger with Jordan's King Hussein for his retaliation to go along with a Syrian request to invite an Arab summit meeting in Amman. Saudi Arabia has sent a high-ranking delegation to Damascus to try to cool the situation. Tension between the two nations is further aggravated by Syria's backing of Iran in its war with Iraq, which is supported by Jordan or Libya. For Jordan reappraisal, Syria has delayed sending supplies to Iran as planned. A classic Marx Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Darwin College, getting real life experience by Sir B. Pealman, With it we have Laurel & Hardy's Oscar-winning short Music in Box, which includes some songs you can imagine (30/70 mm) & B.W. 7:30. What in the World - John K. Strikler Associate State Extension Forester Kansas State University WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES Does A Forester Do in Kansas? December 3 Unies otherwise noted; all films will be loaded at Woodburn Auditorium in the Kansas Union, Weekday film are $1.00; Friday, Saturday, Popular and Sunday film are $1.50; Midnight film are $2.00. Tickets available at the SUA office, SUNDAYDAY level. AVAILABLE 843-477. No smoking or refresments allowed. Museum of Natural History, Dyche Hall SKI STEAMBOAT $1.50 Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers 100% 6 days/5 nights in a beautiful Steamboat condo with kitchen and fireplace only 200 vards from the slopes Only 200 lbs. 3 days lifts and ski rental Discounted additional ski daws - Optional air, bus or train transportation - All taxes included All taxes included MICHELOB. Light $209 MICHELOB. Light SUMMIT WEST FLORIDA SUA FILMS Charter bus option $89 FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: Roby at 864-6835 Tuesday, Dec. 2 Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bete) Roberto Rosselli's return to the neorealist tradition is the story of a black marketer, played by fellow neorealist George Brolsby. His role as the rebel leader for the Nazis but gradually grows into the role. "If anything, the years improved both neorealism and racism," he writes in *Dobbs*, Thirty Years of Italian Cinema. (139 min.) B&W, Italian/subtitles: 7:30. Jean Cocoeau's lyric version of the fairy tale is remarkably imaginative and enthralling, a unique film. The taste and charm of the film is impactful. Halifah Hallew in *BWW*. Day Jean Marais (60 min.) *BWW*. French subtitles. 7:30. Wednesday, Dec. 3 General Della Rovere OPENINGS FOR NEXT SEMESTER I will use a simple black and white image for this task. Please provide the image with the specified text content. Image content: A person sitting on a couch, holding a bottle in their hands. They are wearing a plaid shirt and a cap. The background is indistinct but appears to be an interior space with some decorative elements. *naismith provides a quiet place to live without the hassles of apartment life.* Cumberland, Maryland Naismith Nais Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features U. S. officials say a Syrian invasion of Jordan is not likely, but there is concern in the administration about an assault on national institutions, including Israel, into the conflict. Trattner said it was possible that the problems between Syria and Jordan would subside before any decision was made. The Turkish military, the Jordanian request for more arms. U. N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim met with the U.N. to represent Israel and Syria in representative meetings to voice his concern at the military buildup. "He earnestly hopes that both governments will exercise restraint and take urgent measures to resolve their differences peacefully," a statement issued after the meetings said. A high-level Soviet delegation led by Vasily Kuznetsov, first vice president of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, also arrived in Syria. Description— A senior who still needs to buy a senior class card. Or WANTED— SENIORS— Qualifications— $13.00, payable in cash or check The meet Kansa The CHRIS 233 Ha The MINIS Jayhe Je - Senior class parties— By K. Staff Benefits— · Senior class shirt 1st one Dec. 8 at Gammons The SEMB son. - Nightly specials at local bars for rest of year The mean on the monti - 1 party every week last 6 weeks of year Wher first Jewish - Supports senior class gift to KU HI cultu stude - Supports Commencement - Supports HOPE award We are an equal opport. senior class Where to apply— Info, booth Jayhawk Blvd. in front of Wesco kids Chris said with GRANADA DOWNTOWN TELEPHONE 518-274-5900 GOLDI HAWKS When to apply— 8 a.m. 2 p.m. Dec. 1,2,3 GOLDIE HAWN In revo tiocl occu A Han't ceelie popul it uss Kort, day. PRIVATE BENJAMIN COMMONWEALTH THEATRES Mat Sat & Sun. 2:00 VARSITY DOWNTOWN TELPHONE 843-1065 VARSITY TELEPHONE 843-1085 THE PRIVATE EYEB 7:30 & 9:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 97TH AND JOA TELFONE 822-8400 Some times you watch others they feel your presence. A true friend. MARY TYLER MOORE Custinary Place MAY 14, 2015 SUN 8:31 HILLCREST 2 THR AND IOWA TELPHONE 817-843-8400 THE EMPLOYANT MAN NOV. 10, 8 & 25 Mon Sat Sun 2-15 HILLCREST 3 911 AND IDWA LIFEPORT #442 4426 SUSSY SPACEK 7:30 & 9:30 CINEMA 1 TELEPHONES MEDIA Sat & Sun Mat 9:20 At last, Mr. Wrong MYFAIR PETER DAVIS + CINEMA 2 3111 AND 1004 11324901 847 541 960 ZIP:A-DEE-DO-DAH! Walt Disney's Sand & South Songg.South Song & South TECHNICOLOR 7:30 only Don't Miss The Funt CHEVY CHASE Caddy- shack 9:35 am BABY JANE University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 On Campus TODAY THE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY will meet at 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. TONKRIGHT The CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 6:30 in 209, 232 and 223 Haworth. The MARANATHA CHRISTIAN 7 in the Nymkirk Room of the Union The TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE will meet at 7 in 220 Robinson. The SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDENT ORGANIZATION LECTURE in the Forum Room of the Union has been canceled. The KU SCIENCE FICTION AND POETRY BOOK, on request at 7:30 on the Grief Room of the U.S. for the Grief Room of the U.S. TOMORROW THE GRADUATE BUSINESS COUNCIL will meet at 9 a.m. in the Conference Room of the Satellite Union. PLANNING IN LAWRENCE" will be at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. "A CITIZEN CALL FOR RESPONSIBLE DOWNTOWN Visiting artist BRIM PAULSEN will talk about his work at 2 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. The KU COLLEGIUM MUSICUM CHRISTMAS CONCERT will be at 4 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The BACKGAMMON CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Cork Room 2 of the Union. Jewish celebration begins at sunset By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter When the sun goes down tonight, the sun will burn in the annual Jewish Egist of God. The celebration of Hanukkah, which means "dedication" in Hebrew, begins on the eve of the 25th day of the Hebrew month of Kislev and lasts eight days. A traditionally festive holiday, Hanukkah is a family-centered celebration that has grown in popularity in the United States because it usually fills near Christmas, Ellen KU, KU fillet director, said yesterday. HILEL IS A religious, social and cultural institution for Jewish students at the University in Tel Aviv. "Hannakuk is not as important a holiday in Jewish liturgy as Christmas is to Christians," Kort said. "In America, there are certain things we do that are special and important holidays so close together. Hannakuk is a very festive, very positive holiday." The holiday is observed with eight days of gift giving, candle lighting and baking of special foods. It is especially suitable for children according to Gull Threatz. Hillel treasurer. "Celebrating Hanukkah makes the kids feel better about being non-Christian in a Christian society," she said. "I can feel more at ease with their Judaism." THE STORY behind Hanukkah goes back more than 2,100 years. In 186 B.C., Judah the Maccabee led a revolt against the Syrian tyrant Antichus Epiphanes and his men, who occupied the land of Israel. Antiochus had tried to unite his kingdom under pagan laws. He banned the study of the Torah, the Jewish religion, and religious practices on penalty of death. The Jews were victorious, and they celebrated by holding festivities in the temple Jerusalem and rededicating the temple to God. THE MACCABEAN Revolt is the first recorded war ever waged in behalf of religious freedom. Therefore, in addition to being a festive occasion, Hanukkah is a time for rededication to the ideal of freedom for all. According to one legend, the Jews, after cleansing the temple, found only one small container of oil with which to light their holy lamps. However, the one day's supply of oil miraculously filled up during the rededication ceremonies. From this legend comes the tradition of lighting one candle on the menorah, a sacred candela, for each of the eight days of Hanukkah. In medieval times, Hanukkah became such a popular festival that it was said, "Even he who draws his sustenance from charity should borrow or sell his cloak to purchase oil and lamps, and kindle." HOLIDAY FEASTING became a part of Hanukkah, and traditional foods still eaten today include potato pancakes, fried eggs, applesauce, cheese blintzes and sweets. In countries where Christmas is a popular festival, festival, Hanukkah has Children play games of chance with a dreidel, or a four-sided "spinning top." They often receive gifts on each of the sides. The game of money, known as "Hannukkah gelt." In modern Israel, Hanukkah symbolizes mainly "the victory of the few over the many," and the courage of the Jews to assert themselves as a people. Giant menorahs, visible for great distances, are kindled atop public buildings, such as the governmental Knesset building in Jerusalem. Free Concert sponsored by Fellowship of Christian Athletes Tues. Dec. 2 7:30 p.m. Big 8 Room Union EVERYONE WELCOME TO ATTEND! MATTHEW 10:8 CHARIS Foundations of Singing Geology Today Management Accounting • Harmony and Fun Training Keyboard • Worldly Philosophers Child Psychology Badminton Readings IS THE TIME computers for business • German In Review • Basketball for Man • Theory TO BUILD YOUR PROFESSIONAL Guide to English LIBRARY! Journalist • The Renaissance Design of Machine Elements Craft of Fiction - Handbook of Political Science Methods - Games & - Anthology of Musical Analysis - Pharmaceutical Thousands of Books are Beina Sold For ONLY Calculations Accounting Principles Readings In Health - Historica 10 to 25' EACH!! Issues of Century Bookkeeping & Working Papers Romanticism Political Development • From Slavery to Freedom • 2Oth Europe Kansas Union Bookstore Behavior Gulliver's Travels · Introduction · Science & Behavior Presidential Elections Blaming the Victim Algebra & MALAYSIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 43201 STATION PLAZA Trigonometry The Huntsman American Foreign Policy WW2 - Marketing. A Contemporary Business - Music Study Guide Planning Reflex Testing - Business Research Method Elements of Meteorology - Thermodynamics · Mass Communication Law · Business Law · INTERSESSION '81 December 29,1980—January 9,1981 Plan to enroll December 3 or 4,1980 to reserve your class space and to ensure your class is not cancelled for lack of enrollments. The University of Kansas Lawrence Campus EALC 589 - Life in China Today ARCH 643 - Buildings as Cultural Artifacts: An Analytical Critique HA 605 - Seminar on Special Problems in Art History: Marcel Duchamp and the Challenge of Modern Art HIST 509 - The American Civil War and Literary Imagination HPER 108 - Basic Skill Instruction in Cross-Country Skiing HPER 108 - Basic Skill Instruction in Skin Diving HPER 108 - Basic Skill Instruction in Dance HPER 112 - Advanced Skill Instruction in Whole Stroke Swimming JOUR 607 - Professional Practicum in Journalism JOUR 698 - Television Analysis and Criticism: Emphasis on News PC&B 400 or 701 Laboratory in Reproductive Biology Techniques POLS 836 - Topics in Public Administration:Public Budgeting Laboratory POLS 837 - Topics in Public Policy: Health Care Delivery Reform PSYCH 689 - Seminar in the Psychology of Uniqueness SCHR 561 - Seminar in Stress Management Regent's Center - Overland Park EPR 798 - Individualizing for Gifted and Talented Students Through Simulation Games HIST 509 - Topics in the Social History of 19th Century Medicine Enrollment December 3 and 4,1980 8:30-12:00;1:00-4:00 1st Floor, Office of Admissions and Records Strong Hall - Lawrence or 3:00 - 7:15 p.m. Regent's Center 99th and Mission Road Overland Park A description of course listings and complete enrollment information is available at the Office of Admissions and Records, Strong Hall or the Regent's Center Information Desk (341-4554). Please call 864-3284 if you would like the above information sent to you. Page 4 Opinion University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 Fines should be paid The University of Kansas intends to collect some $230,000 in outstanding parking and library fines. And based on a policy that would withhold paychecks if faculty and students didn't pay up, the Kansas Board of Regents isn't fooling around. One cannot feel sorry for the ticket-crazy KU Parking Service, which has been known to issue tickets for harmless parking violations during the wee hours of the morning and during pouring down rain. Yet the faculty, students and staff must pay up. A policy—even if ridiculously enforced at times—is still a policy. And we must abide by it. If students don't pay up, the University can easily prevent them from enrolling. However, no such safeguard exists for the faculty and staff. Apparently the faculty and staff have taken advantage of this. There may be legal complications in withholding paychecks, but that shouldn't be the main concern. It's sad that faculty members and the staff have not cooperated with the University's policies. The unpaid fines reflect poorly on the University's integrity. It's ridiculous that the Board of Regents has had to lower itself to capture the fines in such a juvenile manner. The faculty and staff has in part brought this would-be policy on themslves. Birthday comes and goes; life continues with changes This wind whistling just outside my window, sighing with patient urgency, is scattering autumn with the fallen leaves and gathering together, slowly but steadily, winter and its With the season goes the semester, vanishing now quickly, like the last grains speeding through an hour glass, and so goes, too, the year, about to disappear as we at last skip around the decade's end. The next time it happens much so much earlier as it was a last, drawing close one ear rather than bursting open another. So it's almost gone now, not simply this year, this semester, this season, but the times, the era, the years that were for many of us synonymous AMY HOLLOWELL with coming of age. We wound our way through the traumas and delights of youth and the tumultuous years that that were the 1870s, only to find ourselves on now the threshold of the 86s, of adulthood. Yesterday, it should be here noted, was my twenty-second birthday, all at once my last birthday of the 70s and of college, and the first one after 21, that final milestone, and the first one, depending on perspective, of the 80s. Thus, it is from a new year's issue forth, finding myself, as I do, in a new situation in the endless progression of situations we call life. From here, it's easy to look back and safely say what was. It's all very clear, from that May afternoon at Kent State in 1970 to that Tuesday, barely weeks ago, when the swelling tide of American conservation came crashing in from the nation. Such are reflections on things past. These were years that, perhaps gone, are not forgotten, and whose mark we, as their products, will bear forever. "We" are actually not "we" at all; instead, "we" are each very much a single, sometimes vain, more than a little self-centered, "me". These "me's", or rather "we", are the outputs of what Tom Wolfe christened "The Me Decade." It was television and jogging suits and health food from the very beginning. It was finding yourself, independence and looking good that counted in the 70s, and we ate it up as fast as we ate our Captain Crunch and Pop Tarts. Fop Tartts. Definitely a key to what those years were all about. Mom at work, breakfast was simply a Fop Tart and a toaster away. In this picture, you can see how to go it alone and how to do it with ease and speed. Speed. Cocaine. White wine on ice. Marijuana. LSD and Peyote, the mind highs of the 60s, were, although not obsolete, being replaced in the 70s by the physical highs of cocaine and speed. It was up, up, with me, me, me, no matter how many bucks, bucks, bucks it took. Matter over mind were the by-words. "The 'if it feels good, do it' attitude was a carry-over, but more lived by the philosophy in the 70s than ever before. The beautiful people, with their flashy hair and big eyes, were devastated by the devastated psyches, ruled, zooming us ever deeper into a slew of materialism. So now we here are, at the end of 1890, at the end of a paradoxical decade, in which the outward pleasures of a people turned inward were paramount. So now here we are, stepping into a new decade, a new era, new times with a potentially new perspective. We've got a new president with old ideas that the conservatives call new because the new ideas of the old Liberals have been around for awhile. We may, in fact, have seen the last of liberalism as we have known it. We may, in fact, be witnessing the demise of progressive vision. But we have also recently witnessed an amazing wonder; we have seen Saturn and its braided rings and lakes of liquid nitrogen, seeing what human eyes have never before seen. Predictions flow with less ease than reflections. What is crystal clear hindight is foggy foresight, particularly from a perch merely a few steps up life's mast, hardly a prime look for look-out. What's clear, however, what the howling wind itself reminds me is, that while today may have been crisp and sunny, tomorrow will be frigid and gray, and the next day will be warmer and then some; tomorrow there have bids and the bids will soon have blossoms and the grass will come back green and wet. Yesterday will be another birthday, another era will be about to begin or end, or another decade or century, another semester or season or year will be winding down, only to be followed shortly by the green and wet grass coming back again, just as before. 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 affiliated with the university, he or she should make the writer's class and home town or faculty or staff position. The Kansan reserves the right to edit letters for publication. KANSAN (USPS $856,046) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the university library. Subscriptions by mail are $14 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $14 for six months or $6 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscriptions change of address to the University Daily Kansas, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 65046 Editor Business Manager Carel Belle Welf Elaine Strahler Managing Editor Cynail Highes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editors Don Munday, Mark Spencer, Cindy Whichtone Sports Editor Patti Armel Associate Sports Editor Patti Armel Entertainment Editor Kevin Mills Make Up Editors Rob Schuland Write Editors Tom Toddach, Lois Wickman Copy Chiefs Elen Iwamoto, Leslie Fangler, Tampmy Turner Copy Chiefs Gail Eggers, Ellen Iwamoto, Tampmy Turner Chief Photographer Robert Dee, Anastasian Staff Photographer Sue Klauss Columnists Amy Hollowell, Ted Lichtel, Bill Menesee, Brett Compole Editorial Cartoonist Scott Fauk, Fred Markham, Susan Scheinmacher, Blake Couplety Artist Artists Joe Barton Staff Writers Michael Wunach, Bret Bolton, John Richardson, Laura Newman Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Kevin Koster National Sales Manager Nandy Koster Campus Sales Manager Barb Light Classified Manager Tracy Coo Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Sandler Staff Artist Jude Sandler Staff Photographer Brian Walton Templates Manager Brian Walton General Manager and News Advisor Rick Munse Kansas Advisor Chuck Chowkin MAKELY THEREMAN DURANDER. © WELCOHAMAG TRIBEAT LET'S TALK SOME MORE ABOUT WHAT SANTA WANTS Wires get crossed on phone story Letters to the Editor To the editor freedom of the press is a fundamental right guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. I have always believed in this right and will continue to believe in it. But when the Kansan starts to take advantage of this right, I start to believe something is wrong. I am referring to Tom Gress' Nov. 14 article concerning the KU men's basketball team. Gress is obviously trying to make headlines by starting a scandal. The article alleges that "at least three players on the KU men's basketball team violated NCAA rules by making long-distance phone calls with an assistant coach's credit card last season." It appears that Grissel did not get any attention from the officials and that his only bit of evidence was assistant教练 Lafayette Norwood's phone bill of Jan. 27, 1980. Several calls were made by Ricky Ross and two other players to friends and relatives with the credit card. These calls were circled on the phone bill by Norwood, who told the athletic department not to pay them. In the article Gress states, "It is not known whether Ross paid for the circled calls," yet he alleges that the calls violated NCAA rules. I am shocked that the Kansan can not at least give the KU basketball team the benefit of the doubt when the team's integrity is at stake. So serious were the accusations that they have caused Ricky Ross to leave the basketball team. As reported by your paper, the rumors were that the Kansan and the "reports would make it impossible to walk on campus without feeling like a fool." Tom Baumann Being the school newspaper, I thought that the Kanan would support KU athletics, but I guess I was wrong. Gress, I hope you are proud of your article because you have succeeded in making headlines at the cost of a fine basketball player. Libertarian hogwash To the editor: In my last letter to the editor on Oct. 20, I tried to show the errors of Kevin Hilker's guest editorial in which he expounded on the alleged benefits of a "Liberarian society." Although written toulou in cheek, I addressed myself to issues, gave examples, and clearly illustrated how illogical Hilker's views and those of the Libertarians are in general. In his reply of Nov. 14, Helliker launched a personal attack on me. He left all my points and examples unanswered, he totally distorted my position, and he put words into my mouth that I neither said nor even implied. But I do not blame Helliker for using these tactics. What else could he have done? It is a difficult task even for a good debater and excellent writer to try and defend a totally illogical position. I shall answer Hilkerk once more. But this will be the last time, no matter how irrelevant or absurd a reply he may come up with the next time around. If indeed he wishes to carry the issues with him, I shall be happy to discuss the issues with him at any time, privately or in public. In my letter I pointed out, for instance, that a libertarian society (in which the economic functions of government would be reduced exclusively to the protection of property) could, by definition, not provide schooling for the children of the poor, incomes for those unemployed without any fault of their own (such as thousands of employees of the factories or jobs of robbers) blacks with employers who wish to discriminate against them. I also mentioned that a monopolist who, for instance, would be in control of the only feasible source of water for a town could charge an exorbitant price for this necessity of life in what. Helliker describes as the Libertarians' "completely responsible society, one in which only the inexhaustible water (the water-drinkers, I guess) would suffer." Obviously, Helliker could not address himself to any of these issues, for Libertarianism has no sensible answers to such social problems. What he did say was that my "remarkable display of 'social consciousness' was nothing short of a plea for socialism." If advocacy of free schooling for our children, of unemployment compensation for those unemployed without any fault of their own, of racial equality, and of social control of monopolies makes one a socialist, so be it. In any case, I would prefer the company of "socialists" as President-elect Reagan or Senator Goldwater, who also proclaim to believe in those things (although I must admit that I am not all that sure about their stand on racial equality). If all people and agencies pursuing the study of the Soviet system and Soviet society are also socialist, then I must have all kinds of "socialist" bedfellows, among them the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency in Washington, Radio Liberty in Munich, the U.S. Army Institute for Advanced Russian Studies in Garmisch—all of them "socialist" comrades of mine!? I fear that at this pace, the socialists will have taken over all of the United States before Helliker's Libertarians get beyond their 1 percent at the polls. Beyond that, Helliker then tells the reader that my obviously socialist position also "explains his other field of interest—Soviet studies." Helliker also asserts that I and people of my persuasion are the ones who back laws against "victimless crimes" (laws which the Libertarians apparently want to see see) and calls them unaware as to believe that it is the liberals, and not the conservatives, who oppose legalization of marjuana or prostitution? And as to his statement that "Shaffer would seem to believe that if suicide were decriminalized, then everyone (himself included in some cases) would thus writen." Such vicious utter nonsense surely does not even merit a reply. One more point: Helliker gives an example of two men walking through a forest in a snow storm, and one of them deciding that he would rather be carried. He then explains that in a Libertarian society the second man would be considered "a man who might very well freeze, starve, or whatever—but then it was his choice." But in a "socially conscious" society, so he says, the government would hold a "gun to the second man's head, saying 'Carry him.' "All I can say to this is that Helliker's understanding of the environment is inadequate; and his example of the two men in the forest does not address itself to the relevant issue at all. The question is not what should be done if one of the two men doesn't want to continue walking. The question is: what should be done if he can't, if he breaks a leg and is unable to take another step, if he is too sick, too old, too feeble to continue the journey, or if he lost his way. But he can walk. And the correct answer is so obvious: of course he should be "left to freeze, starve, or whatever." Any good Libertarian can tell you that. Harry G. Shaffer Professor economics and Soviet and East European Studies To the editor: Language abused The Kanans regularly receives letters from people in favor of women's rights. I respect the opinions thus espoused. However, one offense that is becoming ever more frequent is intolerable. Women now find it necessary to manage the English language. Co The spelling "wimmin" is a non-word. Though I am unfamiliar with the feminist milieu, the new spelling is obviously an avoidance of a subordinate status. The word bears qualities the word are debatable and hardly justify violence to the language. repre yearl An article, written earlier this fall by Susan Schoenmaker, argues that language conspires against women (or wimmin, as ma' Kettle might have called them). I see her point and note that usage is slow to reflect change in the relationship of the sexes. This is proper, as consensus of opinion about such important issues also is slow to change. Language, especially modern English, is based upon the consensus of its speakers. KC coun coun ever tryi Wi imp is ve By the time of inception of the feminine title, Ms., it corresponded roughly to the pronunciation accorded—women of unknown marital status. No information is lost through this change, except a little snippet of personal information (marital status) that is no one's business anyway. I certainly don't begrudge women a change in status. I only ask that they respect the cultural heritage carried forward by the metaphor and structure of language. Don't call history your teacher. I shouldn't reminded crudeness. I don't think hercules should be changed to Hiccuels. To me, the features suggested by wombman are high praise. Such a word, like the English of Chaucer's time, is descriptive, organic and unpretentious. It seems to me, women might try living up to their descriptions, rather than trash the very thing that glorifies them. Christopher Hamill Colby senior To the editor: Concert overlooked Since there have been on articles in the Kansan concerning William Warfield's magnificent concert on Nov. 17, we must sadly admit that your paper made no effort to the KEYN. This oversight is even more unfortunate when one realizes the inherent news value of such a concert. Certainly Warfield does not lack prominence, for he is renowned worldwide for his performances in "Porgy and Bess" and the musical "Showboat." His great baritone voice ranks him with some of the best vocalists this country has ever produced. To hear William Warfield singing “Ol Man River” is akin to hearing the “Hallelujah Chorus” sung by the Morman Tabernacle Chair, reading Heningham’s first novel, or watching Bobby bell cook up a slab of ribs. What about proximity, you say? For proximity you have the University Theatre, and for significance you have Warfield's position as Langston Hughes Visiting Professor of Voice. The fact that the proceeds of the concert go to the Music Scholarship Fund also is no trifle matter. Simply stated, William Warfield's concert was news. As you can see, there is really no reason whatsoever that the Kansan should not have reported on Warfield's consummate musical talents. We will admit that improving your mind through culture is not as easy as watching Tic Tac Dough or throwing darts, but nevertheless we make it a point to take in a notable cultural experience, such as Warfield's concert, when time and inclination permit. Unfortunately, it seems that this time, at least for the Kansan, Tic Tac Dough won out over culture, or to put it more succinctly, you bought the farm. Mark Zieman Wichita sophomore Craig Nauta Overland Park, sophomore c. i st n y s u e n n n r e c t i s ch e i s n e g e n w h al s g e g e n n t n ur k b e w e i p a n nil University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 Page 5 Colleges From page 1 represent approximately 2.2 percent of KU's yearly enrollment. THIS YEAR, 530 students transferred to KU from Kansas community colleges, according to Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records. Communication between junior colleges and the University has grown since the early 70s, when many schools' transfer student enrollments increased slighly. Davies said he could remember that KU was not very interested in his students until the college moved in 1972 to its new location in western Wavandotte County. KCK and Johnson County lead enrollment figures with 329 students, or approximately 70 percent of the transfer junior college students enrolled. With the number of students transferring, the importance of transfer program communication between institutions is increasing. KCK is not the only school that has had a counseling lapse between student and adviser or counselor. This problem can be found every year. Counselors say they are ready to eliminate the problem. SOME OF THE schools are state-run and some privately run, so there is no impossibility that all the schools could have the same transfer program information, all the school personnel agreed. But there is way the communication can be modified, he said. It is bound to happen in any program. "What works well for us might not work at all at a school with a larger enrollment, such as a high school." more Davies, who sees the communication problem as the biggest hindrance to students, said he thought KCK juco's method was satisfactory, but he said it still was up to the students to find the information they needed from the information the school had available. Authorities arrest wife of 'mustard heir' suspect By ROB McNEELY Tennessee authorities have arrested the wife of a man who allegedly swindled merchants in several states—including Kansas, Montana and New York. The man was accused of goods, law enforcement officials said yesterday. Staff Reporter The man, known as Rodney Moquin, is wanted in Douglas County for a series of cons he allegedly pulled off in Lawrence earlier this month. Moquin reportedly was trying to con his way into securing a loan from a Tennessee bank. He said he received $475,000 in acres of land in the county. *Tom*, David, *Hardin County sherrif*, said yesterday. SEATON SAID a bank official became suspicious because he knew of outstanding federal warrants for bank fraud in Montana for a man matching Monin's description. The bank official called the FBI, who in turn called Sutton's office and asked him to check on them. in Savannah, Tenn., a city in Hardin County 115 miles east of Memphis. When sheriff's deputies arrived at the Savannah hotel, Seaton said, they found Moquin's wife Alice in a hotel room with their three children. Seaton said his office traced Moquin to a hotel Seaton said his deputies ran an identification check of Alice Moquin and found that there was an outstanding warrant for her arrest in Douglas County. THE DOUGLAS County warrant was filed after the Moquins allegedly conceded Lawrence merchants out of near $200,000 worth of goods and a $50,000 fine. Douglas County district attorney, said yesterday. A Douglas County warrant also was issued for the killing of Jacquin, who Seaton said was still believed to have been killed. Earlier this month, Moquin came to Lawrence with his wife and their children. Moquin allegedly spun a tale that made him the heir to the French mustard fortune. Mouquin allegedly told local merchants he and his family were settling in Lawrence, but his money was tied up in East coast banks and would not be here for weeks. Several members gave Moquin items ranging from household goods to horses on credit. After allegedly gathering nearly $200,000 worth of items on credit, Moquin and his family left Mojin is wanted in Montana for bank fraud, Seston said. He also is wanted in several states. SEATON SAID he thought Moquin returned to the hotel where she riffle's deputies were questioning his wife but left when he saw them. Seaton said that Mouin's current whereabouts, but that he thought the team had Hard Core. Alice Moquin is being held in the Hardin County jail in lieu of $10,000 bond on the out-credit. "Apparently, he has been in this area for about 10 days," Boston said. "But I think he has left the cart." Local law enforcement officials said yesterday that attorney Michael Gurzicka was made to bring Alice Bauer and Jennifer Daniels Councillor. Malone said several counties had filed warrants against Rodney Mouquin but Douglas County was the only one that filed a warrant against his wife. WITHOUT THE warrant filed against Alice Moquin, the Hardin County identification check in the National Crime Information Computer would have turned up negative, Alice Moquin would not have been arrested and law enforcement officials have been any closer to catching her husband. Stover said there had been previous problems with the heating system and residence hall officials had ignored their complaints about the malfunctioning system. According to Seaton, a check of items in the Moquins' possession revealed that they were either stolen or taken by deception. Heat The Hardin County sheriff's department recovered a 1974 Ford pickup truck, a 1977 Chevrolet blazer, eight horses, a 20-foot goose-vehicle, six cars, and miscellaneous household items, Senton said. Willmon disagreed, saying the system was working fine before Thanksgiving. From page 1 "We don't know yet what caused the maintenance people out here soon to correct it." Seasonat told the Moquins' three children were with Alice Moquin when she was arrested. He said all three children had been moved to a hospital of Human Services to a nearby foster home. sign. He said, however, that the list was to be used only to determine which rooms were affected. It was not a sign-up sheet for residents to attend or damage suffered in expectation of rainstorm impacts. HOUSING OFFICIALS said residents were not covered by any type of insurance paid for by the City. "The only type of insurance we carry that might apply in a situation like this is our fire insurance," J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said. "The only problem is that the policy is $1,000 deductible." Wison said, however, that many of the Wilson parents homeowners policies might cover the rent. Meeting canceled Tonight's City Commission meeting has been canceled because commissioners will be attending the National League of Cities conference in Atlanta until Thursday. members of the league will be discuss possible effects of Ronald Reagan's administration on federal funding to cities, said Allen Lovd, city management analyst. The conference gives city problems a chance to talk about mutual problems, Loyd said. "It's a good point for point city commissioners to learn about what other cities are going through and what problems they face," he said. There is 18 difference!!! PREPARE FOR: MCAT • DAT • LSAT GMAT • GRE • OCAT VAT • SAT Schedules Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact 8112 Newton Overland Park, KS. 86206 (913) 341-1220 KIPLAN Educational Center WHERE TO LOOK AT THE LOUNGE CENTER DIET CENTER By the "weigh" - how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa 12:59 60 40 30 20 10 0 Santa Claus is coming to town! Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift Singing Telegrams 841-6169 4.5 32 Chocolate Krispy Delivered With Each Order --a) Police guidelines and procedures leading to arrest b) Tests to determine degree of influence c) Confirmation that an officer is qualified 2. O.U.I. (Operating Under the Influence of Alcohol or Drugs) TOPICS TO BE DISCUSSED: COUNTRYfm 843-143 We Also Cater For Groups Consultations: a) Police guidelines and procedures leading to arrest EXLE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts THIS SUNDAY, MAKE IT A BUCKET OF CHICKEN FROM 15 West 9th 3. Kansas No-Fault Insurance Requirements & Application 4. Kansas Comparative NonLife insurance Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE -ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 e) Procedures involved from arrest through court action f) Potential Penalties EXILE MOTOR VEHICLE WORKSHOP (Ignorance Isn't Bliss) "THE POTENTIAL CRIMINAL & CIVIL CONSEQUENCES OF DRIVING: THIRD FLOOR, CONFERENCE ROOM SATELLITE UNION TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2nd-7:00 P.M. Sponsored by: Student Legal Services Steve Ruddick, Attorney for Student Legal Services KU Police Department Community Services, Officer Vic Shore Alcohol Action Project, George Lorey, Outreach Director MOTOR VEHICLE WORKSHOP Meisner Milstead LIQUOR 1. Insurance Requirements in Kansas. ( ) Potential loss of driver statistics ( ) Proof necessary for criminal conviction 6. Non-Criminal Consequences of Traffic Violations a) Potential loss of license—Tips to prevent loss b) Civil liability—Negligence Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! ICE CYCLE BENETT & SPRITT Liquor CASE DISCOUNTS INSTRETCENTER CENTER BEHIND MOW IN WORK 5. The Law and Practical Tips on Auto Repairs 25th & Iowa 842-4499 Holiday Plaza Considerations. SIGNS • GRAPHIC DESIGN ARTWORK • ADVERTISING SIGN SERVICE ARTSIGN 846 LINLOS LAWRENCE, KANSAS 842 0722 Stereo Equipment 7. Accident report requirements Paid for by Student Activity Fees VIN Student Break Special Dec. 8 Jan. 19 Rent for 1 month and get almost 2 weeks rent FREE! Fort Knox Mini Warehouse U-store it. U-lock it. U-keep the key 1717 W. 31st Street 841-4244 Student I.D. required Books Bicycles Stereo Equipment Records Tires Motorcycles lotorcycles Bicycles City___ State___ Zip___ I am interested in learning more about your extra income opportunity. Please furnish me with all the details. The Bonus Referral Plan, Inc. P.O. Box 19722, Dept. P-2 Dallas, Texas 75219 Leaving for any time you earn a extra money Turn your spare time into cash by opening an annex with our company corporations. Receive generous bonuses包佣金 with our member corporations. Receive generous bonuses包佣金 with our member corporations. Extra Income Opportunity $ Address This Ad Appeared College or University . Please Type or Print Legibly Name of Publication in Which Bucky's Bull Riding Bucky's HAMBURGERS come as you are . . . hungry 2120 WEST NINTH Double Cheeseburgers Two for Only $1.69 Take a Turkey Break Good Thru Sun. 12/7. Bucky's Gifts PHOTO ZEROHER "Where cards and gifts abound" PARTY SUPPLIES OUR FRIEND IS YOUR FRIEND We have someone for you to meet. He's soft, plush, and a very good listener. Come into the Zercher Photo nearest you and get acquainted STAR DOG we're sure you'll want to take at least one of our friends home with you. After all, talk is cheap, but a good listener is hard to find. Downtown Hillcrest 919 Iowa 1107 Massachusetts --- Jim Potter's Workshops GREETING CARDS Attention The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Rusty Leefel Concerned Student Award. Applications are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall and the Student Senate Office, 1054 Kansas Union. The Rusty Leefel Concerned Student Award was established in 1973 and is presented annually to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions areal concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The Chancellor selects the recipient from nominations presented by the Student Awards Committee. The Award will be presented at the Higher Education Week banquet scheduled for Sunday, February 15, 1981. The applications for the Rusty Leefel Concerned Student Award must be received by the Student Awards Committee, clo The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, by Friday, December 12, 1980. University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 NELSON'S CUTS PRICES TO THE CORE! Buy NOW ( before Christmas! ) without the worry of finding the same item at a lower price later. We GUARANTEE* these to be the lowest prices you'll find for 90 days. MUSIC SYSTEMS FROM $199.00! Your choice Hibach SDP-8410 B-track OR SDT-9310 Cassette Recorder/Player with AM/FM, record changer and speakers. A great ' starter system ' LSTS $229.95 ODR$ 229.95 CORE PRICE $199.95 Sanoya 44 CH system with AM/FM stereo receiver, built-in cassette recorder, speakers and BSR record changer This 4-piece system sounds great! CORE PRICE $299.95 Sanpo JXT-K430 AM/MF stereo with cassette record and magnet record changer and speakers. A Nelson's Best. 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LISTS $129.95 CORE PRICE $79.88 ea Fisher FS-230 A 10" 3-way with 40 watts A Nelson's 'Best Buy' LISTS $159.95 CORE PRICE $89.88 ea Atec Design 10 A 2-way, 50 watt speaker that's highly accurate in sound reproduction LISTS $169.95 CORE PRICE $109.88 ea Fisher F-2540 70 watt 12" 3-way speaker. LISTS C$19.95 CORE PRICE $119.88 ea JBL 502 A V 2-way 80 watts and it's 'a Best Buy, too! LISTS $159 95 CORE PRESENCE $199 Aftec Design 20 The specs. 2'10" woofers, 3" mid-range and tweeter and 120 watt it is almost undestructible FITER $7-140 12" 3-way design for up to 75 watts LSTS $289.95 CORE PRICE $179.88 ea tweeter and 120 watts. It's almost indestructible! LISTS $19.95 CORE PRICE $139.88 ea LISTS $19.95 CORE PRICE $139.86 Earlier St. 714-20 12" 3-way design for up to 75 watts BL 702XV A 3 way speaker rated at 200 watts IJS$ 249 95 CORE PRICE $179.88 ea ISTS $249.95 lather $17-750 A 12" -4-way rated at 100 watts CORE PRISE $179.88 ea lather $17-750 A 12" -4-way rated at 100 watts CORE PRISE $179.88 ea lather ST-750 A 12" 4-way rated at 100 watts ITS$ $99.99 CORE PRICE $229.88 ea BL 902XV 12' 3-way design for up to 200 watts ISTS $299.95 CORE PRESS $229.88 ea Fisher ST-760 Huge 15"-3-way rated at 130 watts. A Nelson's Best Buy luy ISTS $409 95 CORE PRICE $249.88 ea ISTS $409.95 CORE PRICE $249.88ea STS 730 A 15" 4 view with 165 matte. Again. Buy! 100% MATTING! iother ST-780 A 15" 4-way with 165 watts. Another Best Buy. ISTS $489.95 CORE PRESIGN $289.88 ea TURNTABLES BIC 60 Z fully automatic belt-drive change with strobe LISTS $179.95 CORE PRICE $99.88 Fisher MT-6310 semi-automatic belt-drive with strobe A Nelson's 'Best Buy LISTS $119.95 CORE PRICE $99.88 BIC 80 Z This Nelson's 'Best Buy' is a fully automatic belt-drive turntable with digital speed computer readout. And much more! LISTS $239.95 CORE PRICE $119.88 JVC LA-55 OR Sony PST-22 semi-automatic direct drive turntable with strobe I EACH AT GREAT SAVINGS! LISTS $149.95 CORE PRICE $119.88 Sony PST-30 OR JVC LF-66 fully automatic direct drive with strobe VIDEO CHOPPER LISTS $179.95 CORE PRICE $149.88 JVC GL-AS semi automatic, or Sony PS-4X5 fully automatic, both with Quartz speed control YOYU COPE $199.00 COPE $199.00 LISTS $219.95 CORE PRICE $179.88 SAN sys PSX -859 fully automatic; 2-motor direct drive with Quartz speed driver; it was $500.0 LSTS $299.95 LSTS $249.88 CORE PRESS $249.88 AUDIO / VIDEO FURNITURE Select from 22 models and styles AN EXAMPLE: Technics $81-94 walnut rack with three adjustable shelves and littles $129.95 CORE PRIOR $60.88 PORTABLE CASSETTES / TELEPHONE ANSWERERS --- Choose from 35 models of portable, including the Panasonic NK-163 model only at $99.88 Panasonic PS-J3 a portable cassette with stereo headphones is just $149.88 is just $149.88 Sanyo M-2402 a unit with AM/FM is just $49.88 Sony CFS-45 AM/FM stereo is just $129.88 Code A Phone or Phones Mote answers begin at $99.88 Nelson's has 10 models of VCR's from Panasonic, Sanitix, Hitachi, and MGA. Beta and VHS formats. Priced as low as $95.00. Code-A-Phone or Phone Mate answers begin at $99.88. RADIOS / HEADPHONES SPECIALTY PORTABLES UUUU VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDERS/TV For CB i's, clocks, portable radios, table radios, come to Nelson 's; for CB ii's, cores on Sony, Panasonic, Canaveral, Pioneer, and AKG. Mura SP-503 Headphone with padded headband and earcups, stereo/mono switch and individual volume controls, and cord: NOW HALF - PRICE! LISTS $29.99 CORE PRICE $14.88 --- TAPE DECKS *Sanye RD-5006 cassette OR RD-8020 8-track recorder. One of the best starter deck around!* LISTS $119.95 CORE PRICE $89.88 *Sanye RD-5008 with Dolby NR and LED VU meters. Bargain priced now* LISTS $149.95 CORE PRICE $119.88 *Sony TC-K22 cassette with Dolby NR and metal tape capability. A Nelson's Best Buy* LISTS $249.95 CORE PRICE $169.88 *Tecx CX-310 cassette with Dolby NR and metal tape capability* LISTS $249.95 CORE PRICE $169.88 *Sanye RD-5025 Digitron display cassette with Dolby NR. metal tape capability and music search function. A Best Buy* LISTS $219.95 CORE PRICE $189.88 *Tecx CX-350 cassette with Dolby NR and metal tape capability* LISTS $279.95 CORE PRICE $189.88 *Tecx A-650 cassette deck has 2 motors and metal tape capability* LISTS $349.95 CORE PRICE $299.88 *Sony TC-KC1 cassette deck with 2 solenoid controlled motors. LED VU meter display, metal tape capability and Dolby NR. And More, it's a 'Best Buy' LISTS $349.95 CORE PRICE $319.88 *Tecx A-510 II cassette deck with full solenoid operation. flourescent bar metering, metal tape capacity and Dolby NR* LISTS $449.95 CORE PRICE $349.88 *Sony TC-K71 cassette deck with full solenoid operation. LED metering, metal tape capability. Dolby NR and 3 heads. It's a 'Best Buy' LISTS $449.95 CORE PRICE $429.88 *Tecx A-2000 re-reef to-reef with full solenoid operation Only white in stock supply lasts. No rainchecks* LISTS $699.95 CORE PRICE $449.88 *Tecx A-2000R re-reef with auto-reverse Demo machines* LISTS $799.95 CORE PRICE $549.88 CAR STEREO Sanye FT.C2 mini-chassis cassette for imports and GM X-body cars Mini-priced at only $79.88 Clarion PE-6768 small-chassis cassette to fit most any car or truck SAVE $950 GAVE 50% LISTS $189.95 now just $94.88 **SYNTAX FT-87 B-14rack with pushbutton station selection** separate battery pack locking fast forward, great for full futre LISTS $159.99 **New** $99.88 Sanyo FT-C8 mini-chassis cassette with fast forward, rewind and reverse. For imports and G-M X-bodies our lowest price is $99.88. If you get a SMALL CAR but you are in Pioneer, check the unique new KP-1500 designed to fit your car or truck. It costs $100.88. Looking for auto-reverse, locking forward and rewind, automatic music search in a chassis that it lift into what you are driving? See the New SAMF FT-7. You'll love it and our INTRODUCTORY PRICE Lists at $149.95 $119.98 **CHEVY CITATION OWNERS!** The *Sanwo FTC-8* ships right into your dash and offers automatic music search, auto-reverse, separate bass and treble and more! (Fits other cars, too, of course!) **LISTS** $159.95 now $139.88 IMPORT and GM X-Mody body lookers looking for an in-dash cassette with the Sanye FT-C10-mini chassis on lists LIS$ 169.59 + $149.88 The Sanyo FT-482 has automatic music-search locking last for/rewind/separate bass & tibre and more all in a chassis to fit most cars and trucks. it's a BEST BUY! LISTS $179.95 now $159.88 Drive an import or GM X-body, and want a cassette with pushbutton tuning, lock fast forward and rewind, automatic music search with four speaker capability? The Sanyo FT-C14 is your best buy! LSTS $199.95 now $179.88 American car and truck owners, here's digital display of time and stations, locking fast forward & rewind, auto-reverse and four speaker capability in the *Sanyo FT-645 BEST BUY* LISTS $199.95 now $179.88 Can't find a DELUXE car stereo to fit your small car? Look at the NEW 丰田 FA-C16T with Dolby, auto-reverse, loudness, separate bass and treble controls and metal tape capability and look at our introductory price of $95.95 price: $189.88 A Pioneer Cassette You Can Afford! The KP-250 has locking fast-forward and replay PLUS FM STEREO! A great special purchase that'll save you 50%! LSTS $149.95 now $74.88 A Pioneer Cassette You Can Afford! The KP-250 has locking fast TOYOTA BASES SUBARU & MAZDA5 with built-in stereo radio but not taupe! The *Clarison PE-828* auto-reverse cassette should skip right in to your dash or console *pocket stack* Mounts underdash! toot! **$129.95** Get up to underdash? THE NEW FANTO FT-150 the way to go with Dohcy, looking fast forward/rewind, auto-reverse PLUS music system Check our introductory price! LISTS $139.95 now $119.8P C POWER BOOSTERS **Concept EO-8070** has 50 watts and is a BEST BUY with built-in 7-band graphic equalizer LISTS $139.95 now $79.88 **Tancredi TE-80** gives you 60 watts, a 7-band graphic equalizer and built-in LED power meters! LISTS $199.95 now $89.88 **Tancredi TE-100** is POWERFUL! 120 watts, LED power meters and a 7-band graphic equalizer! LISTS $199.95 now $119.88 **Concept PB-6000** gives you 60 watts of CLEAN POWER and has separate bass and treble controls LISTS $69.95 now $39.88 **Majestic MEB-632** power booster with 60 watts PLUS 5-banu graphic equalizer. While they last! **Majestic MEB-632 power booster with 60 watts PL5-ban** graphical equalizer. While they last! now **549.88** ISTS $99.95 now $49.88 C CAR STEREO SPEAKERS 4 x 10" Palaemon EB-814 ZU Wall CXMai kit $79.95 'SAVE 50%' now $39.88 pr. Sanpy SP-412 35 watt Traxial kit $79.95 'BEST BUY' now $79.88 pr. Jensen J-1130 50 watt Trax-II $79.95 'TOP OF THE LINE' $129.88 pr. Se The K $69.95 "SAVE 50%" $34.88 pr Ploner TS-693 20 watt Coaxial kit $71.95 "100z. Magnets" $49.88 pr Ploner TS-694 20 watt Coaxial kit $85.95 "BEST BUY" $59.88 pr Sanjo SP-778 30 watt Triaxial kit $109.95 "BEST BUY" $79.88 pr Ploner TS-695 40 watt Triaxial kit $149.95 "TOP OF THE LINE" $119.88 Jeremia J-033 100 watt Triaxil $129.95 "TOP OF THE LINE" $129.88 Concept CS-6922 25 watt Coaxial kit $69.95 'SAVE 50%' $34.88 prf Jensen J-1033 100 wall traxn $159.95 "TOP OF THE LINE" $129.88 Sanyo SP-700 5 watt 6½" kit $16.95 "LEAST EXPENSIVE" $11.88 Sanyo SP-709 10 watt 4" kit $25.95 "FOR SMALL CARS" $19.88 Concept CS-5412 15 watt 6½" Coak-kit $49.95 10 oz Magnets $29.88 Concept CP-8102 12 watt 4" kit $39.95 "FOR SMALL CARS" $29.88 Panasonic EAB-915 20 watt 4" kit $39.95 "Highly Recommended" $34.88 Panasonic EAB-050 20 watt 5" kit $49.95 "BEST BUY" $44.88 Sanyo SP-40 30 watt 4" coak-kit $59.95 "FOR SMALL CARS" $49.88 Concept CS-5423 25 watt 6½" triax-kit $69.95 "20 oz Magnets" $49.88 Pioneer TS-167 20 watt 6½" Coak-kit $79.95 "DURBEST SELLER" $69.88 Jensen J-1201 50 watt 6½" Coak-kit ... DOOR MOUNT ... By DIAN Staff Re BUSINESS SELLER Jansen J-1201 50 watt 6½¢ Coax-kill $109.95 "TOP OF THE LINE" $89.88 *Nelson's Low Price Guarantee "We're pointme come be to go." "I wo student but the ---SURFACE MOUNT --- Pioneer TS-5 8 watt Convertable $29.95 "WILL DOOR MOUNT" $24.88 Concept CS-8811 30 watt box style $79.95 "WHEN NOTHING FITS" $49.88 Sanoy SP-758 30 watt coax-convert $64.95 "WILL REAR DECK MOUNT" $49.88 Sanoy SP-760 30 watt triax-convert $89.95 "WILL REAR DECK MOUNT" $69.88 STUD formally last See with the gavel b preside preside Bert presiden eager t issues a would l committe this sem "If we, or any other local servicing dealer, advertises a lower price on the equipment or item you buy, we'll refund the difference... plus a righteous 10% in cash. plus our anndonias." Some merchandise is not in all stores. If the item you purchase is not at your local store, but available from another Nelson's location, we guarantee delivery to your store in time for Christmas. 2319 Louisiana Lawrence,KS 66044 841-3775 master charge VISA* NELSON'S TEAM ELECTRONICS University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 Page 7 Senate power to formally change hands By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Bert Coleman, student body president, said yesterday that he was eager to begin working on student issues and complaints, but that he would have to settle for appointing him and hiring staff personnel this semester. "I would like to take care of all student problems right now," he said, "but there's just not enough time. "We're working on making appointments, and hopefully, when we come back in the spring we'll be ready to go." STUDENT SENATE leadership will formally change hands Thursday at the last Senate meeting of the semester with the committee on student body vice president, Matt Davis, to the new vice president, Bren Abbott. The joint session of the old and new Senates will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Final officers' reports are given, by the senate, on Tuesday before the three holdover Senate seats. No legislation will be heard or acted upon. The holdover senators are elected from the old Senate. They serve on the Student Senate and the University Council. After the elections, Davis will officially give the gavel to Abbott. Abbott and Coleman then will give them'responsors' approval to many apporters that have been made. FOUR NEW students also will be elected to the Committee Board. The board, which includes the student body vice president, will examine committee appointments to ensure that there are more than 12 senators on each committee. There can be an unlimited number of The eight Senate standing committees are Academic Affairs, Com- munity Affairs, Minority Affairs, Auditing, Minority Affairs, Student Rights, Student Services and Sports. committee members who are not senators. Two subcommittees, which also are open for members, are Elections and Budget. KU Issues for Action is a new committee that will work as a subcommittee of the Associated Students of Kansas, Abbott said. ASK is a statewide student lobbying group. ABBOTT, who advocated the formation of an association would could lobby group for KU issues. Jeff Evans, ASK campus director, said the committee would work in the same way as Concerned Students for defective computers in a defunct KU blogging organization. "CSHE will not create the kind of thing we're looking for," Evans said. "It doesn't have the capacity for the information and insight that ASK has." Evans said he did not want to reactivate CSHE, however. EVANSAID THE committee would work on issues such as selling beer in Memorial Stadium. "By forming another organization, we end up doing more organizing than acting on issues. I think we have the structure with ASK, so why create another organization and another head boncho? I don't see the reason in it." Committee applications are available in the Senate office. Although students can apply for committees all year, there will be a general meeting Dec. 8 on election chairmen. Senators and non-senators are eligible for chairman positions. Applications for Senate office staff may be due Dec. 8, and interviews will be held on Wednesday. A 25-year-old Haskell Indian Junior College student was being held yesterday in Douglas County Jail on charges stemming from a Sunday afternoon attack which he allegedly took to take a handgun away from a Lawrence police officer. Formal charges were not filed in the fight against who, was bent on trying to get the amount of $23.750 boxed. On the Record According to police, two Lawrence officers were sent at 4:35 Sunday afternoon to investigate a subject who allegedly drank beer inside the Dairy Queen, 1835 Massachusetts St., and urinated on a sidewalk outside. One of the officers took the suspect outside and began to issue him a notice possessing the evidence, law that prohibits the consumption of mail beverages in public, police said. Police said the other officer remained inside Dairy Queen to question withheld. While one officer was writing the s notice to appear, the suspect allegedly swung at the officer and then wrestled with him, trying to take the officer's gun out of its holster, police said. The suspect was arrested and booked on charges of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, two counts of battery on a police officer, resisting arrest in the workplace, thus consuming a malt beverage in public and disorderly conduct. According to police, the man and the woman were sitting in a van in the 1000 block of Vermont Street after he had shown her a nearby house. Lawrence police are investigating a Sunday evening alleged assault on a 21-year-old Lawrence woman who told police she was assaulted by a male real estate agent who had just finished herer a house, police said yesterday. Police said that, while the two were in the van, the man allegedly tried to sexually assault the woman. The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 CLASSIFIED RATES 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word.. one $2.50 two three four five six seven eight nine ten one $2.50 two three four five six seven eight nine ten one $2.75 two $2.75 three $2.50 四 $2.50 五 $4.50 六 $4.50 七 $4.50 八 $4.50 九 $2.50 十 $2.50 AD DEADLINES ERRORS Monday Thursday 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday 5 p.m. Wednesday Monday 5 p.m. Thursday 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 issued on behalf of the Office of Oftow. #04-138 KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ENTERTAINMENT DID TRAVEL CENTER - Airline * * Escorted Tours * Hotel/Resort * * Skip Packages * Car Rental * * Group Rates International Student Specialists Domestic & International Reservations Bly dancer for your holiday parties. No jig festivals. 841-3598 for p. 12. m-8. 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St, Lawrence, KS 9:30 5:30 M-F. 9:30 5:00 SAT. FOR RENT Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. $112.50 each per month. Large 4 bdmr. duplex, central air conditioning, all appliances. Call 843-5730 or 843-2704. 3 Bedroom Townhouses Renting now. Other townhouses, including attached, attached apartments, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Parkway Townhouses, 26th and Kaiden, 74th. (954) 850-2911. 2 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Uuilties paid.quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Cap 843- 979 or 853-4185. Apt. and rooms for rent, newly remodeled near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf Spacious, 2 berm, apt. for 2 to 4 people, Sustainable, low-income. No pets. Phone 817-368-0956. Not available. for fall or spring, Naimith Hall offers you the best of dormitory. Good kitchen and dining room, good food and plenty it, weekday maid service to clean your room, a comfortable bedroom and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment law firm wants you to call Naimith HALL, 1800 Naimith Drive, 943-8559. Capsi Capri Apt. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bdmr. apts. available. Central air, wall-to-wall. carpet. carpeted. blocks south of wall. Call 846-5075 after 3 or 35% as on weekends. rent. nice apt. for men, next to campus. Work day work out part of rest of rent. Call 841-485-181. NEW DUPLEX AVAILABLE IMDEMIDATE- MENT APARTMENT LIVING, YOU CAN ENJOY APARTMENT LIVING, YOU CAN ENJOY TEMPORARY DUPLEXES EXPERIENCE. FRA- KENSHIP TEMPORARY DUPLEXES EXPERIENCE. KITCHEN ATTACHED GARAGE. FOLE FULL BATH, BATHS IN CLOSER, BED, BATHS IN CLOSER, BED. TWO OR TWO THREE STUDENTS. MUSE SEE! WISCONSIN STREET. FOR MORE INFO- NING. 82-4355 or 81-4288 TO 5 P.M.). 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplace, and carport. Will take 3 students. 2500 ft². Roommate to share house. $1116/mo. utilities. Available. 15. 84-0038. 12-8 Most substitute nice 2 bdm. apt. Close to campus. Off street parking. 841-714-7891 2 bdm. furnished mobile homes. Quit location. No children or pets. References required. K100 and up. Jayhawk Court. 842-8075 or 842-0182. 12-8 Subbase one bbm, apt. starting January first. Fully furnished. Water paid. Deposit. Central heating. $210. 749-2114. After 4:00. 12-2 For rent now or in December, townhouse in Haskell, east side of street. Cairn drive, dry room. Wheelchair ramp. Dry room and dry room furnishings. Cairn to keep; yr. control. Bathroom bath room. N.y. yr. control. Pet calls 341-503-1801 STUDIO - sublearn at Meadowbrook for research on aquatic ecology. 800-574-2133, water and cable paid $841; mail resume to STUDIO. DONT WAIT till the last minute to find a place for second semester. New atiburon TU80 and TU81, 2 and 3 bdmts. unfurnished or unfurnished, continuously located at 9th and Eighth Avenue in your townhome today. For more info, call 842-655 (8:45 m.-5 p.m.) or 841-1212. 12-8 NEW 4-FLEX available for second semester. Sophomore course. Cookery and COMPLETE FUNNISHED. locally located at 9th and Indiana, within 6545 (85 a.m.-p. m.) or 1222 (a.m.-p. m.). 12-8 Sparacus 1 berm apt. in Traillridge Gas and Tennis Court Apt. in Traillridge Gas and towns of tennis courts and poipl. Call 769-148. Brand new 3-bdm, duplex in super local location. Certified by FCC. Mail for order. $25, 814-707-04 day, 842-945-045 evening. Room. 855/mo. 855 dep. 1/ 5 utilizes. 1333 Kentucky. 840-7840. Randy or Steve. 12-3 Like new - 1 bdm. apt. across from studi- m. Sublease. 841-6315 after 5-60. 12-8 House for rent—beautiful home with 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bathroom, and shoppe- appliances, partially furnished in a great neighborhood. 841-7840 U and shopping center. 842-3652 32nd month U and shoppe- port. 842-4468. References. 12-3 Sublease 2 bdrm. apt. (4 beds) $80 per person. Heat and water paid. $\frac{1}{4}$ electric, on bus route. 841-9788. 12-8 Roommate to share luxury condominium, very nice, with vaulted ceilings and fire- place, close to campus. $140 mon. 841-4016. 12-8 Christian Campus House has a few open rooms. Call 842-6592,between 9:00-10:00,8:30-9:30,12:00-12:30 Subsite use pat. Fully furnished. Lo- siter used. 800 per room. Call 12-5471 or 841-5455. Need to sublease: 2 bdm. apt. 5 min. from campus. Laundry facilities, laundry dish, free parking. Waste, water, and truth at laundry. Jan. 30. $7/day. Call Muat at 12-15, after 21:30. or 3 or b3m. insulated, remodeled home, all appliances, unfurnished, fenced yard, out building, AC, walk to campus or shop- house. Adult needs adults need only 12-8 843-07433 Large, furnished one bdm. apt. on bus route. $210/mo. 749-2419. 12-5 Available Dec. 22, 1 bdmr. apl. $109/mo. plus utilities. On bus route. 841-8265 or 841- 8247. 12-5 Available Jan. 1. Luxury duplex, Meadow- brook 3. bdm, fire bath, A/C heat, all appliances, dbl. gar. $450. 842-3581 or 842-930. sublease me a bdm, full bath att. 21% blocks from campus. No deposit. Call 749-1685. 12-5 crystaley carriage at 1400 Tenn. Available Dec. 1st, Fireplace, off-street parcel space, up to $250/mo. Also only $250/mo with $200 deposit. Utilities: 0484. Absolutely no pets. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Science notes to use them—1). As study makes sense, to use them—1). As study exam preparation. *New Analysis of Wheat* and Corn. *New Analysis of Water* Critts. Mall bookstore and Great Book Store. Alligator, starter and generator specialists UADOMOTIVE "ELECTRIC," 943-965, 968, 971, 972. Spectacular bdus, for male in apt, with two students. Free December rent. Availabie for summer intership in college $13/mo. plus 1/3 low fees. 5 min. to campus. 843-654-689. 12-8 MATTRESSEN, Orthopedic sets from $295. PATRIANNE, Orthopedic sets from $395. Patriane, one block west of righ and low. Patriane, one block west of righ and low. MEADOWBROOK TOWNHOUSE available quiet. On bus route. Phone 841-8436. Kup Studio for sublease at Meadowbrook. Furn- ished by 841-5735. Available. Arrival to or before 841-5735. There will be two openings in the Kolomna Community HIV living groups and some seminaries. The students' applications obtained at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 120 Ordeal, or call 843-257-9680. Vintage clothing and ole nole "juname" to wear in the winter of 1946-47. 329th Street, 3008 W. 6th, 11-5 Tues.-Sat. 232-234. *ff*. Female Roommate to share 2 bdmr. furnished apl. on bus route. $131.50 water pallet. 842-7481. 12-8 GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOTHES. European-style Suits, sugaes, sports apron, leather jackets, shirts, slacks. Call about 825-5435, 749-1814. tf PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS, proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For details and application to: DB2 Production, dept. K Box 523, Arteza Atoni 523, 12-48 FOR SALE 1978 VW Rabbit, blue with black interior, 55,000 miles. Very good condition mechan- ic. Currently Miniature true tree. Must cassette. Call 841-263-824 or 842-697-2. Must sell soon! WATERBED MATTRESSES $30.99, 3 year warrantie. WHITE LIGHT, 70 Mass. $65. $15.99 for Mattress and base. Must sublease 2 bdm. apt. Jan 1 or before November 30, 2015. Route. New carpet. 841-868-89. 13-5 HOUSEPLAN Altus by Pace in-dash AM/FM/stereo car radio model XMC-3763 and two Audiovox 3-way speakers model Tryxov. Call 841-2581 and ask for Pat. 12-28 Must sell: Tame Monk parrot, 16 inch gold camera, recorder, tape recorder 12-3 Keep trying! 1978 TR7 excellent cond. full sun roof. low elevation. Interior doors only. Sediment Sections intriguing. Baldfront 984-316 55-210. Sidelight windows. $4,995. Honda Mopar for sale. Good condition. Rearbattack $25. Call 811-4682 or 12-2 1975 Burucki GT-750. Must sell now. Good price to buy in 2013. $1,860 to 1301 LOUISVILLE #15. 12-8 More old stuff than one commonly has to handle is the pottery. A special odd bit of Sterling and pottery this week, Emerald Bail, Just north of Johnny's inn in N. Lawrence. Open Mon.-Sat., 12-5 Rectangular bumper pool table. Excellent Rectangular bumper pool table. All ails included. 841-8311 after a pam. 12-5 2-year-old townhouse, 1844 sq. ft. by 54ft. 3-year-old townhouse, 1860 sq. ft. by 54ft. Lavender, Assumable. 100% Technics 45 watt receiver and a pair of Missouri Research book shelf speakers. 12-5 FOUND Found picture in Wesco last Thurs. Call 861-501- and identify. 12-3 Found a set of keys SW of the River 842-6736 (about 2 weeks ago) 12-3 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES/ ORDINARY NURSE with us, as a public service to nursing home residents? Our consumer organi- zation team (KNH) needs your help and input on nursing home conditions and your opinion on the care and treatment of will be kept confidential. Please call us: 9271) Maid St. #5, Lawrence, Kansas 6044. Waist St. #1, Lawrence, Kansas 6044. $1000 to $3000 monthly working off-shore and in-ternational, with commitment to permanence necessary, work one quarter, net, three quarters or five months. A list of companies hiring sample appl- lications. Offer includes Owen International Dept. 28-P.O Box 6441 Owen International Dept. 28-P.O Box 6441 OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer year, round S. Amer. S. Aurora, Australia. All. fields. $100-120 monthly, Sightseeing. Free iris. C. Box 52-1 KCRona Coral Int. C. 926253 Student assistants needed in records de- sign for 12-18 hour weekdays, available 12-50 hours per week during school year and full time during school breaks as well. For more information, go to the maker Center, 1663 Engel Road. 12-5 $5.00 REWARD for CHEM 10 notebook. It is red, durable and prefaced in presumably Murphy Hall, Wed. Nov. 19. It is red, says the computer on it, written in blue and black ink. Cal. 12-3876 7646 for Ole Need singers, good voices will receive HIGH pay: 842-8993. Call for appointment LOST Postdoctoral applications in analytical chemistry of drug and bioassays are projects of proofing chemistry and in pharmaceuticals and biopharmaceutics are pharmaceuticals and biopharmaceutical Chemistry, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, 60044. Postdoctoral applications in chemical and biological sciences are invited to apply. Miniturp postdoctoral employment Deadline for applications is December 3, 1980. 12-3 Jahawker yearbook needs a morning secretary, must be able to type and handle minor office duties. Salary $150 per month. Applies at午班年book at 21B Kansas University 12-3 NOTICE NURSES: Psychiatric nursing provides care for personal growth. We offer excellent training salary, including a northwest $6 month plus salary, in weekdays. Option includes only once per year, monthly full-time or Part time hours; 4. Excellent continuing educational opportunities, holiday and sick leave. BCBS life and medical credited. We welcome your application. Call Nursing, Owatonna State Hospital, Owatonna, MN 52802. Ext. 441. Minority applicants encouraged. Part-time help to do light shipping, filing, and typing. Flexible schedule approximate- ment week. Apply in person at Don's Speed Mile north of mile 12-5. 24-40 junction. Henry's has opened for 3 persons noon applies. Apply in person.待您 12-4 quires only. A reorganizational meeting for GOBI will be held at the University of Iowa at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room in the Union. It will address the issues of Gay and Lesbian needs in our context. We will be there. 12-4 ski WINTER PARK SPRING BREAK FOUR DAYS— FOUR NITES $271 INCLUDES TRANS., LODGING, LIFTS, & RENTALS OR LODGING FOR $119 SIGN-UP DEADLINE DEC. 23 AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477 PERSONAL SKI VALI Alum has new condos. for rent. 2-bdrm., 2-bath, sleeps 6. Kitchen, feels michael Caciopio. 303-478-4910. tr FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC—abortions HIT 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating BHP with steroids. Pregnancy testing call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (103) 642-3100. 4401 W. 109th St, Overland Park, Kansas. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. tf New Louise's Happy Hour We Buy used furniture Phone 841-4244. 12-8 Everyday 7-8 p.m. (except game days) WINE .50* schooners .30* draws with KU I.D. LOUISE'S LOUSE'S 1009 Mass SINGING MESSAGES for all occations. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegraphs. 841-6169. Tf Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it! ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. tf No problem too small no time too late. We are here to help. Headquarters-841-2845. 1602 Macey or drop by or buy them never close. Partially joined by Student activity fees. 12-8 EXAM BLUES? Prepare for a Merry Christmas at the Schooner Museum Bookshop, open during gallery hours. 12-9 Gift Idea Jewelry Earrings • Necklaces Bracelets • Pins Instant color passport, LD, and reumes phone card. B/W, 12-8. Swell Books, 749-161-11. MISS PIGGY IS HERE! (for your favorite name) to the Spencer Museum School 12-8 Holiday Plaza M-Th 10-8 Sun 1-5 70 nutritious peanut recipes. Send 5.00 for the Peanut Book to K-M-C- Sales. Box 64, Big Crab, Oklia. 74332. 12-8 This Christmas give yourself and your children a gift. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure, that you that you will be proud to own and proud to give to others. All of our work is completely guaranteed to please you and our children. Our Christmas gifts and to reside in our Christmases and to reside in our apprentices. 749-1811, 128-181 BIG SHOP Male roommate needed for spring semester. Furnished, close to campus. $87, 1/3 utilities. 749-5110. 12-3 Fragranted with studying? 2 SU Med Stud- surface anatomy. 1-678-0136 12-4 surface anatomy. 1-678-0136 TAKE HOME A BIT OF KANSAS. You can find photo books on Kansas at the Spencer Museum Book Shop. 12-9 TRAVEL CENTER Taking a trip? We offer the lowest fares available. CALL TODAY! 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 32rd St., Lawrence, KS 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM 897-243-5000 HEY ZEEK. “CONGRATULATIONS” !!! kck. 12-2 CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Beautiful PINE HILL FARM owns the our selected trees have been cut. Drive East on Highway 10, four miles west of off ramp, 11; miles south, 545-217-19, 12-8 4 households of very good looking men. Wanting ladies for friendship and how do more. We are all in the same house we do we say so all single ladies call anytime 841-5093. 12-5 Bernie. Even though you may be going away soon, my love for you has kept me occupied with the same too. Thanks for the most wonderful 2 yrs of life and still many many more to come. Do a friend in a situation. Call 814-8571. 12-8 A madman called them to death. If you learn carefully you'll hear his last breath, remember the past are condented to remember the past are condented to remember the past are condented to remember the past are condented to remember the past are condented to remember the past are condens SERVICES OFFERED THE BKE GARAGE-Complete professional garage. Same day service. Specialty cars, specially fitted garages, specialty cars. Same day service. All car needs met. I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tt TYPING Experienced typet- thesis, dissertations, selection of manuscripts, selecting selects, Barb, after 5 p.m. 843-210-361 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectic. Call Ellen or Jeannan. 941-2172. 12-8 Experienced K.U. typist, HM Correcting Electronic, Quality work. Referrals available. Sandy, evening and weekends. 768- 9818. tf 200 MPH ENCORE COPY CORPS 817-354-2222 Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done; thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 843-6897 after 5 and weekends Experienced typer term paper, thesis Broadreadings Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-744. tf Accurate, experienced typefinder IHM correl ing Selective. Call Donna 842-2744. For PROFESSIONAL TYPEFING Call Myra 841-4900. IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re-eli- cate, accurate, IBM pcics/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. Typist/Editor, IBM Pica/Elec. Quality Work, reasonable rate. Thesis, dispersions welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan. 842- 9127. Prompt service by experienced typist on prompt service by peervie. Proofreading. 12-8 Hays 843-1737. Excellent Typist will type your papers. Call 842-8091. 12-8 DISSERTATION SUPPERSHER - for fewer nurses of the ulcers, schedule spring disertation typing time. March-April in the winter-February in cookie maker. **FRI 842-4786** WANTED Non-smoking female to share newly decorated, fully furnished 2 bdmr. Bath Gatehouse apt. $130 + ½ utilities. Call 841-9790. GOLD* SILVER- DIAMONDS. Class rings, Wedding Bands, Silver Colons, Sterling etc. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 542-2868. Buy-Sell-Trade. Gold, Silver and Coins. $150 - $200. Great Plains National Library. 16th E. 8th (downstown Lawrence) University. 400-877-3200, fully furnished Female to share beautiful new lg. house with 3 others for spring school. Owner bmw. $115 + 1/2 utilities 5 min. from cam- brom. 641-8643. 12-5 Roommate needed for 2 bdmr. apt. Prefe. non-smoking grad. female. $132.50 + utilities. 841-6368. 12-4 Female housemate for spring semester: 3 bdm. house, 2 min. from campus. $92 + utilities. Call 749-1905. 12-5 Female or male housemates. Nice large newer home, fireplace, 2 front rooms $90 mo. + 1/5 utilities. Call anytime 841-5032 12.5 Female roommate to share furnished apt Close to campus. $105 + ½ rooms. 841- 4836. Keep trying. 12-4 Female Roommate Needed for spring semen- furnished. Furnished, 2 bdm. apt. in older home, 10 minute walk to campus. apt. $125 + utilities. Call 749-1586. The University Daily ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FORM SELL IT WITH A KANSAN CLASSIFIED SOMEBODY OUT THERE WANTS WHAT YOU DON'T! CLASSIFIED HEADING: 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 Law. Lawrence, Kansas 66045. Use rates below to figure costs. Now you've got it! Selling Power! Dates to Run: additional worde RATES: 10 words or less 1 hour 2 hours 3 hours 4 hours 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 1 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY: 1 Col. x 1 Inch-$3.75 NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: --- 4 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 2, 1980 KANSAS 55 BEN BIGLER/Kansan staf Victor Mitchell, playing his first game in Allen Field House, goes up for two of his 10 points against Pepperdine last night. He also grabbed 10 rebounds to lead the Jayhawks in that category, which was expected when he was recruited out of an Amarillo, Texas, junior college last season. 'Hawks win 6th straight Rv PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Wayland Baptist gave the KU women's basketball team more of a battle last night than in the championship game of the Queen's Classic last Saturday night, but the end result was the same. Kansas came away with its sixth straight victory. 72-68 last night in Plainview, Texas. as has been the case all season, KU was led by Lynette Woodard, Tracy Claxton and Megan Scott, all of whom scored in double figures. Claxton had 15 points and Scott with 14 points. KU wasn't playing up to par in the first half, and Wayland took advantage that, being down by 20 points, was a big mistake. KU Assistant Coach Sandy Bahan said last night that the team was slowed by illness to five Jayhawks, among them Claxton said Scott. But Wavley wanted revenge, too, she said. Besides making 15 points, Claxton, a 6-foot freshman, added 15 rebounds to put her season on hold. "THEY WERE READY for us tonight," Bahan said. They wanted to make up for our beating them the other night. We had five girls who well, so in the first half we were pretty flat." Woodard added 10 rebounds, two blocked shots and four steals. Even though KU was off in the first half, they got back on track in the second period. THE JAYHAWKS TOOK a key paper printed on their practice uniforms and put it to use. Intensity. "Once we got the intensity we were better," Bahan said "it took us longer to adjust to the noise." "We got to where we could hit, but we just couldn't pull away like we did the other night." One reason KU couldn't pull away was the fact that Waylands' Kathy Booth, a 5-foot-9 forward, hit 15 foot jump shots 10 times. Jamie Horacek, a 6-foot 10 player 18 points to keep the game close for the Queens. The starting lineup of Woodard, Clarton, Scott, Connie Means and Mary Myers took care of most of KU's scoring, but Chris Stewart added four points and had five assists. Once again, Shebra Legrant did not play for KU. She injured her knee in practice before the season began. Legrant, who's forte is the inside game, could help KU score better. KANSAS WAS OUTBOUNDED by waters from LEGER and KU's in- powering in missing without Leger RD. Woodard's 27 points upped her career total to 3,062, and moved her to within 241 points of the national women's scoring record. Woodard has 170 points this season. According to Bahan, KU battled not only Wayland Baptist, but a rowdy crowd and strict of order. "We're real proud of the girls because they were so nice and considerate with the officiating and the crowd." she The Jayhawks will see if they can continue their winning at home Wednesday when they host Northern Oklahoma College in KU's first home game of the season. Rogers grabs Heisman By United Press International The 6-foot-2, 225-run running back from South Carolina was a runaway winner for the Heisman Trophy yesterday. He beat out Hugh Carpenter in the final round and the Heisman running back Herschel Walker of Georgia. For George Rogers, football was a way to escape the dreary life he knew as a youngster—poverty, washing dishes and sleeping three to a bed. "I thank the entire coaching staff for helping me and the players for playing so hard behind me," Rogers said yesterday. "I'm kind of surprised I won it. I thought I had a real good team." The coach said that that might be my downfall. Usually the Heisman Trophy goes to a team with a better record." Rogers' mother relied on welfare to help support her five children, three boys and two girls. His father, George Washington Rogers, Sr., is a convicted murderer who was divorced from his wife a decade ago. After serving nearly 40 years in prison, he joined a woman friend, the senior Rogers was paroled in time to see his son play in the Georgia-South Carolina game Nov.1. The story of Rogers and football began when he was eight. After crying on the sidelines because he had fouled up a play in a school where he was given a second chance by his coach. Rogers, 21, knew in the third grade that he had talent with a football, but he had to overcome difficult odds to go on to win the nation's highest individual collegiate football honor. "I think it's very difficult for a defensive lineman to win the award because he's not in the spotlight," Rogers said. "A running back can make things happen whereas a defensive lineman has to wait for the action to come to him. I would say if Hugh Green didn't win it, it might be a long time before a defensive player ever wins it." The rags-to-riches story of Rogers has the quality of a soap opera, except that this story is "I was washing dishes, stacking sacks of cement for $18 an hour," he said, "I wanted to go to school, but it was hard to look at everybody eating and you didn't have any lunch." "Finally he put me in with not much time left," Rogers said. "They pitched me the ball and I took off running and scored." After the third grade, Rogers didn't get back on the field for nearly seven years. He went to live with his aunt in Duluth, Georgia, and rushed for more than 900 yards in his first season. His junior year was even better, when he had 2,300 yards and the attention of several scouts. Rogers remembers how his mother did no, always have enough money for his school lunch. "I would go to the store," she says. Booty's bombs in 2nd half launch KU over Pepperdine Rogers gives credit to Green's attempt to prepare the first defensive player to win the Heist. Somewhere along the line, something physical or something mental or something divine dictated that Booty Neal would always be a substitute. If he ever had the chance to get out of that role, he ruined it last night in Kansas' 81-67 victory over Peppered University. "I felt that what we were trying to accomplish was something new and unusual . . . I'm not disappointed," Green, Pitt's All-America defensive end, said. "There are two different levels for offensive and defensive players. It is slated for an offensive player to win, but when a defensive player is second, that means people feel he is a very comparable player." But Green wasn't disappointed in finishing second. Sports Writer The Jahwacks lost a 14-point lead in the first half and went to the dressing room ahead only 35-33 in their first home game of the season. For the first eight and one-half minutes of the second half, the game stayed close. Then Darnell Valentine got his third foul and Head Coach Ted Owens looked down the bench. He called for Neal with the Jahwinks leading only 43-42. Two radar-range Neal jumpers later the Jayhawks had a lead that they kept building on until the end. Turning the game around probably won't get Neal a starting spot Wednesday against Michigan however. He played too well off the bench. By KEVIN BERTELS Green is considered to be the leading candidate for Lombardi Award as the nation's best defender. Green and Rogers will get a chance to show just how good they can be against each other when Pitt meets South Carolina in the Gator Bowl Dec. 9. "Some players do well off the bench," ows said. "Body nots need much time to warm up." THE CROWD ROAED every time Neal touched the ball and he never held it for long. His teammates looked for the hot-handed Neal and expected a shot when he not the ball. "The crowd is a great help, and my teammates are even a bigger help," Neal said. "They look for me to shoot. I just have to show good judgment and nick a good shot." What constitutes a good shot for Neal still remains, even though. Owens tends to understate the ability of him. Neal himself hasn't set a limit yet "Booty obviously has good range," he said "When I'm open, I shoot," he said. "If I feel it, I shoot." It's got to be a good shot." Neal missed his only shot of the first half, but in a five goal goals in the final 12 minutes of the game. a dunk at the end of a fast break. He had 16 points, trying his career high. Neal's spectaculareplay overshadowed the consistent play of Tony Guy, who was the Jayhawks leading scorer for the second game with 23 points. He had 22 points at Reno Satur- "GUY GOT HIS POINTS quicky, as has been his style. "I'm just out there to make everything go." Guy said. "I know if I get the ball and I'm open I can hit it. I don't try to create shots, but I try to help the team by taking good shots. When guys like Booty and David Magley are putting it in, I just set it to them." "They just told me to go down to the corner because the defense would go to Booty," Crawford said. "When Booty got the ball, all I had to do was stand there and get shots." John Crawford also benefited from the hot hand of Neal. When the defense hurried to guard Neal when he got the ball, Crawford waited in the corner and hit three buckets late in the second half for the Jayhawks. His four first-half baskets combined to give him 14 points. David Magley scored the first basket of the game just as he did Saturday. He finished the game with just six points but had four assists, second on the team after Valentine. VICTOR MITCHELL, KU's junior college transfer center, playing before his first Allen Field House crowd, would have liked to have some nice words with the officials, too. He was hit in the line and had four fouls, two that he got in collisions that he thought were offensive fouls. With 6:32 left in the first half, it looked as if the game would be a runaway. KU's man-to-man defense was forcing turnovers and the Jayhawks jumped out to a 29-15 lead. Pepperdeen then switched to a different zone defense and it took the last of the first half and the first 10 minutes of the second for KU to find the cure. A last-second basket by Valentine before halftime was all that kept the game from being tied at the intermission. Owens stated the facts very succinctly at halftime, according to co-captain Guy. "He got his point across and that is putting it modestly." Guy said. "He told us in his own way about the importance of being smart." would be defense that would get us back in the of course, he said it as nicely as he could." "I THOUGHT VICTOR played well." Owens said. "I could tell a difference on the boards when he wasn't in. When he was out, they were getting a lot of second and third shots." Mitchell seemed to be struggling at times, with the officiating not going his way, but in the end his stats did not show it. He led Kansas with 10 rebounds and bolted of 10 shots for 10 points. "The refs were the only thing that messed me up," he said. "All my life the refs haven't let me play. Because of my size they think I can't move. Those were least恼责 charges." Playing the first home game is tough, with the players not used to the crowd and feeling pressure to play well before the hometown folk, Owens said. "First games at home are tough," he said. "There's no question that we should play a lot better." JAYHAWK NOTES: Boody Neal's shooting performance came as a surprise to Pepperdine coach Jim Harrick. "Where's he from?" was the first question. "Is he a freshman?" came next and "Where has he been played?" was last when found out that Neal is a senior from Oxen Hill, Md. Darnell Valentine's 12 points and three of 11 shootings won't get him a spot on the All-America teams, but his 11 assists and five steals will help the defense. He had seven assists in the season opener. Kansas used only seven players and ended the game with four players with four fouls and two wild cards. Owens takes career victory No.300 in Javhawks' second game of 1980 By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer V Ted Owens may have won the 300th game of his career, but he is more pleased to win his second of the season. "Three hundred is special, but number two means more to me now." Owens said after his Jayhawks downed Pepperdine 81-67 last night in Allen Field House. Owens, in his 17th year as head coach of the KU basketball team, has compiled a 300-144 record at the University of Kansas. His stint as Jayhawk coach is second only to that of the flat F.C. Allen, for whom Allen Field House is named. Allen, recognized as the "Father of Basketball Coaching," led KU on the court for 39 years. Nineteen players have earned All-Big Eight honors over Owens, and he has produced 24 goals in a season. OWENS BEGAN his KU coaching career in 1965. The Jayhawks were 17-8 that year and finished second in the Big Eight. Since then, Owens' teams have won Big Eight Championships and advanced to the NCAA tournament, finished in the prestigious Final four twice. Walter Wesley, Dave Robisch and Bud Stallworth. Owens has been Big Eight Coach of the Year five times, and Basketball Weekly named him Coach of the Year after the 1977-78 season. Owens, 51, is now the dean of Big Eight basketball. Only the late Joe Cipriano of Nebraska had coached longer than Owens. This would have been Ciriangoro's 18th season. KU BAKETBALL fans, accustomed to Jayhawk teams with winning records, have been less than sympathetic when KU posts a not-so-great season. When KU finished 13-13 in 1976, "Gong Tied" posters were a familiar sight at Allen Field House. With all his successes, Owens' stay at KU may seem rosy. Not so. Last year, when a talented but young Jayhawk team closed its season at 15-14, the cry went up again. After KU fans and alums had successfully staged a "Bony Voyage Bud" campaign a year earlier in an effort to oust then-football coach Bud Moore, many believed that Owens had spent his last night on the Kansas bench. Bob Marcum, athletic director, issued a vote of confidence for Owen after ACS lost to Villanova. First, sophomore guard Ricky Ross left the team after reports that he and two other players had used an athletic department credit card to place long distance phone calls. On the same day that Owens announced the loss of Ross, sophomore center Kelly Knight injured his knee in practice. Knight will be out for the season. Eight tournament. Everything appeared to be fine in crimson-and-blue country until Oklahoma coach Dave Bliss resigned, Owens, who was named captain on the situation, and rumors began to fly. Owens dispelled both hopes and fears when he announced he would not be leaving KU. And this season did not start any more smoothly than the last ended. But with two victories under his belt, Owens had won a third, and he had been through so much adversity. "I thought about it (the 300th victory) a little bit, but I didn't mention it to the squad," he said. Owens said he had not planned a celebration. "We play too soon," he said, referring to KU's contest against Michigan Wednesday night. "I'm too old to do that." MAGLEY 35 Kansas Head Coach Ted Owens advises junior forward David Magley during last night's game against Pepperdine. Owens' advice in the past obviously has been good, because he notched his 300th career victory at KU last night with an 81-67 victory. 1 The University Daily KANSAN Wednesday, December 3, 1980 Vol. 91, No.69 USPS 650-640 University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Tension rises near Poland, Soviet border By United Press International The Soviet Union closed Poland's western border to Western military observers yesterday and sealed parts of the Polish frontier. Soviet officials said they were "very" six" alert according to British military analysts. In Warsaw, the Communist Party purged four hard-line members from the ruling Politburo, a move that would seem to strengthen the position of the party's reform-minded leaders. All four had been associates of former party leader Edward Gierek. the decision came at the end of a two-day session. The central committee met against the backdrop of reported Soviet troop movements on the border with the populous new independent labor unions. In Washington, the White House warned that any Soviet military intervention in Poland would have "serious and adverse" consequences for East-West and U.S.-Soviet relations. White House Press Secretary Jody Powell said President Carter had spoken with the leaders of France, West Germany and Britain this week about the Polish situation. The State Department summoned Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin, and an administration source said U.S. intelligence had been accused of conspiracy thought to indicate a possible invasion of Poland. In Moscow, the Soviet Foreign Ministry issued an unusually specific statement denying a Soviet nuclear agreement. Despite the Soviet denial, military sources in West Berlin and London said the Soviets had shut off those parts of Poland the East German border remained open to Western military observers. THEY WERE also signs that Warsaw Pact troops were engaged in maneuvers on Poland's borders, Western military sources said. Similar incidents occurred in the Soviet invasion of Belarus in 1968. The reported Soviet moves would effectively block Poland on two sides. Poland is sandwiched between East Germany to the west, the Soviet Union to the east and Czechoslovakia to the south. All three are members of the Warsaw Pact. However, the sources cautioned against interneting the moves as invasion preparations "We're not—emphatically not—viewing this as evidence of an imminent invasion, but a cover for exercise activities," one Western source said. ABC News reported that a group of 60 Polish generals and 200 staff officers had drawn up a petition and submitted it secretly to the Compunist Party Central Committee. DAVE KRAUS/Kansan Staff The petition reportedly states that if East German forces crush a U.S. flanker, it will be defeated and the war ends. CIVILIAN TRAFFIC across the East German border apparently was not affected by the military move. The northwestern and international rail traffic was flowing normally through West Germany. In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Maj. Gerry. Jerry Curry said there had been no change in the status of U.S. forces in Europe. No large-scale maneuvers are scheduled during the next week. Some Western analysts saw the reported troop movements as part of a series of Soviet warnings to Poland because of recent Polish labor unrest. STANLEY KENNEDY Debbie Porter, left, stands next to Jan Denfeld in their apartment. The two are trying to obtain a marriage license in Douglas County. Women to battle state law against same-sex marriage By BRETT WOODS Staff Reporter Marriage licenses are issued by the state and recognize a binding legal relationship between a man and a woman. To most people, a marriage is a public declaration that a man must live with each other. Jan Denfeld and Debbie Porter of Lawrence meet all the legal requirements for marriage with one exception—they are both women and marriage between two people of the same sex is illegal in Kansas and the rest of the United States. The two didn't know that when they formally applied for a marriage license Sept. 26, but three days later Douglas County refused issue a license in compliance with state law. "When we got down there (the Douglas County Courthouse), we told them we had come to pick up our marriage license," Denfeld said. "At first everybody started looking at each other and then finally a woman came up to us and said in a very loud voice, so everyone in the office could hear her. I'm sorry but it's come down that two women can't get married. I mean we can't issue you a marriage license in Kansas." Sitting together on the sofa, holding hands in a one-bedroom apartment they share with seven cats and a parrot, the two women said this week that when they were children they didn't know about the specific law that prohibited homosexual marriage in Kansas. Denfeld and Porter said they would like to be married in Lawrence because their friends were here. Both women live and work in the city. Denfeld is director of Gay Services of Kansas. *ney (the county) said they took it to someone higher and found out the opinion of the court, which said you can't do it," Denfeld said. THE TWO are now planning to write the American Civil Liberties Union and request that its leaders accept the bill. Homosexual marriage in Kansas was prohibited during the 1980 legislative session when lawmakers rewrote the marriage laws to specifically state, "The marriage contract is to be considered in law as a civil contract between two people of the opposite sex. . ." A 1977 opinion by former Kansas Attorney General Curt T. Schneider also barred homosexual marriage by citing previous Kansas statutes and relating them to four cases where various state courts said men were not implicitly referred to a man and a woman. S Schneider said the laws were "sufficiently gender-specific (and) that a marriage may not be solemnized between persons of the same sex." Autumn Dentelt and Porter legally can live together as lovers, they face many legal barriers if they do, according to Roz Richter, executive director of the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund for homosexual issues in New York City. "You can't file a joint tax return unless you are legally married," Richter said. "The other two big areas come up with insurance and medical benefits. Most employers permit you to place your spouse on your medical records so that you do that unless you are legally married." Richter also said inheritance laws in most states provided only for a person's spouse if he didn't have a will. Co-parenting of children is also restricted to married couples. See WOMEN page 6 Commencement changes include guest speaker Acting Chancellor Del Shankel has approved Commencement changes that include inviting a nationally prominent speaker to the University and introducing individual school recognition programs. Shankel said this week that he approved most of the changes recommended by the Special Commencement Committee appointed by former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes. The only change Shankel did not approve was to move Commencement from Monday to Sunday. Commencement will be Monday, May 18. The date change would have made it difficult for Kansas Road 10 Regents members to attend the event. The committee's recommendations were based on a survey taken last at May's Commencement. The survey asked students to identify ways to make the ceremony more David Amberl, committee chairman and vice chancellor for student affairs, said the commission has been working to improve student students and suggested each school have a special event to recognize students. Ed Julian, University Relations in- special programs, said, "The recognition programs will put more focus on students who will attend four years at the University and graduated." Shankel said the University was trying to line up a prominent speaker for this year, but would not schedule a speaker if one of national importance was not available. putting it was not valuable. "We don't want to launch that part of the program without someone really good," Shankel said. To provide time for a speaker, the Distinguished Service Award recipients and outstanding teachers' recognition ceremony will be held at All-University Supper on Sunday, May 17. The committee also recommended streamlining the program and activities and cutting back the process down Mount Oread Special Stadium to last no more than 45 minutes. Lawrence savings institutions to add checking with interest By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Lawrence's commercial banks and savings and loans institutions are putting the finishing touches on new interest-bearing checking accounts, as well as new federal deregulation of banks earlier this year. For the first time, savings and loans institutions will be allowed to offer checking accounts. All banks and savings and loans institutions will be able to offer "negotiable order withdrawals" for bear-bearing accounts January 1. These accounts can earn a maximum of 5.25 percent. Officials at local savings and loan institutions are enthusiastic about the deregulation move and plan to offer competitive interest-bearing checking account plans. Officials at Anchor Savings Association, 900 Ohio St., said that NOW accounts will be offered free to customers who maintain a minimum balance of about $500. Capitol Federal Savings, 1046 Vermont St., will offer free NOW accounts for a minimum daily Officials at Lawrence Savings Association, 910ermont St., said that their NOW account plan would be available. "The inability of savings institutions to offer checking accounts has made it necessary for customers to conduct their financial business at different institutions," he said. Kent Earl, treasurer of Lawrence Saving Association, said he expected more customers who had savings accounts at the association to switch their checking accounts to the institution in order to increase demand for the association's other financial services and also increase profits, he said. different instructions, we need All Lawrence banks will offer NOW accounts, although bank officials have differing opinions of the new banking regulation. Bonnie Wells, director of marketing for First National Bank of Lawrence, 90 Massachusetts St., said that the bank had always wanted to offer an interest-bearing checking account service. "We're pleased with the regulation, she said. Wells said the regulation would allow the bank to better serve its customers. Wells she did not think that the regulation allowing savings and loans to offer checking accounts posed a threat to banks. "Banks have years of experience with checking accounts," she said. "the interest-bearing account has nothing to with loaning," he said. "It is just another service." This experience with checking accounts would them, in turn, save over savings and loan charges, she said. Banks use customer savings and checking funds to make loans. Because banks will now pay interest on some checking accounts, these funds will be more expensive to lend out to consumers. Some borrowers may have no need to have to pay interest on both savings and checking funds that they use for loans. However, a loan officer at University State Bank, 955 Iowa St., who asked not to be identified by name, said that paying interest on checking accounts would not affect consumer loan rates. PETE MAXON, loan officer for Lawrence Bank and Trust Co., 647 Massachusetts St., said that the deregulation of banks and the deregulation of bed-and-breakfast could increase the interest on consumer loans. Maxon said banks would have to make loans at higher rates to keep the same margin of profit that they had when they used checking account funds without paying interest on them. NOW ACCOUNTS also will cost more at banks than at savings and loans. Banks require higher minimum balances for a free interest-bearing account. Douglas County Bank, Ninth and Kentucky, will require a minimum balance of $1,000. Other Lawrence banks have not determined what minimum balances they will require, they said. As she worked, her hands were still supply and quick, but their brown skin was covered by dark-brown age spots. Marguerite is 67 and has seven dozen pillowcases a day, five days a week for 30 weeks. The KU Credit Union has run a pilot program for interest-bearing checks called "Ex- In 1950, Marguerite said, she earned 25 cents an hour but her salary has increased steadily since then. Now she earns $2.44 an hour. Workshop for blind source of employment and frustration By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter Every seam was nest, a half-inch wide. But when you look at the touch of her hands, because she is blind. See BLIND page 5 TOPEKA-Under glaring fluorescent lights, Marguerite Mahjah slid one blue-gray pillowcase after another beneath her sewing needle. Marguerite has worked for Kansas Industries the Blind in Topeka since the factory opened in 1930. ABOUT 3,800 sheltered workshops in the United States provide steady employment for blind workers. In return, the U.S. Department of Labor gives the shops permission to pay their visually impaired employees 75 percent of minimum wage or less. Most workers can supplement their incomes with Social Security Disability Insurance payments, be said, and fast workers can inquire about the status when they are paid for each unit they produce. Although her salary and those of the factory's 27 other visually impaired workers are below minimum wage, the wages are legal, and account for a substantial part of the wages of the Toopeka workshop, the wages are fair. Theoretically, the sheltered workshops train their employees to join the sighted work force and earn competitive wages. "If we had to pay everybody $3.10 an hour, we'd so broke." Albright said. Weather STILL WARMER Today will be partly cloudy and considerably warmer, with a high near 42. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 20 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low around 32 and southerly winds at 10 to 15 mph. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and unseasonably warm, with a high of 58 degrees. The outlook for Friday and Saturday shows highs in the 60s and lows in the 40s, with rain developing Saturday eight and turning to snow by Sunday. Temperatures will drop sharply Sunday. Judith Perry Marguerite Mahijah guides a pillowcase through her sewing machine at the Kansas Industries for the Blind workshop in Topeka. More pillowcases stacked in a neat pile await her attention in the background. Mahijah has worked at the workshop as a seamstress for 30 years. 0 Page 2 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Violence jolts 4 El Salvador towns SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Powerful bombs and bloody shootouts jolted four towns near San Salvador yesterday on the eve of a fire for six slain leftist leaders. Twenty-four Salvadorans have died in political violence in the past 24 hours. However, in a news conference in San Salvador, a spokesperson for the 20,000-member National Association of Salvadoran Teachers said Salvadoran National Guard agents had killed the Rev. Marcial Serrano. Serrano's body was found Monday outside his southern parish of Oliculta. in the past 4 months. Church officials said 9,300 people have died in violence this year in the Massachusetts-sized Central American nation of 4.1 million people. Rightists are said to be responsible for most of the killings. Garcia was a member of the teachers' association and was the 149th educator killed since the beginning of the year, the spokesman said. at least 23 other civilians have been killed in the past 24 hours in the latest slayings by right-wing death squads and in firefights between left guard troops. Baker easily wins Senate GOP post WASHINGTON—Senate Republicans named Tennessee's Howard Baker their majority leader yesterday. In other Senate appointments, Republicans named a politically balanced, Western-state hierarchy for the 97th Congress. Members of the Senate's newly elected GOP majority leadership are mostly in their late 40s to mid-50s. There are three conservatives and three moderates. All but Baker and Sen. Trumph Thurmond of South Carolina are from the West. from the West. The Republicans take over the Senate Jan. 5 when the 97th Congress convenes. The leader's elections must be ratified by the full Senate, but the outcome is virtually assured because voting is along party lines. The 53 Republicans met behind closed doors yesterday and faced only one contested leadership race. The conservatives, using their new political clout, emerged as the big winner: Conservative Sen. James McClure of Idaho trounced liberal-moderate Sen. John Heinz of Pennsylvania for chairmanship of the Republican Conference, the party caucus. The vote was 3-3-0. The GOP has not had a Senate majority since the 1953-54 session. The last Republican majority leaders were Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio and Sen. William Knowland of California. Taft died during the 1953-54 session, and Knowland succeeded him. Two explosions injure five in London LONDON- Two bombs exploded outside a British army barracks yesterday, injuring five people. Police said the explosions might signal the beginning of a Christmas bombing campaign by the Irish Republic Army. The London bombing coincided with a hunger strike by seven IRA inmates in northern Ireland. Scotland Yard a terrorist square investigated the bombings. The inmates have been transferred to a prison hospital in Belfast so doctors can watch their condition. The jail also has an office where prisoners are demanding political prisoner status. said. The bombs went off outside the barracks, police said. Police suspected that one bomb that had set an automobile on fire had been planted in the car. The blasts at the barracks were heard as far as two miles away. Houses near the army training center were evacuated in fear that more bombs In the past, the IRA has taken responsibility for similar London bombings. U.S. hostage offer sent to Algerians ALGIERS, Algeria—An American official delivered the most recent U.S. proposals for releasing the 52 hostages in Iran to Algerian intermediaries yesterday. The reply reportedly hinted that the Reagan administration may offer less favorable terms. Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher delivered the document to Algerian Foreign Minister Mohammed Benyahia during a meeting at the Foreign Ministry. Diplomats said the Algerians might deliver it to Tehran as earl as Thursday. The document reportedly contains the clarifications Iran had requested after receiving the first formal U.S. reply to its four demands for release of the hostages. Today is the hostages' 396th day in captivity. However, diplomats familiar with the contents of the document said it did not contain the yes-or-no answers sought by Iran. The sources said the document contained no new offers or concessions and adhered to the position that U.S. laws prevented the United States from strictly meeting all of the Iranian demands. Although the substance of the U.S. position may not have changed, diplomats said the reply did contain a new few tactical approaches. It suggested that the United States and Iran reach a basic agreement to see the hostages and submit the more troublesome details to international law enforcement agencies. It also made clear that the offer was good only as long as President Carter remained in office. It suggested that Iran may find the Reagan administration tougher to deal with, according to the interpretation the diplomats gave it. 9-month state crime statistics up 15 The state has experienced a 15.1 percent increase in both violent and criminal crimes for the first three quarters of the year, KBI director Thomas Kane said. A settlement with Department of Justice officials TOPEKA—The number of murders in Kansas increased 20 percent during the first nine months of this year, compared to the same period in 1979. INVESTIGATION statistic The number of violent crimes has increased, from 6,048 during the first nine months of 1979 to 7,003 during the same period this year, an increase of 20%. Kansas' four metropolitan counties—Johnson, Sedgwick, Shawnee and Wyatt—together showed a 13.4 percent increase in total crimes during the first nine months this year, compared with 1679. The four counties have the state's total population and reported 86.8 percent of the state's total crime. Twenty more murders occurred in Kansas during the same nine-month period this year than last, an increase of 20 percent over 100 murders in 1979. There were 601 raps reported for the period this year, compared with 491 reported during the first three quarters of last year, a 22.4 percent increase. Board OKs money for 9-digit ZIP WASHINGTON - The Postal Board of Governors approved $316 million day for the first phase of its planned expansion to a nine-digit zip code plan. The board held back, however, on the recommendation by Postmaster General William Bolger, on giving final approval to the expansion, possibly to allow the Reagan administration to review the plan first. The expansion is scheduled to take effect next year. The $16 million will be used to buy 252 optical character readers and bar code readers, automated equipment that would be deployed through 1983 If the expansion from the five-digit zip code takes full effect through 1987, the Postal Service estimates it would cost $887 million. However, postal official stressed that the equipment expenditure does not make it possible to account the return on investment from expansion to the nine-digit zip code. Syria ratifies military treaty with Soviets DAMASCUS, Syria—Syria ratified a military "friendship" treaty with the Soviet Union yesterday, in the face of souring relations with neighboring Jordan and a threatening military buildup on both sides of the border. By United Press International was now deployed along the Jordanian frontier, supported by an estimated 180,000 troops. In Washington, the State Department said the United States was considering selling additional ammunition and equipment Jordan in light of the Syrian buildup. Arab diplomatic sources said one quarter of Syria's 200,000-man army The signing of the treaty seemed to be timed to cause concern in Jordan, The treaty was ratified in Damascus by Syrian Prime Minister Abdel Raouf Alakasm and visiting Soviet Vice Premier Vassily Kuznetsov. which has sent about 10,000 of its own troops to the border in response to the Syrian moves. Kuznetsov later said the treaty established the basis for expanding the borders of Ukraine. Italy reports looting in quake areas NAPLES, Italy (UPI)—Desperate survivors of last week's southern Italian earthquake stormed vacant apartment buildings and a monastery yesterday in search of shelter. There were reports of looting and attempts by the Mafia to muscle in on the black market for relief supplies. In a related development, the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved $50 million in emergency relief for victims of the Italian quake. near Naples aids aftershocks rocked the devastated areas east and southeast of the city during the day. The strongest of them were 3 on the open-ended Richter scale. As civil turmoil and reports of profiteering mounted, the Mount Vesuvius Seismological Observatory “It’s a particularly odious crime in dramatic circumstances such as this, but we have to admit that loading the office Minister Adolfo Sarti said in Rome. Naples Mayor Maurizio Valenzi expressed sympathy for those survivors who took over buildings in the city. 'It's easy to understand the behavior include provisions for mutual defense and militar*aid. of those who are in extreme need," Valenzi said, "some of them with small children." Pilfering of earthquake relief supplies was reported in the earthquake region. Police in the northern city of Pisa reported the theft of funds collected for earthquake relief by technical school students in the city. National television said the local Mafia organization in the Naples region, known as the Camorra, was moving to take over control of the disaster area in a bid to realize millions of dollars in illicit profits. In Amman, Jordan, a Saudi Arabian mediator conferred with King Hussein, who had suggested in interviews published yesterday that Syria was being burgled into a confrontation by the Soviet Union. Hussein, in interviews with the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, called the border situation "pretty grave," and said he had asked the United States to speed up deliveries of arms already purchased by Jordan. In Washington, the State Department said the United States was considering the sale of extra parts and ammunition, and not intend to sell Jordan all that it wants. Armed conflict between Jordan and Syria could drag the United States and the Soviet Union into a dangerous proxy war. U. S. officials said they thought the Syrian troop movement was a "muscle-flexing" operation, designed to underscore Syria's anger with Hussein for its invasion, a Syrian request to postpone a recent Arab summit meeting in Amman. Coupon! Pitcher of Beer $1.00 with $5.00 purchase (present coupon) Julie's Italian Food, Steaks, Seafood Good Through 12/15/80. Half Price All Pizzas (carry-out only) Lasagne Dinner Only $2.69 Good Through 12/15/80. 3126 Iowa 842-7170 Sun. thru Thurs. 11-11 Fri. & Sat. 11-1 am Save on Your Favorite Brittania, Chic, Calvin Klein and others at KING of Jeans Half-Price Sale (Today thru Saturday Only!) Here's how it works! Buy one pair of jeans at the regular price and get a second pair of jeans of equal or less value for only. 1/2 Price! - In other words, you could buy 2 pairs of Levi's Straight-leg jeans,the first at $18.99 and the second pair at only $9.49 a 25% reduction on both pairs! - Or you could buy a pair of Chic jeans for women at $28 and a pair of Levi's recycled jeans ($12.99 value) at only $6.49! Any Way You Do It,You SAVE A BUNCH . . So Come On In and Save on These Christmas Gifts. KING of Jeans Levi's 740 Massachusetts C S3 LEVI'S --- University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Page 3 Computer center director search starts By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter The search for a coordinator for the Academic Computer Center is off and running, according to William Hogan, associate executive vice chancellor. Paul J. Wolfe, director of the center, will leave KU July 1 for Detroit, where his wife is managing a ready-mix company and he did he was still looking for employment. Paul Willhite, professor of chemical and petroleum engineering and chairman of the search committee, said the committee had met four times. THE 14-MEMBER committee consists of students, faculty, staff and administrators from the University. Willhite said the committee was developing the job description. The description will be compiled from comments solicited by a letter sent to academic computer faculty and an open forum scheduled Friday. "The forum is for interested personnel to raise questions about the selection process and to offer comments on the job description." Whitte WILHITE SAID the committee's procedures were open while it was writing the job description, but would have done so at the time the final decision was made. "When it comes down to looking at Dutch squatters' eviction sparks clash with police By United Press International AMSTERDAM, Netherlands—Four thousand stone-hurling demonstrators, protesting the eviction of 35 squatters in a housing-building, clashed last night with riot police. Twenty people were arrested, but there were no immediate reports of any injuries. The clashes broke out at police barricades around the building, which had been cleared of squatters at noon by a force of 2,000 riot police. Demonstrators protesting the eviction threw paving stones into the police lines when they were prevented from marching past the building in the evening. Barricades were thrown up by the demonstrators and Amsterdam's public transport system came to a virtual halt while reinforced riot squads blasted the crowds with tear-gas grenades. In the Leidseplein night club area, one police unit was forced to flee in the face of vastly superior numbers of demonstrators. A police official said soon after midnight (Amsterdam) that 20 people had been arrested during the night's fighting. individual resumes it has to be done within the committee," he said. He said a shop and office windows had been smashed and a fire brigade had to douse a fire in a real fire. He said that had been attacked with fire bombs. Calm was reported early today, but riot police remained on guard around the building cleared in the midday operation. Hundreds more were on standby at police headquarters, less than 500 vards away. He said the committee already had placed an advertisement in the Association for Computing Machinery Journal about the position. The committee will be accepting applications until Feb. 15 Willhite said, and will decide on Wolfe's replacement by April 1. The eviction that triggered the demonstration was the fifth large-scale police action this year to remove a court order to vacate their buildings. ADVERTISSEMENTS WILL also be placed in the Kansas City Star, the Topeka Capital Journal, the Chronicle of Education and Computer World, he said. A police official said all the squatters had been released within the hour without being charged. "It is certain that people from both instituents will know the University will invite Wilkinson," she said. "We're trying to come up with a job description that a person might have a "A CITIZEN CALL FOR RESPONSIBLE DOWNTOWN PLANNING IN LAWRENCE," will be at 11:45 a.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. Visiting artist BRIM PAULSEN will talk about his work in the Kansas Union. THE COMMITTEE is attempting to keep its expectations of applicants reasonable. Wilhite said. THE KU COLLEGIUM MUSICUM CHRISTMAS CONCERT will be at 4 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. open forum will be Friday at 3:30 $\mu$m. in the Academic Computer Center. Other members of the committee are Robert C. Bearse, associate vice chancellor of research and graduate studies; John Bucher, user services center; Dr. Michael Academic Computer Center; Helen Clark, computer operator supervisor at the Academic Computer Center; Paul Gilles, professor of chemistry; Martin Jones, associate University director of business and fiscal affairs; Bill Maxwell, assistant director of user services in the academic computer center; Dennis Wallace, professor of political science; and Victor Wallace, professor of computer science. 11 WEST 9th SALE We Buy And Sell Used LPs And We Carry Rock Posters & T-Shirts 15 West 9th 842-3059 The soonest possible date for running the ads is January. Willhite said. $1^{69} Also on the committee are Deanell Tacha, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs; Edward Wike, professor of psychology; Walter Dixon, assistant professor of pharmacology; Gregory Wetzel, Overland Park graduate student; and David Gardner, Healy junior. ECKANKAR will meet at 7 p.m. in 112 Fraser. LE JEU DE SAINT NICHOLAS" will be presented at the French Departmental Party at Play and Party at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room in the Union. The UNIVERSITY COUNCIL will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 108 Blake. THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room in the Union. Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 SPECIAL! The Classic Sub THE ASCENT OF MAN Film Series will present "Long Childhood" at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescoe. Sandwich, Burger, & Yogurt Shop Enjoy Coke The KU OPERA WORKSHOP will perform scenes from well-known operas at 8 p.m. in the William Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. REYNOLDS PRICE, novelist in residence, will speak at the English Department Lecture at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room in the Room. The BACKGAMMON CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in Cork Room 2 in the Union. THE MICROBIOLOGY FORUM will present "Recent Advances in Genetic Engineering" at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room in the Union. lemon tree THE KU SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:00 p.m. in Paralars A and B in the Bronx. He said the short time between the ad and the application closing date would be 45 minutes. On Campus The UNIVERSITY DANCE COMPANY will perform at 5:30 p.m. in 240 Robinson. "The feeling of the people who are in the area (academic computing) is that those who are looking around for a job are going to see it," Willhite said. "They know the position is open. We don't live in a vacuum." Are Classes giving you academic indigestion? Is the thought of final exams making your throat dry and raspy? Come to The Crossing for a "Daily Regulator"!? —Guaranteed to erase your erasable professors from your mental blackboard. THE CROSSING TODAY Featuring famous submarine sandwiches TONIGHT He said the applicants would be screened and interviewed within a month, applauding them. The Kansas welcomes items for inclusion in "On Campus." Organizations should submit information on scheduled free events to the campus editor at least two days in advance of the events. TOMORROW Visiting artist RED GROOMS will show a film at 3 p.m. and slides of his work at 7 p.m. in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium. The children are pulling a carriage through the snow. Getting married? Having a party? Hire a harpist. Call Elaine Peters. 841-2216 SIA Special Event Presents An End of Term Party/Concert Featuring SHOOTING STAR With Black Frost Tuesday, December 9th in the Kansas Union Ballroom at 7:00 p.m. Admission - $3.50 or $3.00 with KUID --- TOP CASH for BOOKS --- TOP CASH for BOOKS ..by the armful or by the trunk full...we pay top prices now thru Dec. 20th. plus receive a 10% off blue discount chip good for purchases in the store. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. OPENINGS FOR SPRING "Naismith is the next best thing to being in Nebraska!" Laurie Schwartz, Sophomore Omaha, Nebraska Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843- Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features NEW Wendy's CHICKEN SANDWICH TASTE NEW Wendy's CHICKEN SANDWICH TASTE Bite into a plump, boneless breast of chicken, crisp on the outside and lightly spiced— tender'n juicy inside, served hot with your choice of topppings on a warm bun. Cheese & Tomato Extra 'Try this new, great taste at 523 West 23rd Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Mideast problems grow For the umpteenth time since World War II, the Mideast is on the verge of an explosion. The Syria-Jordan border has become a tense front, as both nations mobilize for an armed conflict that many observers think is inevitable. Syria's assurances that it would never attack "an Arab brother" believe the fact that it has called its army reservists to arms. And as in the past, the United States is keeping its hand in the area by offering Jordan ammunition to offset the Syrian threat. Whether a new Mideast war is inevitable or not, the United States will continue to be drawn into the area's problems. This country's continuing commitment to Israeli autonomy, recently reaffirmed by President-elect Reagan, its arming of Saudi Arabia and its stake in the area's energy affairs guarantee continued involvement. How far the new administration will take this involvement remains to be seen. Armed intervention with a poorly trained and supplied Rapid Deployment Force is out of the question, as the aborted Iranian hostage rescue proved. Full-scale military involvement, as opposed to the massive supplying of favored nations, probably will depend on the severity of the regional crises. If the Syrians and Jordanians go to war, Lebanon is likely to become one of the battlegrounds, as it has in the past. Israel surely would be drawn into the fray through either defensive actions or attacks on its forces in Lebanon. And what of the recent Syriac-Libya alliance? The Libyan leader, Mosmayer Qaddafi, if he remains true to his words, may join his Syrian ally in combat. Such actions would give him an excuse for the exercise he has wanted to engage in for years: a war with Egypt. Unlike previous wars in the Mideast, a major regional conflict involving several nations would have an added factor. The Soviet presence in Afghanistan grows more dangerous as each nation becomes more involved in a Mideast war. The United States is hard-pressed for a counter to the already positioned Red Army. The situation is a mess, and the United States would do well to let the nations involved resolve it themselves. But this country is too deeply involved in the area to let that happen. So all that is left is to hope that the inevitable does not happen, that the Syrians and Jordanians do not go to war and possibly ignite the parts of the region that are not already on fire. For if they do, the ensuing explosion will be felt not just in the Middle East but around the world. National social weaknesses create pessimistic outlook Presently, the nation is beset with problems that are not of the kind that cry out for immediate attention but nevertheless have a debilitative effect on the society as it exists. If they are let go and proliferate, Americans will become known as a collection of Sibarites, idol-worshipers and seekers of instantaneous eudaemonia. Those problems take refuge in the souls of the weak-willed and the directionless. They are TED LICKTEIG MATTHEW MORRIS harmful to those who might come into contact with a correspondingly low level of air direction. Most of the following are afflicted by the problems: What is singular about the problems is that there is no method to eradicate them without killing them. Fringe fanatics of political candidates, most noticeably in the recent presidential election, the followers of Edward Kennedy. They stare at Kennedy like a swain staring at his mistress. Each looks for a paradise on a platter and is offered it. Another notable among the fanatics is Mrs. Ronald Reagan. A good punch line is to mimeserize her. The fanatics are the ones who say he should have a candidate could or would deliver on his campaign promises. These same fanatics can be found each day in front of a television set watching "All My Children." Right-wing extremists and mothers with the summer camp mentality. Such a mother in Houston, thinking that her sons were in safe hands at a camp and that those in charge would be as naive as she about thinker knacks, had a strong sense of responsibility and presureable sons. The sons informed her that as explorer scouts, they were told by those in charge that they might go on a mission to the Mexican border to watch for illegal aliens crossing the border. One of those in charge evidently thought the Mexicans who did cross inevitably had in mind rape and plunder. He had an inherent dislike for the color light brown, distrusted anyone who did not blend the words "you" and "all" into one, had been convicted in a federal court in Memphis for the illegal sale of automatic weapons and was serving a probated sentence. Weather forecasters and their groupies. To watch a weather forecaster in action, one gets the impression that he is trying to slip a wind ring onto his audience for the following day. Forecasters' groups are given the next day's topic for their conversations. Low pressure systems descend on their heads when the forecaster, who is perceived as the only person left who can somewhat accurately predict what will happen tomorrow, is wrong on the downside. The groups ineluctably look upon their forecasters in the same light as garbagemen when the weather should happen to dare to be rainy or cold. Pompon-shaking, bell-rattling football enthusiasts. At times their enthusiasm becomes robotic. Thousands of them sit, tongues hanging out, wondering, "Will they run? Will they pass?" and then asking for the ball to be bitted upon entering the stadium and welcome him, violence and fiv patterns in their place. Visual-aid, show-and-tell television newscasters. To their surprise, if someone were ever to tell them, the Federal Communication Department would the N-K to the recesses of the gray matter that contain four-letter words. Prudence would demand that television, being the medium with the most impact on its consumers, would place on itself the most stringent standards of content and formatting advertising dollars speak louder than such abstract, complicated notions as responsibility. Blinkered, money mongering corporate executives. If an issue or decision takes more than 15 or 20 minutes of their time, forget it. Give them the bottom line and they will take it. Means? Ends? Consequences? What are you, a socialist, or worse, a liberal Democrat? Fanatics, extremists, groupies, and money-mongers. No wonder the Iranians thought they were terrorists. The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 5604) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Tuesday and Thursday, July 12-18. Subscriptions pay a $20 per mail passage fee. Subscription to Kansas 6045. Subscriptions by are for $13 as an月 fee or $2 a year in Douglass College. Subscription to $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Subscriptions change of address to the University Daily Kansas, Fint Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 6045 Editor Business Manager Carol Beter Wolf Elaine Stratford Manual Better Editor Qyud Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis Campus Editor Judy Weisman Associate Campus Editor Jeff Javen Assistant Campus Editors Don Munday, Mark Spencer, Cindy Whitmore Sports Enthusiast Gene Myers Associate Sports Enthusiast Patty Armold Entertainment Editor Kevin Mills Manual Editors Bob Schand Wire Editors Tom Tedesch, Loa Wiskhanne Copy Chiefs Gail Eggers, Ellen Iwamoto, Tammy Turner Photo Photographer Gail Podd Photo Disk Assistant Lea Leagley Staff Photographers Ben Rigler, Lee Cooley Dave Kraut, Drew Torres, Robert Poole Columnists Amy Holwell, Ted Lickle, Bill Menzeres, Brett Conley Editorial Cartoonist Scott Faust, Fred Markhahn, Susan Schoenmaker, Blake Gungkeen Staff Artists Joe Barton Michael Wunsch, Bret Bolton, John Richardson, Lauren Newman Staff Writers Dan Torchia, Shawn McKay Retail Sales Manager Kevin Koster National Sales Manager Nancy Clauson Campus Sales Manager Nancy Light Classified Manager Tracy Coon Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Wendredt Staff Artist Jody Seller Photographer Brian Waktnik Teacher's Manager Barb Spother General Manager and News Advisor Rob Masoner Kanan Advisor Chuck Clowns Sexuality important for handicapped Sexual problems of the handicapped are only now receiving the appropriate attention that they have long deserved. In the past, it was believed that sex and the handicapped should be a topic discussed only in the individual's home, not in public. Knowledge and acceptance of sexual realities are indispensable to sexual fulfillment and honesty. First comes the FRED MARKHAM C Aud Bairns '00 willingness to recognize biological facts, including practical knowledge of the sexual organs and their functions. More important is acceptance of sexual feelings as legitimate biological and psychological variations, affinities that must be excused or only rudruntily tolerated. Next is the willingness to accept behavioral facts, to recognize how people behave, regardless of how we think they should behave. People have a remarkable capacity for self-deception. When an investigator reports statistics on the prevalence of some socially unacceptable behavior, there is always a public outcry. People do not object because they have more reliable data but because the findings "don't make sense." *my ignoring or denying behavioral realities we merely felt ourselves. Recognizing reality is the only way to live.* Of all the various phases of our sex lives, perhaps the most crucial is how we face up to our own sexual feelings. It is not possible to come to terms with ourselves as long as we refuse to confront our own sexuality. Some extraordinary individuals willingly recognize their needs, yet inhibit those needs for what they consider higher causes. That is one thing; simply to look away is another. We must be honest with ourselves and others in all things, but especially in sex, for in this area pretense wears thin, bravado sounds hollow, and in blushing others we bluff ourselves. Persons having difficulty identifying their sexuality often cannot find qualified counselors. Society simply lacks professional service in this area. Initially, different levels of sexuality must be distinguished. One must not think of genitalis or bedroom activity. Instead, two broad areas must be considered -private and public sexuality, as suggested in the 1975 fall edition of "Rehabilitation Literature." Genital satisfaction, love, reproduction and marriage are quite different and separate things, although they obviously can be related. Sometimes, however, individuals want to engage in premarital sex, or a married couple may not desire or may not be The private level would involve the genital sexual responses and inner problems not usually discernible. This includes the ability to obtain an erection, have an orgasm, give and receive genital and sensual pleasure and receive sexual tensions in oneself and in his partner. On the public level, how the individual acts around others and the role of the role person is to play becomes a major concern for the handicapped individual. More important, the disability may interfere with the individual's personal and public acceptance of his or her masculinity or femininity. For instance, a local radio or television personality without an arm or a leg may or may not be accepted by the public. able to have or care for children. This can be true, and couple, but especially han- dened couples. Sexual counseling for the disabled has been artificial. The counseling is diluted now to minor details and treated as if the clients need to be educated in terms of or have the need to be educated in this field. The professional therapists, nurses, social workers and others who are involved with assisting the disabled all are crucial in helping clients become self-sufficient. However, sexual counseling has remained by default—almost exclusively in the hands of physicians, who may not always be authorities in sexual counseling. The client usually considers his problem to be quite personal. He considers his sexual problem separate from his handicap and of no concern to the professional. Professionals often look at the problem as being outside their profession and outside the client's legitimate concern. Their training has been directed toward setting the client to walk. Therapists, social workers and other professionals must realize their obligation to counsel the disabled person who confronts them with sexual problems. Next, we must consider the perspective of the client's family. The members of the client's family consider sexual problems to be private. They become quite ambivalent when the handicapped family member talks to a professional about sexual difficulties. The family realizes the validity of the issue, but generally wishes to ignore discuss it in hopes that the situation will disappear. Often, the family imagines that if sex is not uissued, it will never be experienced by the individual. The family does not know how to handle overt sex, whether it be masturbation or vaginal intercourse, and a sexual sex partner. Strong conflicts can develop. On one hand, family members want to treat the disabled individual like other family members. On the other hand, they don't want to give false hope, as they consider all hope to be. Last, it is difficult for parents to recognize the sexuality of their children. Finally comes the "second person." This is the perspective on which the client focuses. This, too, is considered private. But here the handicapped individual is concerned about how he may be involved sexually, although he may not be detected in the second party. The main question passing through the potential partner's mind is how he (the second person) can make the situation more enjoyable and whether he can discuss this openly. Instead of speaking to each other about their sexual concerns, couples should avoid loud discussions. This may lead to more problems if and when actual sexual encounters take place. Both parties should talk about their religious beliefs and expectations. What type of relationship do they have and what type do they want in the future? These questions should be directed to counselors who assist the couple. Sexual counseling for the handsome person is a common hope that this situation will be changed in the future and that sexuality and the handicapped will become recognized as a vital part in the counseling of disabled individuals; Senate committees need students now Guest Columnists BY BERT COLEMAN and BREN ABBOTT County College Student Senate has a new year ahead of it. In the year ahead, we will see whether Student Senate is to become a viable and responsive body or a victim of the same criticism leveled in the past. As the newly elected student body president and vice president, we intend to make every effort possible to make Student Senate a workable body for students at the University. But no matter how many hours or how much money you put into Senate programs, they will and will always get more funding. Sixty-seven representatives of the student body have just been elected to represent you. However, we still need your help. The Senate standing committees must now start organizing. The standing committees include: Academic Affairs, Culture, Communications, Finance and Auditing, Student Rights, Sports, Student Services and Minority Affairs. These committees will deal with such things as the sale of beer at football games, freedom of speech, the add-drop policy, campus safety, transportation and parking problems, plus-minus grading system, or even the internal workings of Senate, such as the budget process. These are just a few examples of Senate functions that you can have a voice in. Obtaining an appointment on these committees is as simple as submitting to the Senate office (Level 3, B106 Kansas Union). It is important to have many students on these committees because of the power the committees gained recently when the former Senate passed a bill calling for all legislation to be Every one of us at time or another has complained or wished we would have done something about a problem. Now it is your chance. We challenge you to get involved, to do some good for your fellow students in the field and to gain skill. The student activity fees pay our and the staff's salary, we are here to work for you. We sincerely hope you use the resources available to you. Join us. passed by committee before it can go to the Senate floor. Also, we plan to utilize the committees like never before. We are going to give committees more responsibilities and power. B Bert Coleman, student body president, is a Wichita senior major in engineering and business. Bren Abbott, student body vice president, is a Wichita senior major in journalism and political science. After reading many editorials and news stories supporting the Affirmative Action program, I wish to make the views of the opposing side known. First, however, I want to clear up misconceptions held by some that people opposed to Affirmative Action are narrow-minded, enclosed conservatives. Many advocate programs that change but do not believe that AA is the answer. Those who favor the AA program support a type of reverse discrimination that is supposed to make up for past social sufferings of minorities by giving them preference based on race. The hardiness of minorities led to believe that discrimination was what they were fighting, discrimination based on race and sex. To the editor: Letters to the Editor Affirmative Action promotes racism, sexism I also was shown that a person from a minority race or sex that had my abilities was virtually assured of a General Motors Institute Scholarship, while I had, just because I was born a male and white, (two things I had no part in), virtually no chance of securing one. my chances for obtaining scholarships were seriously impaired because of my race and sex (I am a white male). He cited many examples of discrimination exclusively to women, blacks and other minorities. I and many other people have been victims of this brand of discrimination. I was told at a court hearing in August that I had been a victim. Please don't misunderstand me, I am not bitter. I am able to attend college with the help of lending institutions that have invested in my future, for which I am thankful. But there has been talk of bringing AA to the Guaranteed Student Loan Program. I do believe, however, that America's minorities have been discriminated against in the past. I do not advocate, as some would believe, that we revert to the "good ole days" when blacks were enslaved and women were second-class citizens. That was a crime against America and humanity. Those who work in support of AA programs are supporting the opinion that America's women and minorities are helpless without special help. I truly believe that all people have the power to raise themselves. They are not second-class morons who require special aid. They are strong people and have shown that in past accomplishments. I cannot believe those who say otherwise. I also cannot believe that supporters of the Affirmative Action programs truly are against race and sex discrimination. I advocate a different kind of racism and sexism. Daniel Vincent Grelinger Kansas City, Kan., freshman 5 e o n x t y d e s e t h e e s r d n i r d n s t m n i a l s . . . . . . University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Page 5 Blind From page 1 "Our goal is to train people to work in outside employment, but it doesn't cost as fast as we do." IN THE PAST TWO YEARS, five workers have held the Topkeeper role to take competency jobs. o the com- give r. h has done your to do hours at ac- ce are you use Most blind people who are rehabilitated in Kansas go through personalized programs with assigned counselors, according to Richard Schutz, director of Kansas Services for the Blind, the state agency that oversees all programs for visually impaired Kansas. "Sheltered employment accounts for a very small percentage of the clients we rehabilitate- According to a nationwide study conducted in according to the work of blind workshop employee move into private jobs. "I don't know why they call this a training center," Marguerite said. "Some people have seen it." The National Federation of the Blind, an organization of about 50,000 blind people, has asked the same question, and they have asked it of their colleagues. They ask of the organizations' Douglas County chapter. From their Washington D.C. headquarters, members of the group lobby against the workshops in their own states. They picket police cars to try to convince blind workers to join unions. "We've been called militants, hellraiders and radicals," Anderson said. "But we're serious." The Federation won a partial victory this year days" were gainst when the National Labor Relations Board ordered workshops in Houston and Cincinnati to give workers the right to collective bargaining. When the shops refused to obey the order, the board turned to the courts, said James Gashel, the Federation's Washington legislative office, and said the cases are pending in Texas and Ohio district courts. "If we win, those shops would be the first to collective bargaining," he said. "This is a big step." THE FEDERATION scored another coup this year when the labor department ordered workshops to pay blind workers the minimum wage during a four-year experimental period. The order will take effect in April 1981, Gashel said. Meanwhile, shop managers already are resisting the order. Two weeks ago, Albright joined sheltered shop managers from around the country to protest the farm bill. However, Gashel said, the workshop managers' fears are unfounded. ms are women I help. I power to l-class "Most employers complain whenever minimum wage increases," he said, "but if they don't want to shut their plants down, they'll make the adjustments that are necessary." One of the first adjustments made after the wage increase may be to lay off less productive workers. Kansas Industries for the Blind, which manufactures mops, cleaning cloths, pillowcases and tunices for highway workers, is losing money. It has lost money almost every year since 1950. Schutz said. However, the plant would be covered over operating costs are covered by state taxes. "Something's got to give," he said. "Either they'll be last door the taxpayers are going to be." There already have been layoffs at the Topeka factory. Albright said. Berry said the workshop's flow of government and private contracts had slowed to a trickle this fall, so the plant sends workers for weeks, brings them back for a few days so they still work on projects, and makes up for unemployment benefits. After that, he said, the workshop sends them home again. "I've been laid a month twice—once three days ago and once about a month ago," Marguerite said. "I'll tell you the truth." that in those e that grams iation. n and ger hman SHE SAID she couldn't afford to remain idle. She now supports her husband, who has arthritis, her daughter, who was laid off this month, and her granddaughter. shman As battles for higher wages and collective bargaining are waged in Washington and in other major cities, the workers at Kansas Industries for the Blind are fighting only for sur- "The problem is keeping work going in these plants, 'Albrightham Park.' We're short of work here." Kansas workshops for the blind compete for government contracts with workshops in state penitentiaries, he said, and the prisons usually are given first choice. *Workshops say the blind are patients, not workers. They say they are taking care of them.* As contracts become more and more scarce, Albright said, it may become less expensive to close the workshops and increase the pensions that blind workers are given. MOST PEOPLE who are blind do not need constant care and shelter, he said. Recent laws guarantee that the handicapped cannot be any job for which they are otherwise qualified. "I think it's wrong when a criminal gets priority over the handicapped. That's the law, but it's one of the bad laws." "They could eliminate my job, Berry's job and my office and save a bunch of money." Anderson said jobs such as computer programming, typing, maintenance, teaching, and administration all could be adapted to the strengths and weaknesses of a blind person. But he said the money was not as important as the self-esteem the workers gained after each day's work and that many of his employees could work only in a sheltered environment. "Say what you want, people only hire hired-people if they feel they have to." In the battle over sheltered workshops, there are no good guys or bad guys. Both shop managers and Federation members say they have the workers' interests in mind. vancing. It is a safe environment, and worker stay in the office will think they can not be outside in the outside world. Anderson, who was once a congressional aide, said he agreed with Gasel. Both men are blind. However, some workers choose to work instead in in sheltered workshops, he said, where they receive housing and training. But Gasel said the shop managers were too protective of blind workers. "There are many blind people who have been told and told that they aren't competent," he said. "It's just like a normal child—you tell him he's retarded long enough and he'll believe it." Some of the workers who left the Topeka workshop return; either because of their health or because they think the competitive job market is too much for them. OTHER WORKERS, like Marguerite, have never tried to leave. But 40 years ago when she was a young, black graduate of a high school for the blind, a teacher at the same school. "I never wanted to sew for a living." SHE SAID she was now too old to change jobs, and at 67, with a family of four to support her, she is sick. The workshop does not have a pension plan, Berry said, so when Marguerite retires, her family will have to live on her disability insurance. Their income would be cut in half. Marguerite started her sewing machine again by pumping a treadle on the floor. The black paint on the treadle had been worn away by use of and it glinted under the workshop lights. If she had her life to live again, Marguerite said, she would have gone to college and then become a telephone operator. "I haven't thought about quitting," she said. "I'll just have to keep on going as long as I can." 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C) days life and ski rental D) bus travel, but no train transportation E) optional, but two day transportation €209 $209 per person Charter bus option $89 --- MICHELOB Light SUMMIT summit, jr. - days 5 nights in Snowmass * * Discount additional skifts * * Skiff lift and sk rentals at * * Discounted additional skifts * * Optional air b & bus transportation * $189 per person Charter bus option $85.00 SKI ASPEN/ SNOWMASS R MORE INFORMATION A CALL ROBY 864-6835 AFTER 6:00 This year... put a personal touch in your Christmas giving with Sheaffer's kit. Calligraphy Nancy Kuemmerlein demonstrates "Calligraphy for Christmas" December 3 & 4 from 12:30 til 5:00 pm. Kansas Union Bookstore, level two. Even a novice can make beautiful cards, gifts, invitations . . . an ancient art becomes easy. The kit includes " easy to use" cartridge pen, 3 calligraphy nibs, 14 ink cartridges in 7 colors, practice pad β "how to booket." Kansas Union Bookstores Main Store . Satellite Shop sugg. retail 8.95 sale price 6.95 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 KU group to perform baroque holiday music A its 1890 Christmas recital, KU's Collegium Musicum will offer a musical alternative to those who have grown up without but have entwined "Jingle Bells." The collegium, an early music ensemble, will perform a baroque Christmas Oratorio at 4 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy The oratorio tells the story of Christ's birth in a series of solo and ensemble numbers. The parts of the story are connected by narratives sung by a character called the Evangelist. The piece was written in the 17th century by Heinrich Schutz. The Collegium Musicum performs music from the medieval, renascence and baroque periods, Stewart Carter, assistant professor of music history and director of the group, said yesterday. Those periods began in the 13th century and ended in the 18th century. The Collegeium's title was a Latin name for college musical ensembles 200 years ago, Carter said. The group is made up of about 30 KU students who auditioned during fall enrollment. The KU Collegium, which performed at the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs this semester, usually performs authentic early music. But sometimes, Carter said, that music is hard to find. "A lot of the music only survives in libraries and museums," he said. Schutz's Christmas Oratorio was buried for years in a Swedish library, he said. When the group performs the oratorio, it will use only instruments that existed when Schutz composed his piece. play familiar instruments, including cellos, trumpets and violins, Carter said, but they also will play the sackbut and cornetto, two distant relatives of the modern trombone and clarinet. this afternoon the collegium will The University has a collection of early instruments, Carter said, but musicians who want to start their own collections should be ready to make a large investment. At $10,000 are hard to come by. Most replaces of early instruments are made in Germany, he said, and as the value of the German mark rises the price of German-made instruments. The group's last concert of the semester will be Monday at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Both today's and Monday's concerts are free and open to the public. TENNESSEE Lee Western Shirts As Low As $14.95 All Fomfy Down Vests 20% OFF "Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence" RAASCH WESTERN WEAR 842-8413 All Comfy Down Vests 20% OFF DANIELS RUSSELL Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa for All-American Wear!! Name Brand Ski Wear Name Brenda Ski Wear At Low Prices •Coats •Bibs •Sweaters •Hats •Goggles Esprit De Ski Kero El Mira Esprit Bole Hydron The Noy Bitsy Teeny Weeny Little Ski Shoppe Sun Specs Open Tues-Sat 12:00-4:00 1021 SUN SPECS SUN SPECS OLD GARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE All Our Meats Are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor. Hog Heaven Rib Special Enjoy Coca-Cola LAST HOG HEAVEN SPECIAL OF THE YEAR! No Coupons Accepted With This Special. LAST HOG HEAVY OF THE Y Half Slab Big End $3.49 Half Slab Small End $4.99 Full Slab (to go only) $6.99 Massachusetts National Lawrence OFFER GOOD DEC. 3 - DEC. 7 WED. THRU SUN. THE CHILD-CUSTODY restrictions are of special concern to Denfield and Porter. Denfield has a 28-month-old daughter, who had been raped by the bad after she was raped in the Army. Women From page 1 If the two can be married, Porter said, she will try to adopt the child. The two would then be the legal parents and share the duties of rearing the girl. "We love each other for family improvement and help Adopt Happy for many young child," Porter said. "You can have joint custody between two individuals and also appoint your lover guardian, but that requires a will or some guardianship agreement, Richter said. "However, any agreement would only apply if the natural parent died or was unable to care for the child." without marrying Denfeld, the two will be breaking new legal ground in Kansas, according to Nancy Maxwell, professor of law at Washburn University. If Porter attempts to adopt the child "Kansas has no case law for a single parent adopting a child without the natural parent giving up full parental rights," Maxwell said. "The law of Kansas is that any with may adopt, but it has not been tested in this way." Both Richter and Maxwell said they doubted the chances of challenging the Kansas law in court and suggested an argument could be a legal contract between the two. "The fact that Kansas law has been recently amended to cover the issue of whether the legislative intent and it would be hard to overturn," Richter said. "If they Accounts From page 1 She said the Expandache service was offered by the Credit Union so it could compete with banks and savings institutions planning to offer NOW accounts. pandacheck" since last July. program was offered on a limited basis and about 750 people now participate in the program, Janet Price, manager-treasurer for the Credit Union, said. The Credit Union expanded the COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANDAZ COMMONWEALTH TELEVISION & VIDEO GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE R BENJAMIN 7:15 6 9:00 Mat Sat & Sun, 2:00 PETER HARRIS VARSITY TOWNSIDE TELEPHONES 813-705 THE PRIVATE EYEB 7:30 & 9:15 Mon Sat A Sun. 2:15 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 7:30 & 9:15 HILLCREST 1 37TH AND IOWA 54001 JOHNSON 84026 503-215-6987 Some times you watch Grace, Sister Ruthless and Mother Mary Tyler Moore Ordinary People LVE: 7/11 & 8:30 MAT: SAT 10/21 & 11:15 HILLCREST 3 11TH AND IOWA TELPHONE 862-8800 "Members must make applications, run through Telecredit," she said. THE RAINBOW HILLCREST 2 517-608-4900 THE ELEPHANT MAN Ev. 7:15 - 9:25 Mat Sat Sa 2:15 7:30 & 9:30 P If the member is given a satisfactory rating on check writing by the Telecredit evaluating service, the applicant will obtain an interest-bearing account, she said. 7 40 & 8 20 Sat at 6 Sun at 2:20 At last Mr. Wrong US Museum a Museum New story Interest-bearing accounts are a little more difficult to get at credit unions than at banks or savings and loans, Price said. CINEMA 2 31ST AND IOWA TELEPHONE 843 5400 ZIP+ADEE-DOO-DAH! Walt Disney's Song & South TECHNICOLOR! The contract would be based on a California court ruling that said actor Lee Marvin and Michele Marvin had a legal commitment to each other even though they weren't married. The Marvin case was a landmark one that hasn't been tested in Kansas yet, Maxwell said. 7:30 only Don't Miss The Fun! Caddy shack 0-3% sale CHEVY CHASE service to the rest of KU faculty and staff last December, and offered free interest-bearing account that did not require any credit card. Reappers must eligibility requirements. wanted to challenge the law they could, but it would be a very difficult case to win.1 However, both Richter and Maxwell said a contract relationship was a new area of the law that was still unclear and that had been rejected in some states. A CONTRACT RELATIONSHIP would involve the two legally structuring their living together on paper. Each would have certain competencies that divide the division of property and child support should the relationship end. "I'm gonna live with her regardless," Denfeld said. "Even if Kansas is too backward to admit that two people of the same sex can live and love together as any other couple, that's their problem, not mine." Denfield and Porter haven't written the ACLU yet so they don't know what legal help they can count on if they challenge the law. In the meantime they are planning a religious ceremony at the Metropolitan Community Church, a Kansas City church that permits homosexual members. "New York has rejected the Marvin contract case. Kansas hasn't specifically recognized the case, but there is a proposed amendment that would do away with common law marriage, and one of the reasons is because the Marvin case would replace it." Maxwell said. LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS A chance to study and live in London I A wide range of subjects and courses is available in Central London for students of the social sciences. Junior year... Postgraduate Diplomas One-year Master's degrees... Research Subjects include Accounting and Finance, Actuarial Science, Anthropology, Business Studies, Econometrics, Economics, Economic History, Geography, Government, Industrial Relations, International History, International Relations, Law, Management Operations, Operational Research, Philosophy, Politics, Social Administration, Social Work, Sociology, Social Psychology and Statistical and Mathematical Sciences Application blanks from Admissions Secretary, L. S.E. Houghton Street, London WC24 2AE, England Please state whether junior year or postgraduate Get Over Your Mid-Week Crisis! zzzZ 23rd and Ousdahl It's the middle of the week and Friday seems years away. But there is a solution to your mid-week crisis because tonight is KU NIGHT at GAMMONS. You can enjoy $1.00 bar drinks all night long! Come to Gammons tonight. It might make Wednesdays a little easier to get through. GAMMONS SNOWMONS Southern Hills Center OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! YOUR STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU The Student Senate is now accepting applications for membership on the following standing committees: Communications Culture Finance and Auditing Academic Affairs Minority Affairs Student Rights Student Services Sports Elections (sub committee) Apply in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union d to P c- r- n- to of a nor a nen the at at, lell wid win out aw is ice aat at me ny itty s," ooo eir elir University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Page 7 Drivers' workshop stresses dangers of alcohol By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter About 50 percent of all highway accidents in the United States involve drunk drivers, a local alcohol safety program director said last night. "Every two years more people are killed in highway accidents than were killed in the Vietnam War, and yet no one is holding rallies or getup as," George Lorey, the Lawrence Alcohole Project outreach director, said. In a two-hour motor vehicle workshop at the Satellite Union that dealt primarily with the consequences of drinking and driving. Lorey told the seven students attending that programs such as ASAP were not out to stop their safety, but were concerned about their safety. "We're not out to ruin your good Rock band featured in concert Shooting Star, a Kansas City rock band with a jazz flavor, will perform at 7 p.m. Dec. 9 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Black Frost, a rock group from Manhattan, will open the show. Tickets can be purchased at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union or at Kief's Discount Records and Stereo Supply, 2100 W. 25th St. KU students can purchase tickets for safety and the general public can buy them for their own use. This concert will be different from previous SUA-sponsored special events because SUA officials want to provide a variation on the traditional concert atmosphere. "This concert will offer a more intimate party-type atmosphere," said Duke Divine, SUA Special Events chairman. This will be more than of an end-of-the- finally, or a last "blowout" before finals, he said. An open area for dancing will be available, as well as popcorn, peanuts In the last two years, Shooting Star has gained considerable national prominence, Divine said, since it appeared on tour with the rock group Missouri and released its album "Shooting Star." They are best known for their singles "wrongness" and "Got What I Need" and "Got Charge." Shooting Star appeared at the London Opera House about six months ago. Shooting Star's first album was in the United States, Canada and Europe. Black Frost has toured western and southern Kansas for the past four years. times or my good times, but when your actions can harm you or someone else, we get concerned," he said. ASAP IS A program working to health-care-related accidents and fatalities. "The question becomes, 'When I drink, am I going to be responsible?' he said. "Chances of getting an OUI (operating under the supervision of a police officer) in 1,200? That means every fourth car you meet will have a drunken driver." For the average 180-pound male, that means consuming only five beers in one day. A motorist is considered legally able to show a blood alcohol content of 10 percent. According to Officer Vic Shore of the KU Police Department, the penalty for a first OUI conviction is up to one year in prison and a $500 fee. The most important indicator of disease is blood test, Shore said, and it isn't optional. "If stopped for OUI, you automatically gave consent to taking a blood test for alcohol in the blood when you got your driver's license," he said. Shore said, however, that he also considered a number of other factors. "First, I'll ask them to produce a driver's license. When they sit there and fumble with their cards, you know their manual dexterity is impaired," he added. "They don't sure don't make them like they used to," and struggle to get the card out. "Then IT ask them to out of the car. I'll open the door to help them out and if they fall on the ground, I know for sure they've been drinking. "I might also ask them, 'Do you know your alphabet?' and check for slurred "I might shine a light in their eyes to the pupils contrast as rapidly as they should." "These are not big concerns, but I take them all into consideration." A CAR DOES NOT have to be in motion, Shore said, for its driver to be arrested. A driver and a vehicle need only be in a driving position, he said. "I have seen officers arrest a person in the hospital," he said, with the key in the litigation, he cared. The workshop was sponsored by Student Legal Services. Stive Ruddick, attorney for Legal Services, completed the workshop with information on Kansas insurance requirements and tips for dealing with auto repairmen. Riddick advised students to get as much as possible on paper when taking notes. "Write down on that repair report what you think in your mind is wrong with the car. Be specific about what you want done and demand that you be called before any other work is done," he said. By having everything written down, Ruddick said, a driver can protect himself. "That's not to say all mechanics are crooks, it's just to protect yourself," he Rudwick said drivers also should be aware that he can have his license revoked if he receives three or more violations within a 12-month period. Ruddick said, however, that an arrest for going up to 65 mph in a 55 mph zone would not count against a driver's record. That is the lone exception, he said, and probably will change soon. NOTICE: There will be no basketball buffet before the Michigan game tonight, but we look forward to seeing you at Gabriels Basketball Buffet before the remaining before the remaining home games. 2449 Iowa In the Holiday Plaza 842-5824 Gabriel's zzzZ Get Over Your Mid-Week Crisis! It's the middle of the week and Friday seems years away. But there is a solution to your mid-week crisis because tonight is KU NIGHT at GAMMONS. You can enjoy $1.00 bar drinks all night long! Come to Gammons tonight. It might make Wednesdays a little easier to get through. GAMMONS SNOW 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center MASS. STREET DELL 601 MASSACHUSETTS REUBEN SPECIAL $295 Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage or Russian Rye. Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Special Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 BLACK HILLS GOLD Diamonds and Pearls In patterns that have lasted for centuries. Priced as low as $22.75 Where happy decisions are made . . . McQueen JEWELERS INC. 809 Massachusetts Senate Positions Available The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions: Applications are due by Monday, Dec.8 Student Senate Treasurer Stud-Ex Chairperson Executive Secretary Apply in person in the Student Senate office B105 Kansas Union OPENINGS FOR SPRING THE HALLOWEEN MUSIC COMPANY "Naismith provides you with a pleasant atmosphere which is somewhere between apartment living and dorm living." Adrian Marrullier, Sophomore Colombia, South America Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-P Nails Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 10 Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Deadline for Orders Dec. 8 Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift 4. 5 oz. Chocolate Kiss Delivered With Each Order A51A SGT. PRESTORS OF THE WOLF BAR & RESTAURANT 815 NEW HAMPSHIRE MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE 50¢ OFF ON THE ½ SANDWICH OF THE WEEK (Offer good only for lunch 11 am-2 pm) Open to non-members 11:30 am-2 pm $100 OFF ON ANY FULL SANDWICH INTRODUCING FOOD SERVICE NOW OPEN ON SUNDAY, NOON-10 p.m. OFFER EXPIRES DEC. 25 Giant Baked Potato SUNDAY'S STEAK DINNER Tossed salad all for only 10 oz. Top Sirloin Giant Raked Potato Bread $875 Also Enjoy our Wine & Cheese Special! Every day from 4-7 pm --wants to show you the latest in long-hair styling! Interested in Dance Theatre or Music? We carry a wide selection of books, posters, records music, calendars, puzzles and much more. ... for you or for that special gift. ACT ONE, Ltd. Theatrical Books & Supplies 925 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 841-1045 Hours: 9 to 5 Mon.-Fri. 10 to 6 Saturday Hair Lords 4 Now, turn the page to see the other side . . . hair lords WITH THE OWNER OF THE STORE 1017% Mass. 841-8276 Redken Rent it. Call the Kinsan.Call 864-4358. Page 6 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 KU group to perform baroque holiday music A its 1980 Christmas recital, KU's Collegium Musicum will offer a musical alternative to those who whale outtown "Jingle Bells." but have outrown "Jingle Bells." The collegium, an early music ensemble, will perform a baroque Christmas Oratorio at 4 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy The oratorio tells the story of Christ's birth in a series of solo and ensemble numbers. The parts of the story are connected by narratives sung by a character called the Evangelist. The piece was written in the 17th century by Heinrich Schutz. The Collégium Musicum performs music from the medieval, renaissance and baroque periods, Stewart Carter, assistant professor of music history and director of the group, said yesterday. Those periods began in the 13th century and ended in the 18th century. The Collegeium's title was a Latin name for college musical ensembles 200 years ago, Carter said. The group is made up of about 30 KU students who auditioned during fall enrollment. The KU Collegium, which performed at the Renaissance Festival in Bonner Springs this semester, usually performs authentic early music. But sometimes, Carter said, that music is hard to find. "A lot of the music only survives in libraries and museums." he said. Schutz's Christmas Oratorio was buried for years in a Swedish library, he said. When the group performs the oratorio, it will use only instruments that existed when Schutz composed his piece. play familiar instruments, including cellos, trumpets and violins, Carter said, but they also will play the sackbut and cornetto, two distant relatives of the modern trombone and clarinet. This afternoon the collegium will The University has a collection of early instruments, Carter said, but musicians who want to start their own collections should be careful. They must A4 $1,000 each, good, inexpensive sackbats are hard to come by. Most replicas of early instruments are made in Germany, he said, and as the value of the German mark is growing, the price of German-made instruments. The group's last concert of the semester will be Monday at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Both today's and Monday's concerts are free and open to the public. FASHION FASHION Lee Western Shirts As Low As $14.95 All Family® Down Vests 20% OFF "Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence" RAASCH WESTERN WEAR 842-8413 All Comfy Down Vests 20% OFF F Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa for All-American Wear!! Name Brand Ski Wear Name At Low Prices •Coats •Bibs •Sweaters •Hats •Goggles Esprit De Ski Kero El Mira Esprit Bole Hydron The Joy Bitty Teeny Weeny Little Ski Shoppe Sun SPECS Open Tues-Sat 12:00-4:00 1021 Massachusetts SUN SPECS SUM SUN SPTCS OLD CARPENTER HALL All Our Meats are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbecue Flavor. SMOKEHOUSE Hog Heaven Rib Special Enjoy Coca-Cola LAST HOG HEAVEN SPECIAL OF THE YEAR! No Coupons Accepted With This Special. Half Slab Big End $3.49 Half Slab Small End $4.99 Full Slab (to go only) $6.99 Massachusetts Lawrence OFFER GOOD DEC. 3 - DEC. 7 WED. THRU SUN. THE CHILD-CUSTODY restrictions are of special concern to Dendel and Porter. Dendel has a 28-month-old son who was hospitalized after he had after she was raned in the Army. Women If the two can be married, Porter said, she will try to adopt the child. The two would then be the legal parents and share the duties of rearing the girl. From page 1 "We love each other for family reasons," I would like to adopt Happy for my nephew. "You can have joint custody between two individuals and also appoint your lover guardian, but that requires a will or some guardianship agreement, Richter said. "However, any agreement would only apply if the natural parent died or was unable to care for the child." without marrying Denfeld, the two will be breaking new legal ground in Kansas, according to Nancy Maxwell, professor of law at Washburn University. If Porter attempts to adopt the child "Kansas has no case law for a single parent adopting a child without the natural parent giving up full parental rights," Maxwell said. "The law of adoption in Kansas is that any adult may adopt, but it has not been tested in this way." Both Richter and Maxwell said they doubled the chances of challenging the Kansas law in court and suggested an agreement could be a legal contract between the two. "The fact that Kansas law has been recently amended to cover the issue would be a clear indication of the intent in启发 it has had to overturn." Richter said. "If they Accounts From page 1 pandacheck" since last July. program was offered on a limited basis and about 750 people now participate in the program, Janet Price, manager-treasurer for the Credit Union said. She said the Expandable check service was offered by the Credit Union so it could compete with banks and savings and loans institutions planning to offer The Credit Union expanded the COMMONWALTH THEATRES GRANADA DOWNSHIP TELEPHONE 507-3196 GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE BENJAMIN 7:15 & 8:00 Mat Sat & Sun 9-11 --- VARSITY TELEPHONE 843 1065 THE PRIVATE EYES 7:30 A 9:15 Mon Sat A Sun 2:15 7:30 & 9:15 HILLCREST 1 STH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842-8400 Ordinary Purple Crinarty People A PARAMOUNT PICTURE "Members must make applications, run through Telecredit," she said. HILLCREST 3 917 AND IOWA TELEPHONE 842 8400 HILLCREST 2 THE ELEPHANT MAN EVR. 7-15 M & F Mat Sat & Sun 2:15 KINGSTON Interest-bearing accounts are a little more difficult to get at credit unions than at banks or savings and loans, Price said. If the member is given a satisfactory rating on check writing by the Telecredit evaluating service, the applicant can obtain an interest-bearing account, she said. CINEMA 1 FIRST AND TWO TIMES PARKSIDE 8:45 a.m. Sat & Sun Mar 2, 2020 At last, Mr. Wring MUSIC BY JOHN RITCHIE service to the rest of KU faculty and staff last December, and offered free interest-bearing account that did not require a deposit from members members meet eligibility requirements. ZIP-A-DEE-DOO-DAH! CINEMA 2 2015 AND OWNED 2016-2017 21 ST. LAUDERDALE DURBAN Walt Disney's Song & South Caddy shack D 0-14hu 3:30 only Don't Miss The Fun! CHEVY CHASE PENGUIN "I'm gonna live with her regardless," Denfield said. "Even if Kansas is too backward to admit that two people of the same sex can live and love together as any other couple, that's their problem, not mine." wanted to challenge the law they could, but it would be a very difficult case to The contract would be based on a California court ruling that said actor Lee Marvin and Michele Marvin had a legal commitment to each other even though they weren't married. The Marvin case was a landmark one that hasn't been tested in Kansas yet, Maxwell said. A CONTRACT RELATIONSHIP would involve the two legally structuring their living together on paper. Each would have certain rights including the division of property and child inclusion should the relationship end. Denfeld and Porter haven't written the ACLU yet so they don't know what legal help they can count on if they challenge the law. In the meantime they are planning a religious ceremony at the Metropolitan Community Church, a Kansas City church that permits homosexual members. "New York has rejected the Marvin contract case. Kansas hasn't specifically recognized the case, but there is a proposed amendment that would do away with common law marriage, and one of the reasons is because the Marvin case would replace it." Maxwell said. LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS I A chance to study and live in London Junior year Postgraduate Diplomas One-year Master's degrees Research Application blanks from Subjects include Accounting and Finance, Actuarial Science, Anthropology Business Studies, Econometrics, Economics, Economic History, Geography Government, Industrial Relations, International History, International Relations, Law, Management Sciences, Operational Research, Philosophy, Politics, Social Administration, Work Work, Sociology, Social Psychology and Statistical and Mathematical Sciences A wide range of subjects and courses is available in Central London for students of the social sciences. Admissions Secretary, L. S.E. Houghton Street, London WC24 2AE, England Please state whether junior year or postgraduate Sl ban .7 p Bal 23rd and Ousdahl Get Over Your Mid-Week Crisis! GAMMONS GAMMONS It's the middle of the week and Friday seems years away. But there is a solution to your mid-week crisis because tonight is KU NIGHT at GAMMONS. You can enjoy $1.00 bar drinks all night long! Come to Gammons tonight. It might make Wednesdays a little easier to get through. Southern Hills Center zzzZ YOUR STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU The Student Senate is now accepting applications for membership on the following standing committees: OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! Academic Affairs Culture Communications Finance and Auditing Minority Affairs Student Rights Student Services Sports Elections (sub committee) Apply in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Page 7 Drivers' workshop stresses dangers of alcohol By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Staff Reporter About 50 percent of all highway accidents in the United States involve drunk drivers, a local alcohol safety program director said last night. "Every two years more people are killed in highway accidents than were killed in the Vietnam War, and yet no one is holding rallies or getting upset," George Lorey, the Lawrence Alcohol Project outreach director, said. In a two-hour motor vehicle workshop at the Satellite Union that dealt primarily with the consequences of drinking and driving. Lorey told the seven students attending that programs such as ASAP were not out to stop their use, but were concerned about their safety. "We're not out to ruin your good Rock band featured in concert Shooting Star, a Kansas City rock band with a jazz flavor, will perform at 7 p.m. Dec. 9 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Black Frost, a rock group from Manhattan, will open the show. Tickets can be purchased at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union or at Kief's Discount Records and Stereo Supply. 2100 W. 25th St. KU students can purchase tickets for the general public can buy them for $30. This concert will be different from previous SUA-sponsored special events because SUA officials want to provide a variation on the traditional concert atmosphere. "This concert will offer a more intimate party-type atmosphere," said Duke Divine, SUA Special Events chairman. This will be more of an end-of-the- finals, or a last "blowout" before finally, he says. An open area for dancing will be various, as well as popcorn, peanuts and beer. In the last two years, Shooting Star has gained considerable national prominence, Divine said, since it appeared on tour with the rock group Missouri and released its album "Shooting Star." They are best known for their singles "Stranger Things" and "Got What I Need" or "The Chappaz." Shooting Star appeared at the London Opera House about six months ago. Shooting Star's first album was in the 80 and gained air play in the United States. Black Frost has toured western and southern Kansas for the past four years. times or my good times, but when your you are, you or someone else, we get concerned. ASAP IS A program working to treat alcohol-related accidents and fatalities. "The question becomes, 'When I drink, am I going to be responsible?' he said. "Chances of getting an OUI (operating under the influence of alcohol) in 2,000. That means every fourth car you meet will have a drunken driver." For the average 180-pound male, that means consuming only five beers in one day. A motorist is considered legally responsible for a blood alcohol content of 10 percent. According to Officer Vic Shore of the KU Police Department, the penalty for a first OUI conviction is up to one year in prison and a $500 fee. The most important indicator of the health of good test, Shore said, and it's not optional. "If stopped for OUI, you automatically gave consent to taking a blood test for alcohol in the blood when you got your driver's license," he said. Shore said, however, that he also knew of other factors when making inquiries. "First, I'll ask them to produce a driver's license. When they sit there and fumble with their cards, you know their manual dexterity is impaired," he said. "They're not sure they'd ensure don't make them like they used to, and struggle to get the card out." "Then TII ask them to get out of the car. I'll open the door to help them out and if they fall on the ground, I know for sure they've been drinking. "I might also ask them, 'Do you know my alphabet?' and check for slurred "I might shine a light in their eyes to pupils in pupils contract as rapidly as they should." "These are not big concerns, but I take them all into consideration." A CAR DOES NOT have to be in motion, Shore said, for its driver to be arrested. A driver and a vehicle need only be in a driving position, he said. "I have seen officers arrest a person with the key, and then give the person car with the key in the legislation." The workshop was sponsored by Student Legal Services. Stive Ruddick, attorney for Legal Services, completed the workshop with information on Kansas insurance requirements and tips for dealing with auto airenormer. Riddick advised students to get as much as possible on paper when taking class notes. "Write down on that repair report what you think in your mind is wrong with the car. Be specific about what you want done and demand that you be called before any other work is done," he said. oy naving everything written down. Ruddick said, a driver can protect himself. "That's not to say all mechanics are crooks, it's just to protect yourself," he Ruddick said drivers also should be aware that he can have his license revoked if he receives three or more violations within a 12-month period. Ruddick said, however, that an arrest for going up to 65 mph in a 55 mph zone would not count against a driver's record. That is the lone exception, he said, and probably will change soon. NOTICE: There will be no basketball buffet before the Michigan game tonight, but we look forward to seeing you at Gabriels Basketball Buffet before the remaining home games. 2449 Iowa In the Holiday Plaza 842-5824 Gabriel's zzzZ Get Over Your Mid-Week Crisis! It's the middle of the week and Friday seems years away. But there is a solution to your mid-week crisis because tonight is KU NIGHT at GAMMONS. You can enjoy $1.00 bar drinks all night long! Come to Gammons tonight. It might make Wednesdays a little easier to get through. GAMMONS SNOWMONGS 23rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center MISS. STREET DELI 941 MASSACHUSETTS Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer REUBEN SPECIAL $295 Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage or Russian Rye. Special Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer (3) BLACK HILLS GOLD In patterns that have lasted for centuries. Priced as low as $22.75 Where happy decisions 809 Massachusetts are made . . . McQueen Senate Positions Available The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions: Student Senate Treasurer Stud-Ex Chairperson Executive Secretary Applications are due by Monday, Dec. 8 Apply in person in the Student Senate office B105 Kansas Union OPENINGS FOR SPRING "Nalismith provides you with a pleasant atmosphere which is somewhere between apartment living and dorm living." Adrian Marrullier, Sophomore Colombia, South America Nails Hall Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8FF Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features 10 Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift Singing Telegrams 841.6169 ASTA 4.5 oz. Chocolate Kiss Delivered With Each Order BAR & RESTAURANT 815 NEW HAMPSHIRE MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE SST PRESTONS OF THE NORTH 50% OFF ON THE ½ SANDWICH OF THE WEEK (Offer good only for lunch 11 am-2 pm) Open to non-members 11:30 am-2 pm or $100 OFF INTRODUCING ON ANY FULL SANDWICH FOOD SERVICE NOW OPEN ON SUNDAY, NOON-10 p.m. OFFER EXPIRES DEC. 25 Giant Baked Potato Tossed salad all for only 10 oz.Top Sirloin SUNDAY'S STEAK DINNER Tossed salad Bread 5875 Also Enjoy our Wine & Cheese Special! Every day from 4-7 pm Interested in Dance, Theatre or Music? We carry a wide selection of books, posters, records music, calendars, puzzles and much more... ... for you or for that special gift. ACT ONE, Ltd. Theatrical Books & Supplies 925 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 6044 (913) 841-1045 Hours: 9 to 5 Mon.-Fri. 10 to 6 Saturday Hair Lords wants to show you the latest in long-hair styling! Now,turn the page to see the other side . . . CHAIR LARDS working with clients worldwide 1017% Mass. 841-8276 Redken Rent it. Call the Kainsan. Call 864-4358 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 The provided image is too blurry and pixelated to accurately recognize any text. Therefore, no text can be extracted from it. REMIND! Your People Book coupon expires Dec. 20. STUDENT SPECIALI eyeglasses $44.95 complete Including: Any Single Vision Rx Any Single Vision Hx Plastic, Photogray or Oversize lens Free Tint (Custom grinding, Specialty Choice of over 300 Fashion Frames (Custom grinding, Specialty frames & Bifocals a bil more) Present coupon on purchase VOID 12.20.80 optical dispensary 1230 B 425 Woodbury North fashion eyeland Assembly alters requirements for environmental studies B.A. The College Assembly approved a revised Bachelor of Arts degree in environmental studies yesterday in its last fall semester meeting. The assembly, which is the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, approved changes adding courses to the degree's requirements. The environmental studies program was established 10 years ago, according to Ken Armitage, director of the program. The department decided to change the program's course requirements in 1978, he said, after environmental studies graduates suggested courses that would have prepared them better to enter the job market. The environmental studies program prepares students to resolve conflicts between man and the environment, and helps them understand the issues on Undergraduate Student Advising. For example, a graduate of the job in a government pollution-control office The degree can serve as background for students interested in law or medicine, or it can be combined with another discipline as a double major. "Before the revision the program was more flexible, but students felt they weren't getting anywhere," Armitage said. "There was a feeling that environmental studies was kind of a pud program." In other action, the assembly decided that students who wanted to change an F on their transcripts to a W would have to ask the College to make the change. Before the Assembly's decision there was no time limit for grade changes, said Teri Carwell, secretary of the Assembly, and some students waited two or three years to try to change their transcripts. The Assembly also approved several curricular changes and decided that foreign students who were general studies majors would not be required to take a world civilization and culture course. By JENNIFER LISTON Staff Reporter Petition drive nearly complete in attempt to stop demolitions A petition asking for an ordinance to keep the city from demolishing downtown buildings should have enough signatures Thursday to file it with the city clerk, Richard Kershenbaum, a member of the group circulating the petition, said yesterday. Kersenbaum said the ordinance would ask the city to refrain from the demolition until a company downtown plan is developed. Form your own threesome. Reserve now! Visit New York on a 'Three-Fer' There 18 a difference!!! Members of the group who are circulating petitions will have them notarized at a public meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Community Center, 11th and Massachusetts streets. The group should petition drive and efforts to stop the demolition of a building at 600 Massachusetts Street that instigated the petition drive. There IS a difference!!! PREPARE FOR: MCAT·DAT·LCAT GMAT·GRE·OCAT VAT·SAT Schedules Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact 8112 Newton Overland Park, KS. 68209 EDUCATION CENTER (813) 341-1220 Murray Hill Hotel's "Three-Fer Plan offers rooms to be shared by three persons at only $15 per person per night. Regular rates per night. Double from $40. Single from $30. Two blocks from Madison Square Garden + Large rooms + Color TV THE MURRAY HILL HOTEL 42 West 35th Street, New York, N.Y. 10001 212 947-0200 THE GROUP also will discuss ways to stop the building's demolition, including occupying the Jayhawk Women in Women's Xmas Classic Dec. 20. Madison Square Garden building to stop the wrecking crew if necessary. Kershenbaum said. About 100 people are circulating copies of the petition, Kershenbaum said. The petition asks the Lawrence City Commission to adopt the ordinance or let residents vote on the ordinance in a special election. Kershenbaum said that the petition had about 1,200 signatures. The petition needs 1,613 valid reasons to force an election, he said. KERSHENBAUM SAID that the group would drop the petition drive if city commissioners started to draft a similar ordinance. Members of the group were circulating the petition at the Kansas Union yesterday and will be there today and tomorrow. "If they'd make a good faith effort to carry out the ordinance, we might save the city the cost of a special election," he said. Kersenbaum said that the group would like to give the commissioners a chance to see the completed site, where it forced the ordinance vote. "We'd like to get their reaction to the petition," he said. ICE COLD SPRINTS CHILLED CASE INSTITUTE Bennett Retail Liquor 8917 MASSINGTON 8917 STREETCENTER ILLINOIS LAWRENCE KAANS 442 0735 Flounder Whiting Salmon Mackerel Mullet Dover Sole Across From Raney's At Hillcrest TOMMY'S WOODEN WAGON Praime Schooner SEAFOOD Market 841-6810 THE DISCOUNT DOCK Substantial Seafood Savings FISHERY CARGO at 20% off 15. lb. boxes of Shrimp, Crabmeat, Prawns, Scallops, and Fish Come visit the new Schooner. We've added a "Discount Dock" to save you money and provide faster service. Live Lobsters coming soon. GRAND OPENING SPECIALS ALL WEEK! Hock King Crab Abalone Happy Hanukkah! 75¢ OFF Corned Beef or Pastrami Sandwiches THE STUFFED PIG "PURVEYORS OF FINE SAUSAGES" Hours: Mon-Th. 11:30-8 Sun 12-8 Fri-Sat 11:30-10 Good Thru 12-11-80. 2210 Iowa Behind Sa THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA THE NEW YORKER PREMIO ITALIAN PIZZA SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $200 off ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 From Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer 00 X 1064 Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 FREEDismiss With Ticket Stub From The K.U. vs. Michigan game Thursday, Friday, Saturday REGGAE, DANCE WEEKEND Featuring BLUE RIDDIM BAND with CARIBE TONIGHT SPECIAL 106¢ CONCERT Featuring THE CLOCKS with WHITEMOUND Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Jawrence Opera House Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 422-6930 Jawrence Opera House You've Seen Both Sides! Now, come to Hair Lords (before the holidays) to see what we can do for you! Record Sale CICS hair lords 1011% Mass. 841-8276 Redken M-Sun 9-9 Sun 12-5-30 - Rock For Christmas Gift Giving or personal listening. —Records and 8-track tapes from $1.99— - Pop - Pen - Western KU - Jazz - Classical Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. SWA FILMS ku Wednesday, Dec. 3 General Della Rovere Roberto Rossini's return to the neo-realist tradition is the story of a black marketer, played by fellow neorealist director Vladimir Katselin. The rebel leader for the Nazis but gradually grows into the role. "If anything, the years improved both neorealism and Kafka," he says in *Dobbs, Thirty Years of Italian Cinema*. (139 min.) W.B. Italy/institutions 7-30. Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers (1923) A classic Marx Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Davin College, get acquainted with the show. Hey, Harvey U. Written by S.J. Perman. With it we have Laurel & Hardy's Oscar-winning short The Music Box. In which he sings (3070) B/W; 7:30. Friday, Dec. 5 Superman S The Man of Steel returns in an all-star spectacular which convinces you that a man can fly. Christopher Reeve and Bill Murray star in Lola Lane, Gene Hackman is nasty baddie Lex Luther, and Marlon Brando is godlike Jerl Ei in this epic, aw-inspiring film. Plus: Max Raimond's cartoon Titania (14/20 min). Color: 3:30, 7:30. Uless otherwise noted: all film will be shown at Waldorf Auditorium 241 West 35th Street, 600-549-8000, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday films are $1.50. Midnight films are $2.00. The screening is free and benefits US union. 4th level, information 864-8000. No smoking or refreshments allowed. On the Record Two St. Joseph, Mo., men were being held yesterday in the Douglas County jail after they were arrested for allegedly possessing 14 large, plastic Zip-lock jumps filled with what appeared to be marijuana, Lawrence police said yesterday. Chant office SCHC O.P HOOI a pr Hood chune Need GOLD 731 N. Origin your More jewels carvir Comur The men also were arrested for possession of a stolen motorcycle they allegedly were carrying in the back of their pickup. The officer followed the truck, check, truck the motorcycle's registration and four- thousand dollars in cash. According to police, about 2:37 yesterday morning near 6th and Alabama streets, a Lawrence police officer saw a pickup with Missouri license plates transporting a motor vehicle with Douglas County license plates. Both men were being held in lieu of $3,000 bond. The two men in the truck were arrested for possession of stolen property and for possession of drugs with intent to sell. Belly stag Police said the officer then stopped the truck, looked at the motorcycle in the back and saw bags of "green, leady tin" dropped from under a laundry bag. Police said that sometime between Wednesday night and Monday evening residence in the 800 block of Madeline Lane. LAWRENCE POLICE are investigating a burglary in the 3000 block on Hamawhake Drive over the Thanksgiving weekend. $2,550 worth of jewelry was stolen. Several jewelry items were reported stolen, including a ruby wedding ring and a gold locket, both valued at $800 each. FOR ANY TIME AT THE LOOKING CHAIN DIET CENTER HOW TO WIN AT THE LOOPING GAME DIET CENTER By the "weigh" - how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa HOW TO WIN AT THE LOBS CLUB DIET CENTER 100 80 60 40 20 0 Your money in a Save Account is like a NOW Account . . . NOW University State Bank 9th and Iowa 26th and Iowa Smart Money in Lawrence, the smart rnoney goes to the University. . . Member FDIC OPEN FORUM DIRECTOR OF ACADEMIC COMPUTING SERVICES A search committee has been appointed by the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor to recommend a replacement for Paul J. Wolfe, Coordinator of Academic Computing. Because of the importance of this position to the academic community, the search committee will hold an open forum on Friday, December 5, from 3:30-5:00, in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility to discuss the procedures to be followed, the job description of the position, and the qualifications for the position. All interested persons are invited to attend and participate. A draft job description has been sent to all faculty and staff; copies are also available from the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor. University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Page 9 KANSAN WANT ADS ANNOUNCEMENTS Need Christmas money? Buying SILVER- GOLD-COINS-CLASS RINGS. Boyds Coins. 731 New Hampshire. 842-8773. 12-8 Original Arts & Crafts. Have fun do so with the gorgeous collection. More than 50 artis crafts feature handmade jewelry, pottery, weaving, painting, wood carving, knitting, and more. Community Bldg., 11th and Vermont. 2-677-394-8700. CHOLLYAR, LITERARY & TECHNICAL HOOD BOOKSLLER We also have 25.000 price paperbacks. Come in and browse the books at 1401 1638 chuetshts 814-4044 Chamikah supplies available at the Hilliell office. Call 864-3948. 12-3 ENTERTAINMENT Belly舞ancer for your holiday parties. No sugars functions. 841-539-8 after 5 p.m. 12-8 TRAVEL CENTER TRAVEL CENTER Domestic & International Reservations • Airline • Escorted Tours • Hotel/Resort • Ski Packages • Car Rental • Group Rates International Student Specialists 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, KS 9:30-5:30 M-F, 9:30-2:00 Sat They're coming. The br ABS-Klein 'i Band Monday, Monday. Dec. 8. Entertainment 12-8 ... ROCK'N ROLL WITH PHRED GREEK SPORTS DESK FRIDAY, DEC 5, 8:30 You're all invited to come celebrate! It's a special event for the Education for H headquarters. Short-term counseling and crisis intervention ce nservation sessions, Kasey Wold, and Get Smart Thursday, Dec. 4 from 8pm at midnight at Off-Season partially funded by Student Activity Fees. 12-4 FOR RENT Perfect for 4 students. Close to bus route. $112.50 each per month. Large 4 bdm. duplex, central air conditioning, all appliances. Call 843-5730 or 843-2704. Apt. and rooms for rent, newly remodeled near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tt 2. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt 3. kitchen apt, and comfortable, comfortably. Reasonably pay Call. 4. bedroom apt, and efficient apt. 3 Bedroom Townhouses Renting now Other townhouses will be rented. The 2-story, 1450-square-foot, staged garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our Southren Parkway Townhouses, 26th and Kasdol, 74th Spacious. 2 bdm. apt. for 2 to 4 people. Fireplace, off street parking. Near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-7500. tf Villa Capri Apis. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bdmrs. apis. available. Central air, wall-bath, square room. 21x21 rooms south upaster Hall. Call 800-325-390 or any weekdays on 2-weekends. tall or fall春, Naisim Hall offers you the best of domestics. We serve a variety of food and plenty of it, weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, full schedule of cleaning services, looking for a home or if an apartment limit what you can rent. HALL, 1800 Naisim Drive, 8435-8267 For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. Utilities paid. May work out of rent. Call 842-4185. tf 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace and carpot. Will take 3 students. 2500 W. 6th. 843-733. tt NEW DUPLX AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE APARTMENT LIVING. YOU CAN ENJOY APARTMENT FURNISHING. TEMPORARY DUPLXES OFFER. FEATURES INCLUDE: BATHROOM, BEDROOM, CARRIER, GARAGE, TWO FULL BATH, WALK-in CLOSETS, SEPA- TURES, STUDIO, PET-FREE, TWO OR THREE STUDENTS. MUST SEE WISCONSIN FOR MORE INFO- MATION CALL 842-4455 or 842-1288 for WISCONSIN 2 bdm. furnished mobile homes. Quit location. No children or pets. References required, 810 and up. Jayhawk Court. 843-8075 or 810-0128. 12-8 For rent now or in December, townhouse, Hawkest, east side of street, Carperd claw, dryer furnished its baths and dryer, furnished its kitchen and pay room, no $0.50 deposit per person. If your com- fortable, $0.50 deposit per person. If com- fortable, $0.50 deposit per person. STUDIO-sublease at Meadowbrook for returning Fall and/or Spring semester. Furnished, water and cable paid. $205. $841-881. Tom. 12-5 DON'T WAIT I will the last minute to find a car. Our phones will be ready for you in Jan. Your landline and cellphone will be conveniently located at 8th and 11th floors of our downtown telephone店. For more info call 212-534-0670. NEW 4-PLX available for second semester. New listing is at 8th floor and COMPLETELY FURNISHED. Conveniently located at 9th and Indiana, within walking distance to the BJU campus. 4455 (a.m. 5-p.m.) or 8112-128-128-4455 (a.m. 5-p.m.) or 8112-128-128-4455 Sauconne Jr. tennis in trailridge. Gas and ice tennis at tennsport. Tennis courts and pool. Call 798-1450. Brand new 3-batm. duplex in super local loan cards. $255, 914-597-007, 845-904-005 events. Like new -1 bdm, *apt.* acc. from stadi- m. Subleave. 841-6315 after 5.90. 12-8 House for rent—feminine home with 3 bedrooms. Furnished apartments, partially furnished in a great neighborhood. Chosen to KIT and shopping center. Utilities and utilities post: 842-4468. References: 12-3 Sublease 2 bdrm. apt. (4 beds) $80 per person. Heat and water paid. 1/4 electric, on bus. Route 841-7978. 12-8 Roommates to share luxury condominium. Includes dorm room, office, plces, close to campus. $140 max. $81-$106. Free WiFi. Christian Campus House has a few openings. Apply now. Call 842-6598 between 10:30 and 12:00. Sublease studio apt. Fully furnished. Located on route to $500 per mo. Call 1-843-725-1652. 843-725-1652 Large, furnished one bdmr. apt on bus route; $210/mo. 749-2419. 12-5 Available Dec. 22, 1 b route. apt. $100/mo. Utilities on. bus route. apt. $150/mo. Utilities on. bus route. apt. $125/mo. Need to sublease: 2 bdmr. apt. 5 min. from campus. Lawn facilities, dishwasher, food parking, balcony, Water and trash cans, water faucets, $25/mo. Cnl Kit 12:53, 841:24, 12:30. Very large main floor 2 bdmr, unfurnished room with office space, parking area, Dec. 1st, fireplace, off-street parking, garage, and carport. Also only $500 mo., with $500 deposit. Utili- ties include $800 pet cats. Jeannie at 12-5 $485. Absolutely not pets. Available at: 1. Loisy Laurent duplex, Meudon 2. Les Fondats, Château des Fonds, appliances, dbl. gar $400, $850-387 or $960, appliance rentals. Female Roommate to share 2 bdrm. fur- niture line route $1350, busid $484, paid $842-7841. Spacious bdmr. for male in apt, with two students. Free December rent. Available for $13/mo. for January 1st—you can pay $13/mo. plus 1.3 low utilities 12–8 to campus. 843-4584. Studio for sublease at Meadowbrook. Furn- ished by, before 841-5735. Available after 841- 5735. MEADOWBROOK TOWNHOUSE, available on bus route. Phone 841-8140. Kruger nudet on bus route. Phone 841-8140. Kruger Must lubricate 2 bdmr. apt. Jan. 1 or before to avoid corrosion. Route. New carpet. 841-0938. 12-5 Non-smoking roommate needed for spring semester. I'm clean, quiet and easy to get along with. Call Chuck Alexander at 841-684 or 841-804 for more information. 12-8 Sublease nicely painted 1 bdmr. apt. water paid $190/mo. Bus stops at front door, 749- 5464 or 842-1813. 12-8 2 housemates. 3 bdrm. house, furnished. laundry. $117/mo. + ½ utilities. 1613 Ken- would. 841-4617. 12-8 noture for rent, 4 biks. west of Cartruch- nle. $25/mo. in Mumbai. Bike rental in Avali. Avail. Dec. 21 for 1 or 2 responsible people, prefer 1-2 bikes with summer optionals. 12-8 lease 13-15 For rent: Furried. Very large 2 bdram. 2 bdram, adpm. furnished, furnishings. Attitudes on construction, cleaning and repair. Want to sublease beautiful 1 bdm. spr. Furnished, right off campus. Call 612-557-125- 12-5 Spaeonis semi-furnished apartment in older home with 196 sq. ft. utilities, 108 sq. ft. Elevations 1196 sq. ft. Master Bedroom, Bathroom, Kitchen, Laundry Overland Park park apt avail for sublease Feb. 8, 2015 - $245 for car $245, 1-341-754-251 at 5 p.m. 2 bdm. unfurished in 4-plex. Close to 16 bdm. unfurished in 4-plex. Close to Available immediately. 811-4645. 12-8 Notat and well-eared 3 berm, house with yard carpenter, a kitchen and appliances yard carpenter, a kitchen and appliances yard carpenter, a kitchen and appliances Brand new 3 bdm. duplex at 305-311 North Lane land near St.2, newly installed kitchen appliances, off-season rate at $235 Call Mark 843-8328 or 842-0228 MUST SUBLEASE spacetool 3 bdm. apt; MUST SUBLAGE spacetool 12 callers 12-8 6:57, 9:06, 10 p.m. Sublease for spring semester 2. bpm. app. Close to Gilben's and food 4-1.5c. For more information call 749-1246 after 6 p.m. Roommate share 2 bdmr. Trailride apt. includes: Appliances, courts tennis, court乒 furnished. Exempt bdmr. $170/mo. utilities Sublease De. 15. Call 746-2222 or (855) 555-5555. Suspensions 10, bdrm Meadowbread room 12, Suspensions 5, bdrm Meadowbread room 12, today. Ranily 834-4058 or Meadowbread room. T PIN AOK TOWN Home New 2 bbm! 7bm! very spacious & private w/microware, didwash器, range m or yr. or w/dual-sensor 4040 Alabama FOE. 12- Call Ed Gulferd 842-3487. Nice 2 bcdm . unfurnished ints . in small 841-7377. 844-6300. 841-5215. 12-5 841-7377. 844-6300. 841-5215. 12-5 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- Altermotor, starter and generator specialist, Parts, service and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 843-9069, 3800 W. 6th. SUBLET. Trailridge 2 bdmm. apt. APT. 水页 pd. On Bus Route. 749-2518. 12-8 FOR SALE GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOTHES Euro- market leather jacket, skirt, shoes. Call us at (800) 314-6920. For sublease. two bdrm, completely furnished ant. With fireplace. All utilities paid except electricity. Available after 12-5-14. Connet Jim at 749-1034. No calls. In 12-8 MATTRESSER, Orthopedic sets from $29. MATTHEW'S MASSAGE BASE, from $49. Furniture, one block west of sixth and fwy. SUNNY SAND DOLLAR. $50. WATERBED MATTRESSES, $36.98, 3 year guarantee. WHITE LIGHT, 704 Mass., 843-1286. PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS. proof positiv, laminated in hard plastic. For design of custom packaging, stamped envelope to: DBJ Productions, dek. K Box 232, Temple, Arizona A$253. 12-4 Vintage clothing and neat ole "unique" at Reasonable prices in Teopka at: Pastense. 3308 W 6th. 11-5 Sat.-Sat. 2324..25t 1976 WV Rabbit, black with dark interior, 550万 miles. Very good condition mechanically and physically. Michelin train. Call 841-3200 or 842-1922. Must sell soon! 1978 TR7 excellent cond. full sun roof, low elevation. 50 ft. high. Constr. Sqft. Sitquiries only. Baldwain 944-316-1164 www.baldwain.com For sale: Large, large; slightly worn early American couch. $50. Call 704-9451-128 Cannon 100mm lens with case. Has only been used for a two week camera. 864-1302-12-5 More old stuff than one commonly has to have, and more of it is bits of Starling and pottery this week. Emerald City, just north of Johnsburg in B. Lawrence. Open Mon–Sat. 12-5 2-year-old townhouse, 1344 sq. ft. 3 bdm, 1/3 bath. i-car garage, fenced yard, gutter 街 in SW Lawrence. Assume宅面 $82.600. B41-7895 or I-1258-8587. 3-5 Technics 45 watt receiver and a pair of Access Remote book shelf speakers. 13-5 Rectangleal bumper pool table. Excellent bumpers. Large white bale included. 12-5 841-331 after 5 p.m. Turbitable-TechniChus EL-1700 Direct Drive Drive Bundle with 8GB SSD and best offer. First 4100 takes on best offer. 67 Pontiac Lernans, 4-apeed, radials, runs good, dependable. Call events. 81-541-128-68 1975 Suzuki GT-750. Must sell now. Good car, but no reserve. 43-12, 86-16 to 1301 Louise Lankman. Yamaha Stereo amplifier, Pioneer Turntable, and Northface Down Jacket—all in excel- lent condition. Call 841-5461. 12-8 Term papers coming up? Need a journalist's Christmas present? Silver-lead elec type set, available; barely similar. Similar rules are $20-$300. Mint, 12-8 $140-B/O. Curt 884-2923. Must sell-1979 "Ladies Grand Prix" like new, every price, or make offer. Call Chuck 6430-8440. 125 & 130. www.ladiesgrandprix.com Motorcycle for sale 1973 Kawasaki 175 cc Used 1980 Kawasaki 3,000 miles 161-576 Keep trying. MT250 Horda 75. Kreselent condition, pump professional. Assigned $500. book vip. code: 611030. Must sell: Tame Monk parrot, 18 inch gold chain, Sony cassette recorder. 941-3382. Keep trying! 12-3 One pair Brooks jogging shoes, never worn. Men's 8½/9. $15 Call 843-1312. 12-5 Beta Max 6 hour video recorders. Direct from factory—full warranty. $1100 retail now only $500. 842-2853. 12-8 Two red chiffon formalms, worn only once, by bridalmaids. Great for Xmas or Valentines parties or wedding. Sizes 8/10 and 10/12. $ech. Each. B42-4442. 18-8 SOUNDENSE STEREO. TURNTABLE. CASSETTE. RECORDER. 18 TRACK. HEADPHONES. 18 RECORDS. 2 MONTHS OLD. $350 only. 12-8 JIEFS, CARS, TRUCKS available through government agencies, many sell for under $200. Call 601-841-9041 Ext. #383 for your information on how to purchase. 12-5 Mamiya DSK-1000 35mm camera/w 55mm 1.8 lens. Plus Bentonini Bunnelhill nail- er 2x converter, and camera bag $275 or best offer. Call evenings 842-6568. 12-8 FOUND Found piece in Wescow last Thurs. Call seats and identify. 12-3 Found a set of keys SW of the River 542- 6736 (at two weeks ago) 12-3 Call 844-6497 and identify. 12-5 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES ORDERLERS! We are a public service nursing home residents? Our consumer organization, Kanaka for Improvement of Homelessness, will assist you and input on nursing home conditions and your opinion of the care and services provided. Our correspondence will be kept confidential. Please contact us at: 971-534-2600, Lawrence, K 60044, Waist St. #2, 971-534-2600, Lawrence, K 60044, OVERSEAS JOBS - Summer/year round. Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Aa. All fields. $500-1200 monthly Sightseeing trips. Cox Box 525-Kiora Corona Del Mar, CA 92825. Student assistants needed in records department and 12-5 hours per week during school year and full time during school breaks and during summer break. For a maker center, 1058 Eagle Road. 12-5 $1500 to $2000 monthly working off-shore, with full-time on-site support. Provide necessary work one quarter, two quarters, or a list of companies hiring sample job positions. Owen International, Inc., P.O. Box 9800, Ottawa, Ontario. postdoctoral applications in analytical chemistry of drug substances and the use of chemical chemistry and in pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics are being accepted. Chemistry Department, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60044. Individuals with strong quality and biological skills are invited to apply. Minimum postdoctoral employment is required. Deadline for application is December 3, 1980. 12-3 Jayhawk yearbook needs a morning secretary, must be able to type and handle minor office duties. Salary is $900 per day as yearbook office. 121H Kansas University 12-3 Part-time help to do light shipping, filing, and typing. Flexible schedule approximate. Apply in port of highway. Don't Speed Shop 1½ mile north of highway. 24-40 junction. Cookers, cashiers, waitresses, and bartenders 12/3 15/th Friday 12/5 at Minaxin's Pizzeria Henry's has opening for 3 persons noon hours M-F. Apply in person. Serious injuries only. 12-4 RESEARCH ASSISTANTS. Neurobiology Laboratory, University of Kansas, time for minimum one year. Degree qualification: B.A. (or) or B.S. in the biological or chemical sciences preferred. Have must have training and clinical procedures. Experience with subacellular fractionation and centrifuging. Contact Professor Elias Michaelus or Professor Haworth. 654-828-1284 University of Kansas NURSES: Psychiatric nurse provides care for personal growth. We offer excellent training salary with merit increase in 6 months, mentoring salary with merit increase in 6 months, assignments, including weekend duty only, one week's weekend; 3. Full time or Part time hours; 4. Excellent continuing education courses, holiday, and sick leave. SCM accredited. We welcome your application. Call Nursing. Owatonna State Office, Owatonna, ND 52970. Minority applicants encouraged. **41.** Minority applicants encouraged. CRUISERS, CLUB MEDITHERMEAN, SAIL- BOATING. Office Person Consultant Co- mputer Repair. Server. Send $45. 11 handing for cash. CALL CRUISERS, CLUB MEDITHERMEAN, 5103, 6129, Sacramento, Ca. 91758. REQUESTS: Applicants are now being accepted for the position of Eudora. Starling date and salary open. Tom Jeromea, Box K, Eudora. KS 60253-12-8. We are an equal opportunity employer. Wanted: Responsible college student or job applicant in maintenance, and odd jobs 2-3 afermomint. Req: Master's degree or maintenance and odd jobs 2-3 afermomint. Britton Station (in Meadowbrook) between 10-4. An equa opportunity employed by a community organization is encouraged to apply. Application desciine regular work hours to begin January. 12-5 Need part-time babysitter in my home for an adorable one year old girl. Monday-Thursday afternoons. own transportation needed. Call 243-0788 after 5:00. 12-8 LOOKING FOR A CHANCE TO TRAVEL? If you're getting a call of caution, please consider becoming a Tour Manager! In order to quality you must have an appealing profile. The Manager you would be executing the tour groups to vary your possibilities in the future for assignments possibilities in the future for assignments world wide. If interested send me a resume at Mountaineer, Inc. P.O. Box 807, Lawrence KS 66044 LOST **REWARD for CHEM 150 notebook.** I lost between the bed and the hall. Medical Hall Wed, Nov. 19 it is red. says Chemistry on it. written with nibble, and black ink and blue ink. 12-3 404 ask for a dictionary. HELP! My gray and white female kitten is lost. If you know the whereabouts of this fesley girl, call 842-6557 PLEASE! 12-8 LOST—Brown Roffe Ski Jacket. Lost at the Entertainer Friday, Nov 21. *Reward offered* Call Mike Greig at 843-5386. 12-8 LOST man's check wool sport cap size 7/8 L. Label Locke & Sons. London. R- ward. 843-8211. 12-5 ٢ NOTICE TRAVEL CENTER Taking a trip? We offer the lowest fares available. CALL TODAY! 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W, 234 St. Lawrence, KS 785-792-7232 1601 W. 23rd St, Lawrence, KS 9:30 5:30 M-F. 9:30 2:00 Sat a reorganizational meeting for GSK will be held Thursday, March 15th in an international Room in the Union. It will address the issue of Gay and Homosexuality in the University. The Arnold of Please be there. 12-4 Good Summer Jobs. Chester Colorado Campers, Estes Park, Boulder, Colorado and other staff openings. Seeking college sophomores and older for teaching and counselor positions in mid-august. $75 plus room board and access to campus. Board reviews a campus soon. Sinere interest in young people required. Write: Chester Colorado Campers Box 6525, Denver, CO 80208 Have The Navy pay your tuition. 864-3161 Sophomore Engineers You like bread, we like bread. We'll trade ours for yours. THE CROSSING. 12-5 PERSONAL FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC - abbreviations to 15 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth and neonatal care. Visitation call; c arm 9; am to 8 p.m. (913) 623-3100. 446 w. Hilliard 91, Overstory Park, Kawasaki. 461 w. Hilliard 91, Overstory Park, Kawasaki. SKI VAIL! Alum has new condos. for rent. 2-bdrm, 2-bath, sleeps 6. Kitchen, reasonable. Marya Caioppo. 303-476-4910. reflt 1 PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. tf SINGING MESSAGES for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6199. tf Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it! ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169 tf No problem too small, no time too late. We are here to help. Headquarters—by any means. We are here by any means. We never close. Partially funded by Student Activity fees. 12-8 This Christmas give yourself and your family a special gift. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure! Let swetl Studi make your own book and proud to give. Excellent quality at reasonable price and guaranteed to please you. "Why accept anything less?" Call about our Christmas gift. Send a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas card. Singing Telegraphs 841-619-8 Send Singing Telegrams 841-619-8 12-8 Male roommate needed for spring semester. Marmota room to campus, $87, 1/2-3 Bathroom, 9-13, $89, 1/2-3 TAKE HOME A BIT OF KANSAY. You can obtain KanSAY at the Museum of Museum Book Shop. 12-9 We Buy used furniture. B41-42444 12-8 EXAM BLUES) Prepare for a Merry Christmas at the Spencer Museum Bookshop, open during gallery hours. 12-9 MISS PIGGY IS HERE! (for your favorite Kermit) The Miss Piggy covergirl calendar is at the Spencer Museum Shop complete with centerfold. 12-9 Instant color passport. I.D. and resume photo. Bronze. Swell Studies 749-1611. Swell Studies 749-1611. 70 nutritious peanut recipes. Send 5.00 for The Peanut Book to K-M-C. Sales. Box 64, Big Cabin, Okla. 74332. 12-8 Frustrated with studying? 2 KU Med Stu- face surface anatomy, 1-677-0138 12-4 Dear Pet, We made it. I hope you’re comfortable. You will be. We’re Super Bowl Bound! You will be. CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Beautiful PINE HILL FARM has been chosen for our selected trees have been cut. Drive East on Highway 10, four miles south of Downtown. off ramp is 11 miles north. base: 542-251. 4 households of very good looking men. Wanting ladies for friendship and hopefully more, would really like people and we do what we want. We also all angel friends 814-5033 12-5 WINTER PARK SPRING BREAK WP ski FOUR DAYS— FOUR NITES SIGN-UP DEADLINE DEC. 23 $271 INCLUDES TRANS., LODGING, LIFTS, & RENTALS OR LODGING FOR $119 AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477 Do a friend a favor—send a professional tuck-in by r. v. winkens. Call 841-572-157. 12-8 Hillel Club Come meet meet Rabbi Maki Elmond Cune Meet meet Rabbi Maki Alcowd D. Kansas University Catfeater. 12-3 Gift Idea Beautiful Leathers Shoulder • Clutch 雪宝宝 Handbags Holiday Plaza M-Th 10-8 Sun 1-5 BAG SHOP Frustrations relieved, grades not guaranteed. Celebrate your possible success or failure in style at THE CROSSING. 12-5 Hey Colorado bumble bee when are you going to show us more than your gorgeous and beautiful smile in Trek. We love them, they are so beautiful from all of us to "All of you." 12-4 YARD BARN FREE DEMONSTRATION FREE DEMONSTRATION This Saturday - 11:00 am QUICK TO KNIT FOR CHRISTMAS by Susan Caims 730 Mass YARNBARN 730 Mass. Celebrate the end of card with some tough touchers. Wear a red hat, black coat, tainerer, Monday night, Dec. 8th 12-3 Commemorate 1980 Election with a cup of our peanuts Happy Hour at Daily To the brave command team that rescued the Squirrel Held Hostage: Thanks but no thanks. Freedom is hazardous to my health. I take capacity. Rockett J. 12-3 THE CROSSING Turd. Bud and Chump—just wanted you to know that "I really like you" and that Thanksgiving was coming, and that with someone as desirable you P.S. I love you. Spanky. 12-3 have we, get 6, deal for you! We the BASES have you, get 6, deal for you! We the BASES you can drink 8 oz. 80 Monday night, DKE we can drink 8 oz. 80 Monday night, DKE SERVICES OFFERED I DO EXCELLENT SEWING. ALTER MENDING AND MENDING $3.50 an hour 81-469-009 81-469-009 TYPING Experienced, typed—term papers, thesis, meis, electric IM Ebook Proofreading, spellin corrected. 843-9545. Mrs. Wright. tf I do darned good typing, Peggy 842-4768, tf Experienced, thesis-then-discus, term paper, mib, IBM correcting selectic, Barb, after p. 94. bm-3210, tf Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done: thems, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty, 842-6697 after 5 and weeks later. If ENCORE COPY CORPS 403-826-1001 Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectric. Call Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 12-8 or 842-2001 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast pre- evenings to 10 am and weekends. 845-252-7960 United Nations Accurate, experienced typtil IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-7244. tf Typist, Editor, IBM Pica, Elite. Quality, work, reasonable rates. Thesis, dissertations welcome; editing/layout. Call Joan. 842- 9127. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myrna. 841-4980. ff Excellent Typist will type your papers. Call 842-8091. 12-8 Prompt service by experienced typhon on elec electric typewriter. Proreading, Mrs. Hays 843-1737. 12-8 DISSERTATION SUFFERERS — for fewer migrators, lower blood pressures and more spring dissertation typing now. March-April is a banquet; January-February is cooler. Pearl's Reasonable rates. Quick service. IBM elements, 10 or 12 pitch. 843-8611 or 841-7668. 12-5 WANTED Boy-Sale-Truck, Gold Silver, and Colns Check around and get the best deal in town. Great Plains Numerical Services 10th. E. (district Lawrence) 842-800-1260. Non-smoking female to share newly decorated, fully furnished 2 bbm. at Bath Gatehouse apt. $130 + 1 utilities Call 841-7928-12-8 GOLD, SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings. Wedding Bands, Silver Colns, Sterling etc. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-4741 or 542-2868. Female housemate for spring semester: 3 bdrm. house, 2 min. from campus. $92 + utilities. Call 749-1995. 12-5 2 or 3 roommates to sublease a 3bm. drpm. i/13 elec. all others pd., on bus route. Very nice. 784-2074. Ask for Dave/Mike. 12-8 Roommate needed for 2 bdrm. apt. prefer non-smoking grad. female. $132.50 + ½; utilities. 841-6368. 12-8 Female or male housemates Nice large room. +/- 15 usites Call anytime 841-203- mo. +/- 15 usites Call anytime 841-203- Female roommate to share furnished spit up Roommate $15 + ½; utility spaces 12-8 436. Keep Female Roommate Needed for spring semester students with a 10 minute walk to campus. $125 tuition for room. Male roommate to share 2 bdmr. apt. Spur- phone. bus route 891. 844-0449. 12-8 844-0449. Female roommate needed for a b2. dorm. story Haverne Place Townhouse, 5 minutes from campus $12.50 plus 1% utilities. Call Leslie 749-2331. Roommate for completely furnished 2 bdm. mobile home. $90 + $1/2 gas, elec. Call John 749-349 evenings. 12-8 Roommate wanted, female Dec. grad for Overland Park area, non-smoker. Call 841-3718. 12-8 1 or 2 roommates needed for Jayhawk Towers 1st second semester. $125/month. Call 444-6379. Housemates wanted, $55/mo. + 1/4 until. Grad student preferred, 508 Indiana. 843- 1163. 12-8 Mature Female(s) (Preferably) to nice large 4 bdm. home 1/12 blk. from campus. Must be tolerant of 2 cats. $5 +1 using. 79-82-5. 6-8 p.m. or before 8-4 am. Person or persons to share apt. Furnished. close to store, on bus route. 841-980-12-6 Need female roommate to two bdrm 11720 plus ½ utilities. On a bus route 8430 plus ½ utilities. Need one fun-loving but studious female roommate to share a close-to-campus 2 bdm. apt. for the spring semester. Call 941-9750. 12-8 Female roommate to share extra nice, fur- inished. 2 bdmr. 2 bath duplex. $115 + \frac{1}{2}$ utilities. Buit 841-8390. 12-8 Female roommate needed. Large 2 bdrm apt. Close to campus, downtown. $92.50/mo. + 1/2 electric. Call Joan 841-4333. 12-8 Roommate to share 2 bdm. apt. in Jay- hawk Towers. $162.50. Utilities included. 841-2792. 12-8 Legislative Aides, January 12-14 Appellate aid, good pay. possible, college credit contact Senator Ron Hein. 603 S.W. 57th St. 812-793-1288; 812-793-1285; 12-8 Wanted—Subjects to diet for experiment. Write to P.O. Box 1201, Lawrence, for more info. 13-5 Good ailing company for Christmas in days in colorado. Call Jurgen 826-12-5. Male or female roommate to complete each bimber. $150.743-533. 12-8 Female roommate to share furnished 2 bdm. Jawkayower Towers apts with 3 others spring semester. B55.8 includes utilities except phone. 749-1547. 12-8 Person to share house. Excellent location close to campus. Graduate student preferred, own room. $160 + no utilities. Call after 12-8 841-803-7457 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, December 3, 1980 Double-header opens with women's game By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor On paper, it looks like a rout. The seventh-ranked team in the country against a junior college team from Oklahoma. But this junior college team was best program in the country, evidenced by a 1979 NJCAA championship. Kansas, 6-4, plays this junior college, Northern Oklahoma, 8-1, today in the women's first home game. The Tippo's at 5:18 in Allen Field House. Leo Canaday, the head coach of Northern Oklahoma, said yesterday that he didn't know much about the game. The Jawhays to be touch opponents. "From what I understand, Canaday said, "if you shut down one, they have another who will score." THAT HAS BEEN THE case for KU this season. The Jayhawks have a strong bench, and KU Head Coach Mike McCarthy was called up for hesitation in calling on her reserves. Northern Oklahoma is a running team and will attempt to run against Kansas. But to be a successful running team, the players must be strong. But Canaday said he didn't think his team had the height to do that. "We like to run," he said. "Every team I have I stress the fast break. I think we have good overall speed, and we can't beat them on boards, you sure as beck can't run." The Mavericks will use a man-to-man defense, but Canaday said he wouldn't hesitate to switch to a zone if his team couldn't contain KU's sharphooters. "We do what we feel is necessary to shut down the offense. I prefer man-to-man, but sometimes that doesn't work," he said. IF KU TAKES the upper hand in the game, Washington could go to her bench, and Canady said he has 12 players he lists as starters. Basically, he said, he has two squads that complement each other. If one squad has a problem in one area, the other usually tries to pick up the slack. But he did announce a starting lineup for the game. Sandy Douglas, a 5-foot-9 guard, was the leading scorer on last year's team that went 28-5. Patti Komaly at 5-foot-8 is the other guard. Gayle Stout, 5-foot-9, is one forward. Starting in place of the Maverick's top forward, Angela Reed, who injured her ankle yesterday, will be Jackie Eckels at 5-foot-11. The center is 5-foot-1 Rocheille Ware. WASHINGTON'S STARTING five is tentatively set with Lynette Woodard and Tracy Claxton at the wings, Mary Myers at point guard and Megan Scott and Connie Means at the posts. Means, a junior, is a graduate of Northern Oklahoma, where she earned juco All-America honors last year as a center. Several players should log play time, and Canaday said he hoped his squad would put on a good show. "We'll be fighting for our lives," Canaday said. "I'm hoping like heck we can make it competitive." Have A White Christmas With WHITE STAG ACTIONSPORTS ACTIONSPORTS Versatile, Great - Looking & Functional Jackets Sweaters Vests Bibs Kansas City - Topeka - Wichita first serve SKI & SPORTS SHOPPE 840 Massachusetts, Lawrence 841-0811 1 The cheapest method of buying mass manufactured stove equipment. 2 A store of stove equipment that stores will not stock. STEREO BUYERS Mail Order Programs— Advantages and disadvantages of all mail order programs: ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES— 1 Advance payment in full is required. 2 Maturity and wait time is appointed there to an weeks. 3 Deferred payments are ordered orders at high. 4 Defective units must be transported to the customer center at the customer's location. 5 Logs and damaged documents are the customer's responsibilities. If you choose to mail order, Kid's can help ease the pain. Because of our volume purchase with most manufactures, we require your help in shipping and charging charges and will fight the lost and damaged clamp battle. From experience and knowledge we are sure our new order establishment STATEMENT- NOTE — Our mail order orders are not "buyers' damage" or reject orders; they are delivered to our warehouse. Warehouse Sound CO. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MAIL ORDER TERMS— 1. Payment in full with order. 1. A 10* s service charge for change or cancellation of order. 2. Normal delivery time is two in six weeks. We assume no responsibility for delivery delays. 3. All units are subject to manufacturer's warranty terms. Most mail order units must be serviced by the manufacturer's warranty service center, it will be charged accordingly. 4. All packages have a tracking number. KU meets Michigan in nightcap KU's first two opponents, Pepperdine and Nevada-Reno, had young, inexperienced squads. Michigan, however, returns three of the top scorers from a team that was 17 last season. But they didn't have as much luck against Big Ten competition, finishing with an 8-10 conference record. The Wolverines did, however, go to the National Invitational Tournament. By KEVIN BERTELS Just how much will be displayed tonight when Michigan and Kansas tangle in Allen Field House. Tipoff is at 7:35. Here in the cold, when winter comes, man's thoughts turn to basketball and the warmth of a roof over one's head. The colder the weather, the more emphasis placed on basketball. On that note, let it be said that in Michigan, folks place a tremendous amount of emphasis on basketball. "I recruited Mike McGee very hard," in the Big Ten. He is a great spreadter. One of the best players in the Big Ten last season was the Wolverines' 6-foot-5 forward Mike McGee. He averaged 22.2 points a game and KU Head Coach Ted Owens would have liked him to have scored those points for the Jawhacks. Sports Writer Also back for Michigan is Thad Garner, a 6-foot-7 junior forward and Paul Heuerman, a senior who alternates at center and forward at 6-foot-8. Heuerman was the last season, and Heuerman was close behind with 9.6 points a game. MICHIHAN HAS WON its only game the 180 season against Eastern Michigan Tony Guy, KU's leading scorer with 45 points, has had the hottest hand by far of any Jayhawk, while Darnell Valentine has been coldest. Guy has hit six home runs in his last three, while Valentine has shot 23 times and made only seven, a 30-percent mark. After two games, both 14-point victories, the first on the road against Nevaud-Reno and Monday night's home opener against Peppardine, Owens has only a few complaints about the play of his Jayahwake队. Against Pepperidge, KU started the game with a tough man-to-man defense and ended the game with 10 minutes of solid defense, in the middle half of the game the defense faltered, allowing the Waves to come back from a 14-point deficit. Part of the problem was an ineffective full-court press. coach Bill Frieder. He took over after Johnny Ellr, Michigan coach for 12 years, accepted a job at Iowa State. Orr had 103-119 record at Michigan. THE OPONENTS' defense was a problem for KU in the two games, especially when it was a zone and Booty Neal was not hitting 20-foot jumpers, as he did in the final 11 minutes against Penerdine. "Our press was not effective," Owens said. "The man-to-man defense was excellent in the first 10 minutes." "Our penetration was not good against the zone," Owens said. "We need the high and low post to perform." The inside men, Art House and Victor Mitchell, have combined for 54 percent with Mitchell hitten 11-of-19 for 34 percent and Housey 3-of-7 for 43 percent. Individually, Magley has hit 50 percent. Neal .48 percent and Crawford .34 percent. Although impressed with the shooting of Neal, Pepperdine Coach Jim Harrick that KU could win him in a strike zone by shooting from low range. VALENTINE HAS made up for his shooting woes with his floor game, however. He had nine assists against three. He had one perp dine, proving that prepares talk of SO FAR, MOST of the outside shots have been taken by Neal, David Magley and John Crawford. Those players have combined for 47 percent this season. They also have 35 percent in 1980, 33 percent against Nevada-Reno and 45 percent against Peperowind. "The bad thing is that people expect him to hit that shot every time." Harriet of Neal "There are things that he beats off. Of those you don't win on that shot. If you live by the long shot, you will die by the long shot." Certainly, the early season performance by KU indicates that the Jayhawks will have a much better chance of survival with the outside shot than they did last season. KU made 48 percent of its shots last season, a KU record, but from outside the lane the Jayhawks failed to hit the said at the beginning of the season that long-range shooting would need to be one area of improvement. New York (UP1) —The United Press International Board of Coachs top 20 college football rating after a decade of experience. UPI Top Twenty Bell, seniors receive awards 565 519 519 493 493 451 381 377 381 377 266 248 246 248 179 150 179 150 138 138 138 138 114 114 114 114 63 38 63 38 13 13 13 13 theses and pom- mets Dorene (7) 9-11 Donte (5) 12-(9-4) Florida State 9-1 Pittsburgh (11)-18(1) Michigan 9-2 Michigan 9-2 Baylor 10-1 Jackson 10-2 Nebraska 9-2 Penn State 10-1 Indiana 10-1 UCLA 9-2 UCLA 9-2 Brightham Young 11-1 Washington 9-2 Washington 9-2 Saskatchewan call 7-1 South Carolina 8-3 South Carolina 8-3 SMU 8-3 In past seasons, much of KU's legitimate competition came after the annual game against Kentucky. This season that will change with Michigan, the third game of the season. Because of the toucher schedule this season, coaches have had to increase the Jayhawks were making an effort to concentrate on each game. Freshman Kerwin Bell and two football banquet in the Kansas Union. Bell, a concensus All-Big Eight performer and newcomer of the year in the conference, was named the outstanding offensive player of the year. He was presented by Billy Getto Award, was presented by John Hadl, offensive coordinator. Bell led the Jayhawks in rushing with 1,114 yards and eight touchdowns. His rushing total was a Big Eight record for a freshman, and he scored 14th freshman to ever gain 1,000 yards. The two seniors, Jeff Fox and Frank Wattete, also received player-of-the-year awards. Fox, a defensive tackle, was named the outstanding defensive player and Wattete, a free safety, was named the Ryvans Evans-Arthur Weaver winner for the senior with best combined record in academics and Fox, who is from LaCrescenta, Calif., led down linemen with 102 tackles. He received the Don Pierce Award, presented by Tom Batta, defensive coordinator. Fox also was voted the team's most valuable player. Guy has been no slouch in the passing department, either. He had 10 assists against RB. "If we expect to reach our goal of the NCAA playoffs we have to take the games one at a time," he said. "Each team stands in our way of reaching each goal." Wattetle, who is from Abilene, was one of KU's captains this season. His award was presented by Mike Fisher, academic counselor. The coaches chose the defensive and offensive awards. The players voted for the most valuable player award. a team-oriented game was not idle chatter. JAYHAWK NOTES: KU forward John Crawford made several shots from near the top of the key Monday, prompting reporters to ask why he was moved from the corner he had inhabited for the last two seasons. "I got promoted, I guess," he said. There seems to be some confusion over the heights of some Jayhawks. Crawford was listed at 6-foot-8 last season and is said to be 6-7 this season. Victor Mitchell, the hefty junior college transfer, is listed at 6-foot-9 but he says that he is 6-foot-10. "I don't care what they say, I'm 6-4, five to six," he said. "Because of my size I look very small." Bullets streak stops KC Kings LANDOVER, Md., (UPI)—Kevin Grevey score nine straight points last night to break a 91-91 tie and give the Washington Bullets a 107-102 victory over the Kansas City Kings. Grevey scored 21 points but had a tough time guarding Otis Birdsong, who scored a season-high 38 points. He was from Elvin Haves and 18 from Porter. Greyve hit four consecutive shots off assists from Kevin Porter and added a free throw in a three-minute span to give the Bullets a 109-83 lead. The Bullets, 11-14, led by as many as 11 points in the first half but the Kings tied at 71 with 5:30 to play in the third quarter. We have plenty of mat and illustration board, bristol board, color key and i.n.t., vellum, portfolios and more! Think . . pen&,inc. for your semester end projects. free coffee while you shop! SAFETY pen&ine art supplies 613 917nm 841/1777 Master Charge VISA open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS 900 MASS. KANSAAS UNION CALL TODAY! 843-1211 Come with us to the 18th Century in Merio Oak Edge and enjoy the charming dimir traditions of the clergy, musician, ministers and the matrials歌。 VIN The evening will begin at 6:30 with the Wassan Bowl. Dinner is at 7:00 Meisner - Milstead Liquor Featuring one of the largest selections of wine in town. We have something to suit every taste. Let us serve you! Cost is $8.50 per person. Call the SUA office for reservations up to two days prior to the dinner. Tickets can be picked up between 8:30 and 5:00 on Monday through Friday or 6:00 to 7:00 on December 4 & 5 25th & Iowa 842 4499 Holiday Plaza Thursday, December 4 and Friday, December 5, 1980 Kansas Union Balletroom The 7th Annual Madrigal Dinner Attention The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Applications are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall and the Student Senate Office, 1088 Kanzai Union. The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award was established in 1973 and is presented annually to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The Chancellor selects the recipient from nominations presented by the Student Awards Committee. The Award will be presented at the Higher Education Week banquet scheduled for Sunday, February 15, 1981. The applications for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award must be received by the Student Awards Committee. c/o The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, by Friday, December 12, 1980. CITIZEN University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas The University Daily KANSAN thursday, December 4, 1980 Vol.91, No.70 USPS 650-640 Chinese educators visit KU By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Five members of a delegation from the People's Republic of China spent last night in Allen Field House watching their first American basketball game. The Chinese men, one dressed in a traditional gray and black-trimmed Chinese uniform, clapped along with the crowd when it recognized their visit to the University of Kansas. the delegation, which arrived yesterday morning, include Fan Daoyuan, president of Zhengzhou University in Henan Province, and Tsao Tse-wan, associate professor of mathematics, and Li Yun-lou, lecturer in English from Zhengzhou. the other members of the delegation are from Henan Medical College. Tu Pai-lian is an associate professor and Ton Min-sheng is a professor and the vice president of the college. The delegation will stay on the Lawrence campus until Saturday and will spend Sunday and Monday at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan. The delegation is here to discuss a possible academic exchange program with the University similar to the one made by a KU delegation that went to China last May. DURING THAT TRIP, the KU delegation, led by Acting Chancellor Del Shankel, signed an agreement with Nan Kai University and Nan Jing University that included cultural and teaching exchange programs between the two universities. Fan said through an interpreter that he came to the University "for the bettering of good relations between the two schools." He said he hoped to make arrangements to allow student and faculty exchanges for teaching, lecturing and studying. An exchange of library and resource materials between the universities is another part of the arrangement Fan hopes to make. Shankel said the universities probably would work out a general agreement for cooperation He said the Henan delegation already had invited students and others to China for an archeological expedition this summer or the next summer. "We will probably accept that invitation," Shankel said. Fan said the group came to the University to get in better shape of the University and its educational processes. "We came to learn and get a better perception of what is going on in American education," he KU is larger than Zhengzhou University, Fan said. "I'm happy with the environment, the good air and the good learning atmosphere," he said. "I really want to find out about how American students are learning and how American teachers are." (WK) "We are going to be here for four or five days. We will have school will have scheduled discussions with staff members." THE DELEGATION will tour student residence hills, Robinson Center, the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, the Museum of Natural History, Malott and Worthhalls both and the computer service facility during the next two days. On Friday, the group will meet with KU students and faculty members from the People's Republic of China. Shankel said the arrangements for the delegation's visit began about a month ago when the Chinese sent a telegram to KU asking that arrangements be made. The University then sent a formal invitation to the group, Shankel said, and completed arrangement for the group to visit the State University of State University and the University of Oregon. Chae-Jin Lee, professor of political science and coordinator of the Center for East Asian Studies, said the group's visit was part of the sistership program between the Han Province and Kansas began during Gov. John Carlin's trip to the province last year. "Because of the sisterhood relationship, a delegation headed by Shankel went to China in April to discuss the possibility of academic research at the University and the University of Kansas," Lee said. University of Kansas He said the Henan Province was similar to Kansas because it was predominantly agricultural and had an interesting history. Henan Province has several former dynasty capitals and is a strong cultural province, Lee There are 20 shopping days left until Christmas and five cramming days left until finals. Service offers tips for finals studying Most students vow every semester to develop regular study halters, but according to several studies, they are not effective. "I know it an idea that most students share," said Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center. "But sometimes it goes by the wavide pretty badly." Michael Bryant, project coordinator of SES, said business had picked up this month. For some of those troubled students, there is the Supportive Educational Services office in the Military Science Annex. "We have the students coming in at the end of the semester, wanting to be saved," he said. "But by that time, things have built up, and it may be too late." The SES office, which is partially funded by a federal grant, can assign free tutoring services to students who qualify financially. Students who do not qualify are sent to other tutors. The Assistance Center, the math and English departments and an honorary chemistry fraternity also offer free tutoring services. "We try not to turn students away," Bryant said. BY NOW, HOWEVER, it is too late to be assigned a tutor for the fall semester. There is still hope for students who have put off studying until the last days before finals, counselors said. Both the SES office and the Assistance Center is located in PINNAGE 5. пх See FINALS page 5 LA Yun- lou, lecturer in English at Zhengzhou University in the Henan Province, People's Republic of China, and Carol Shankel, wife of Acting Chancellor Del Shankel, share popcorn during the first half of the KU-Michigan basketball game. Li is visiting KU to discuss an exchange program. Women believe discrimination still exists at KU Staff Writer By DIANE SWANSON An assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Irene Whertit, was being considered for tenure when she left the University of Kansas three years ago. three years ago. She never really felt included in department activities, although she was at KU for almost six years, she said. Wherit was the only woman in the 10-man department. "It was never anything blank," said the 1977 Commission on the Status of Women teaching award winner. "It was things like hearing comments made behind my back. "I felt this general underlying attitude that I was the only woman and that I was somehow aware of it," she said. Wherit said she thought she had the necessary teaching, research and service qualifications for tenure because she had supervised Spanish teaching assistants and directed the summer Spanish program and the guest speakers for off-campus groups. SENSING OPPOSITION to her tenure appointment, however, she decided to look for another job instead of making waves and losing the support of management that department personnel were offering her. Wherit said she didn't file a complaint for fear of being labeled a troublemaker. or being labeled a it obsolete. "It was a hard six years," she said. Wherit now teaches Spanish at another Big Eight university in a department with two other "The atmosphere is very congenial, very relaxed," she said. According to Elizabeth Banks, associate professor of classics and former chairman of the Unclassified Women's Advisory Unit for Affirmative Action, Wherit's situation is not unusual but is rarely discussed outside private circles of friends. "It's a situation where women feel discriminated against but are afraid to complain for fear of losing favorable job recommendations. It is often a good day to-day working environment," she said. Judith Rotman, associate professor of math, is the only full-time woman tenured faculty member in the 33-member department. Although she said she had been treated well by the department, she has been lucky—the exception rather than the rule. "Some people still won't work with me," she said. "Because they are because they face to face, we can communicate." According to Roitman, who is also national president of the Association of Women in Math, discrimination now takes the form of subtle imucrements rather than blatant attacks. "For example, there is a woman professor I know whose department colleagues feel uncomfortable going to lunch with her because they are so endowed with the idea that women are sex objects. They think going out with her will make their wives mad," she said. OSTRACIZING. WOMEN from this informal network of interoffice politics keeps women from learning the survival tricks that Rotman says are necessary for retention and promotion—tricks that let people know what and how well you are doing. "I was amazed to learn that men bargain for salaries. I never knew that when I was job hunting," Roitman said. "Women are afraid of not getting jobs, I guess. They'll take whatever salary they can get." According to statistics compiled for the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, male professors at KU earned an average of $27,400 in 1979, compared with $28,200 for women. Male associate professors earned $20,700 while women earned $19,400, and male assistant professors earned $16,700 while women earned $16,100. The number of women faculty members has increased at KU, although not to the national In 1979, 17.5 percent of KU's faculty were women, compared with 16.8 percent in 1975. There were 178 women compared with 641 men and 188 women compared with 898 men in 1977. Nationally, full-time women faculty increased by 8 percent of all faculty between 1977 and 1979. Women in KU executive, administrative and managerial positions fell from a high of 25 percent in 1977 to 18.2 percent in 1979. The number of women in top positions decreased from 59 to 43 while the number of men in administrative positions increased from 180 to 193. Nationally, women hold 25.5 percent of university executive, administrative and "There is no question in my mind that there have been some gains," said Carolyn Hallenbeck, assistant to the vice chancellor of research and graduate studies. The gaps are continuing to grow wider, Women in England. In women, number 5 percent but seven percent. Charles 'Himmelberg, chairman of the department of math, said a large part of the problem was attributable to the smaller number of women than men available in the employment pool. IN 1979-80, 819 people received doctorates in the math sciences. Of those, 703 were men and 116 were women, he said. "Everybody likes to hire women and minorities now, and with the small number to choose from, I think we've done very well," he said. See DISCRIMINATION page 6 A. H. S. Reiko Hillemeis, a Kansas City, Mo., medical consultant and practitioner of orientis medicine, prepares to apply a mugwort to the leg of Cindy Beers, Kansas City, Kan. The mugwort was demonstrated during a lecture at the Helen Fwenner Spencer Museum of Art. SCOTT HOOKER/Kansan staff Ancient oriental medical ways should be trusted, expert says By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter No one understands how oriental medicine works, its practitioners say, but it works. "The practitioner knows. For 5,000 years, oriental medicine has worked," said Reiko Hilleshein, a Kansas City, Mo., medical consultant and practitioner of oriental medicine. Hillesheim explained and demonstrated some oriental medical techniques to about 80 people at the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art last night. "The basic approach and philosophy to the human body has not changed in several thousand years, because the body has not changed." Hillsheim said. Oriental medicine uses several methods to restore the body's balance, Hillesheim said, including acupuncture and acupressure. She said Yin and Yang, two opposite dynamic forces, were the basic philosophy behind oriental medicine. If these forces are out of proportion, she said, the body does not function properly. IN ACUPRESSURE, pressure is applied to specific points on the body, she said, while in acupuncture doctors insert thin needles to puncture the points. Herbs and diet are also used in oriental medicine, Hillesheim said. See ACUPUNCTURE page 5 Weather A FASANT Today will be unseasonally warm with highs near 60, according to the KU Weather Service. Skies will be mostly sunny by noon. Winds will be mild with a slight chance of Toungt will be mostly clear and not as cold with a low around 32. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with temperatures in the mid-60s. University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Israeli commandos strike near Beirut TEL AVIV, Israel—Israeli commandos stuck deep inside Lebanon early yesterday, inflicting casualties at Palestinian guerrilla positions closer to Jerusalem. All Israeli forces returned safely to base after killing a number of terrorists and civilians and wounding many others, the command said in a statement. Chief of Staff LL. Gen. Raphael Etan told Israeli radio that the overnight raid 33 miles into south Lebanon was successful. In a protest note to U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, Lebanon said in Israeli kills killed 15 people and was called 'Earlier, Palentinian spokesmen in Karbala' "I achieved all the goals that we set," Eitan said. "It was carried out on a high level. We are a sophisticated army." improved. Ellen said the Israeli attacks were intended "to take the initiative from the terrorists, to prevent them from organizing for attack on our territory, to cause them losses and damage and to force them . . . to defend themselves." Mao's widow admits to accusations CEILING - After four years of silence and resistance, Mao Tse-tung's widow cracked in court yesterday and made two damming admissions, saying she once had ordered China's late head of state Liu Shaqi to be "cut into a thousand pieces." In the most dramatic courtroom moment since the Gang of Four trial began two weeks ago, Jiang Qing was confronted with a recording of a conversation she allegedly had with aides about Liu, Mao's chief rival and the most prominent victim of the 1966-67 cultural revolution. She admitted the voice was hers, but she continued to deny that she hounded Lu to his lonely death in exile. She also admitted that she wrote that he was dead. Jiang also apparently invoked Mao's name in her defense, but those remarks were deleted from the version of her testimony that was made The prosecution hailed the admissions as a major breakthrough in its efforts to convince the country and the world that the trial was not a kangaroo court and that Jiang was, in fact, guilty of the crimes of which she was accused. Jiang faces a possible death sentence if convicted of the charges against her. Radical fugitive from '60s surrenders CHICAGO-Former radical leader Bernardine Dohrn surrendered to authorities yesterday, ending nearly 11 years of life as a fugitive. But she said she remained committed to the causes for which she fought a decade ago. Dobrin, former leader of the Weather Underground and now the mother of two young children, was freed on $25,000 bond. "I remain committed to the struggle ahead," Dohrin said at a news conference after her bond hearing. "The nature of the system has not changed. I regret not all our efforts to side with the forces of national liberation." Dohn was accompanied by her boyfriend and companion in hiding. Bill Barnett reported, "She was an exceptional friend." Dohrm, who once was listed among the FB's most wanted criminals, faces charges on seven counts of mob action and aggravated battery and two counts of ball jumping. Defense attorney Michael Kennedy said Dohrm, who is charged with assault in New York City, intended to face all charges pending against her. Reagan's Cabinet choices disclosed WASHINGTON—Caspar Weinberger will be secretary of defense, William Casey will be CIA director and Pennsylvania Republic Drew Lewis will be transportation secretary in Ronald Reagan's administration, Republican sources said yesterday. The sources also said Reagan's top choices for three other Cabinet positions were Gen. Alexander Haig for secretary of state; Walter Wriston, a New York banker, for Treasury secretary; and William French Smith, Reagan's personal attorney, for attorney general. Reagan press spokesman Joe Holmes said in Los Angeles that Reagan had made most of his Cabinet decisions but no announcements had been made because of FBI security clearances and checks on possible conflicts of interest. He said that some appointments might be announced later this week, but that it would be worth him would hold a news conference next week to give some of his selection. Reagan sources said Weinberg, 63, a long-time Reagan adviser and former secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, was the key to speeding up the selection process because the president-elected to ensure Weinberg's place in the Cabinet before appointing others. Casey, 67, former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, was Reagan's campaign manager this year. Lewis, 49, heads Lewis and Associates, a management consulting firm in Plymouth Meeting, Pa. He serves as deputy campaign manager for Reagan. Fire code violations found in MGM LAS VEGAS, NV.—Investigators of the Nov. 21 fire that killed 84 people at the MGM Grand Hotel have found code violations in the hotel's fire alarm and fire control systems. The Las Vegas Sun, in a copyrighted story, said that although preliminary results of the investigation were not scheduled to be officially released until October 2014, they would be available online. The story said investigators found that the fire alarm system was deliberately wired so it would not sound for five minutes. The alarm was rigged to send an indicator light to a downstairs guard station and delay sounding the upstairs audible alarm. They also found that the main air circulation equipment was bolted in such a way that dampers could not operate correctly. If the dampers had operated properly, smoke would not have spread so quickly through air ducts and throughout the 28-story resort hotel. Investigators discovered that large holes had been cut in a main corridor and in a smoke-proof stairwell, where more than a dozen people were found. One starwall was shielded from the blazing casino by a plywood plank instead of a fire-resistant dry wall as required by code. Several starwall windows were installed. U.S. court to review Lewis' finances The newspaper said Clark County fire investigators apparently did not discover the violations during routine inspections. Lewis is seeking to reorganize his debts under Chapter 13 proceedings in bankruptcy court. The oral examination is necessary so creditors can determine whether Lewis has submitted an accurate schedule of his debts, attorney David Goldwater said. LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Entertainer Jerry Lewis has been ordered by U.S. troops and is being held in a military base in Washington, with financial records dating back to 1988 to Las Vegas to give a next deposition. Lewis is required to bring his personal and corporate income tax returns from 1986 to 1979, property tax returns from California, tax assessments on his Bel Air and Las Vegas homes and inventories of all his personal possessions in both residences. George also ordered Lewis to bring all the financial documents he was required to produce during an anti-trust trial in Los Angeles federal court. Patti Lewis, who was married to Lewis for 35 years, is suing him for $450,000 a year. Lewis' attorneys agit he was a minor stockholder in the company. Lewis filed a bankruptcy petition in Las Vegas as the trial opened in Los Angeles. The verdict against the two veteran House Democrats was read in U.S. District Court by Jerome Karpf, foreman of the eight-man, four-woman jury which had deliberated 22 hours in two days. NEW YORK—Reps. John Murphy of New York and Frank Thompson of New Jersey were convicted yesterday of conspiracy. Thompson also was found guilty of bribery and of accepting $50,000 from undercover agents in the FBI's Abscam political corruption probe. Two more congressmen guilty in Abscam By United Press International Murphy was found guilty of conspiracy, conflict of interest and accepting an unlawful gratuity. He was found innocent of bribery. spiracy, bribery and accepting an innocent of conflict of interest. Thompson was found guilty of con- Thompson faces up to 22 years in prison. Murphy could receive as many as nine years. Both men said they would appeal the convictions. Murphy and Thompson were charged with sharing in separate $50,000 bribes from FBI undercover agents who posed as representatives of wealthy Arabs seeking help in immigrating to the United States. Continued unrest threatens nation, Poles warned By United Press International "Countrymen, the fate of the nation and the country are in the balance." an As in previous Abscam trials, video and audio recordings of several meetings between the defendants and the prosecution were the basis of the government's case. WARSAW, Poland–Polarun's army and Communist Party leadership seize separatist positions; warnings yesterday continue containing laborers threatened the nation's defenses and The statements followed an appeal by party leader Stanisław Kania that called upon workers to cooperate in ending Poland's crisis. Kania also warned that counterrevolutionary elements were still in the country. --free coffee while you shop! Responding to a jury question shortly before the verdict was reached, District Judge George Pratt told members of the panel that actual possession of the firearms would be shown to determine that Murphy and Thompson received part of the money. TABLES & CHAIRS 26 Oak Dining Tables $50-$100 Emerald City - 415 N. 2nd Just N. of the Bridge Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:00 --free coffee while you shop! Thompson, 62, is chairman of the House Administration Committee and Murphy, 54, is chairman of the House Merchant, Marine and Fisheries Committee. Both were defeated in their re-election bids last month. Thompson served 26 years in the House and Murphy served 18. $ 5 0^{\mathrm{c}} $ Schlotzsky's Just one sandwich...it's that good! Schlotzsky's SANDWICH SHOPS 23rd & Iowa 843-3700 11-9 Mon.-Thurs. 50c OFF on a Schlotzsky Phone in and carry out 11-11 Fri. Sat. 12-9 Sun. Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Expires 12/17/80 "Countrymen, the fate of the nation and the country are in the balance," an appeal by the party's central committee said. "Prolonging unrest could lead our motherland to the border of economic and moral ruin." TONIGHT, FRIDAY & SATURDAY REGGAE, DANCE WEEKEND Featuring BLUE RIDDIM BAND with CARIBE Next Week 8 EDDIE SHAW AND ROB MAGGAN, FREE 10 THE LOTIONS 11 THE DERS with THE MORELLS 12/13 THE SECRETS Where the stars are 7th & Mass 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House WAXMAN Candles Inc. Hours: 9:00 till 8:00 M thru Thur. 9:00 till 5:30 Fri. & Sat. 12:00 till 4:00 Sunday 1405 Massachusetts SIGNS *GRAPHIC DESIGN* ARTWORK *ADVERTISING SIGN SERVICE ART&SIGN* 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 Total Interior Enhancement - Signs - Graphics - Wall Art America's Illustration Board Perfectionists for the Progressive Business Mick's BICYCLE SHOP ROLLER SKATE SALE! 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Pitcher of Beer $1.00 with $5.00 purchase (present coupon) Julie's Italian Food, Steaks, Seafood Good Through 12/15/80. Phone 911 812 1811 Ext 10 Coupon! Pitcher of Beer $1.00 with $5.00 purchase (present coupon) Julie's Italian Food, Steaks, Seafood Good Through 12/15/80. 3126 Iowa 842-7170 Sun. thru Thurs. 11-11 Fri. & Sat. 11-1 am Half Price All Pizzas (carry-out only) Lasagne Dinner Only $2.69 Good Through 12/15/80. P O Box 2 Lawrence, Ks. 660 Half Price All Pizzas (carry-out only) Lasagne Dinner Only $2.69 Good Through 12/15/80. 4 8 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 3 WEST Dance session begins Friday This year's winter concert by the KU Dance Company will feature six new jazz and modern dances, as well as a number of the choreographers who designed them. Performances will begin tomorrow night at 8 in 240 Robinson Center and will be repeated on Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m. Two assistant professors in health, physical education and recreation will present new works. James Hamburg will direct "Trains," a duet that will be accompanied by sounds of trains and voices of musicians. "Heather, Allison and Michael," is an energetic piece involving three dancers. The other assistant professor, Joan Sloss, will choreograph "More than One Way of Looking at a Blackbird," which is based on the Wallace Stevens poem "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird." On Campus TODAY Visiting artist RED GROOMS will show a film at 3 p.m. and slides of his work at 8 p.m. in the Helen Foresman Soencer Museum of Art auditorium. THE UNIVERSITY COUNIL will meet at 3:10 p.m. in 108 Blake. TONIGHT THE STUDENT SENATE will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas Room of the State Building. THE LIFE-ISSUE SEMINAR ON SEXUALITY will discuss "Sexuality in Christian Perspective: The Human Adventure" at 7 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. The ASCENT OF MAN Film Series will present "Long Childhood" at 7:30 p.m. in 3140 Wescoe. "LE JEU DE SAINT NICOLHAS" will be presented at the department of Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - MAINTAINS - TRAVEL INSURANCE - ES SORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! 900 MAS KANSAST UNIION 843-1211 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 John Michael Talbot from Sparrow Music on Albums & Tapes Come To The Quiet - The Painter The Lord's Supper - Beginnings We offer a complete line of Catholic music, books, religious articles,and gifts. ROSS CR EFERENCE bookstore Malls Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas 842-1553 100 from everyday · thru the Holidays let undercover take care of your favorite lady UNDERCOVER 17 W.9TH + Free gift wrapping always available. 749-0004 Rexall really knows its ABC's... ... as well as its D's, E's, B-12's, Zincs and any other vitamin that you might need. And you can find a complete selection of quality Rexall vitamins right here at your Kansas Union Booksstore. Do yourself a favor and stop in today! Good health to all... from Rexall. The Vitamin People. BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICE * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UMON BOOKSTORES French Christmas Play and Caroling Party at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. U The KU OPERA WORKSHOP will perform scenes from well-known operas at 8 p.m. in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Rexall Rexall Rexall THE MICROBIOLOGY FORUM will present "Recent Advances in Genetic Engineering" at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. REYNOLDS PRICE, novelist in residence, will speak at the department of English Lecture at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. Main Store, Level 2, Kansas Union Satellite Shop Satellite Union TOMORROW THE DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union. THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Union. THE INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP meeting will be at 7 p.m. in the Regionalial Room at the Union. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will teach beginning dances from 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the Robinson Gym. Senate Positions Available The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions: Student Senate Treasurer Stud-Ex Chairperson Executive Secretary Applications are due by Monday, Dec. 8 Apply in person in the Student Senate office B105 Kansas Union MASS. STREET DELI in 2041 MASSACHUSETTS REUBEN SPECIAL $2^95 Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage or Russian Rye. Special Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Come with us to the 16th Century in Merida Old England and enjoy the charming dinner traditions of the muskets and the madrigal singers. The evening will begin at 6.30 with the Wassail Bowl Dinner is at 7.00 Thursday, December 4 and Friday, December 5, 1980 Kansas Union Ballroom Cost is 8.50 per person call to the SUA office for reservations up to two days prior to the dinner. Tickets can be picked up between 8:30 and 5:00 on Monday through Friday of 6:00 to 7:00 on December 4 & 5 The 7th Annual Madrigal Dinner SUA 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 20% OFF All Roots! All Boots! Men's & Women's Fashion & Western Styles As Low As $47.95 As Low As $47^{95} for All-American Wear! Holiday Plaza 25th & Ithouse 842-8413 Your Authentic Western Store in Lawrence RAASCH WESTERN WEAR RENT THE HUDDLE The Holiday Season is here and you want to have a party, but there's no place to have it. Now you can RENT THE HUDDLE available. Food catering and keg set-ups "We clean it up." CALL 842-9533 AFTER 2 p.m. for information. for information. 2406IOWA Have a child francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts 843-4191 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 fr Have a Christmas ball at warm gifts . . . treat yourself or tuck away'till Christmas socks Wigwam Wigwam socks go to great lengths to warm feet for students, hunters, skiers or chair rockerists. Give cushiony comfort in 100% wool blend light blends of woollynonaelastic. 1.95 to 7.50 SKI KINS underskiwear Skisik turtleneck wish fashionily fit in shape-keeping 50 poly/50 cotton knit with Spands reinforced collars/cuffs. Straight cut bottoms. Solid colors. Men's 13.95. Ladies 14.95. SkISkin underski separates .. kicky union suits in poly/acrylic and poly/wool. Solids and prints for yourself, male or female friends, younger brothers and sisters. 8.95 to 20.50 hotfingers' gloves and mittens WELLS LAMONT Hotfitters gloves and mittens . . . built tough, but feature high fashion colors and designs. Leathers and look-a-likes warmly with feather, fibrill or fibre. 5.95 to 39.95 1 MILITARY GLOVES Saranac glove liners Saracen lilins, a lightweight inner glove that knit with silver Lurex to retain heat; rug ribbed rubfee. Hot Ideas for yourself, or to wear in a stocking. Men's and ladies' sizes. 3.85 "Sporty things for sporty people . . . for Christmas" Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Opinion This year in review The year 1980 saw many things, both good and bad. There proved to be many worthwhile moments in the arts, movies, news, sports, etc. During the next several days, the Kansan will take a look at this past year. With the help of an editorial writing class, readers may gain insight to the year that has past before them. The Kansan will examine the major news stories of 1980, both on the University and national levels. Glimpses into the world of sports, arts and music also will be provided. And more. It was a memorable year. You may be amazed how quickly time passes. The Bottom 20 newsmakers make many dubious headlines By J. V. SMITH Guest Columnist In first place on the Bottom Twenty Newsmakers list (that is, the 19th runner-up) was the perennial favorable, Ramsey Clark. This year, Clark did not figure to make the BTN list, but he did offer himself a desperation move, Clark offered to exchange himself for one of the hostages. The attempt did not sway BTN judges, however, until the Iranians spanned Clark and his offer. One BTN judge said, "If the ayatolah can spurn Clark, we can do we can show him our contempt as well." They battled it out to the end, setting aside their honor and dignity, wielding the driest of dirty tricks, clawing their way to the bottom of the barrel, striving for the inglorious title of Bottom Loser in the annual competition for a place on the Bottom Twenty Newsmakers list. Wanda Brandstetter won the 18th runner-up TOMMY HALKINS And it was a surprise finish at the bottom of the list where the newsmaker—crowned Bottom Looser—was an 11th hour enthronment who used a trick play (a dirty one) to upset the favorite of all the oddsmakers. But that story later. First, the runners-up. A Bottom 20 newsmaker . . . BILLY CARTER The 15th runner-up was the Social Security Administration, the only government agency to make the list this year, for sending relief checks to prison inmates, including "Son of Sam" killer David R. Berkowitz, who was convicted of murdering six people in New York City. The Abscam defendants won the 16th position among runners-up. The prize money will be divided among the four categories of defendants: (1) those who were too drunk; (2) those who were entrapped; (3) those who were carrying on without real intention, but weren't really going to do anything for the briers. Defendants can be rewarded for participation in multiple categories. spot in the balloting with her bribery conviction. She bought her way onto the list with an attempt to buy votes for the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment in Illinois. She was expected to achieve lower ranking on the list, but ERASam was overshadowed by Abscun in the late voting. If the Founding Fathers had named a national religion in the Constitution, it would have been this year's 14th ordinary mortal's the practical news that earth's magnetic poles will reverse in 1,200 years, that there is a liquid beneath the surface of Mars, and that yellow clouds of gas surround Titan, Saturn's largest moon. Science also reported that Alexander the Great was an alcoholic and that mouse saliva can help heal wounds. And a computer picked Miss Kansas to win the Miss America pageant. Sharing the 17th runner-up spot were five Explorer scouts from Wilmington, Del., who were charged with arson in 10 fires. The scouts, sponsored by a fire company, allegedly set the fires so they could assist firefighters in putting them out. Rick Honeycutt, a Seattle Mariners baseball pitcher, grabbed the 13 runner-up position by becoming the only man in modern memory to get caught doctoring a baseball. The team of Masters and Johnson, sex researchers, won the spot of 12th runner-up. Other researchers have called the team's work "flawed by methodical errors and slipshod mistakes," and they are awed by promises that Masters and Johnson would do it all over again to make things right. Allan Vishoot sewed up the 11th runner-up set by amputating the right leg of a patient whose left leg had deteriorated. Ralph Ross, a director of the hospital where the surgery occurred, assured Vishoot of his standing on the BTN by expaining that the good leg probably would have been there. The bottom of the first 10 of the Bottom Twenty went to the University Daily Kansan editorial page on two counts. First, for the balanced, mature commentary on Campaign '80; and second, for going against the official on the KU banner policy, thus leaving the First Amendment unguarded. Jane Byrne, mayor of Chicago, led off the final 10 of the bottom dwellers. Byrne, who also won the coveted "Ms. Congenitality" title for her relations with the Chicago press, revoked special police parking permits for journalists in (make no mistake about) it) her city. Only a fraction of a percentage point separated Billy Carter from the seventen runner-up, Col. Moamar Khanadfay of Libya. The decisive thrust for Khadafy was struck in July when he announced that he would seize German, British and Italian assets in Libya unless those nations paid billions in reparations for battles fought on Libyan deserts in World War II. Billy Carter was selected as eighth runner-up and named a winner of initiatives. He also was named "Mr. Congeniality." The producers of "That's incredible" won the undisputed six runner-up position for showing the mayhem of failed stunts in all their glory — and that is why their replay replays — over and over and over . . . The fifth runner-up spot went to animals and their lovers. The San Clemente Island goats held up the U. Navy. The Grand Canyon burrows held up the National Park Service. The沙师 dartners held up construction of the Tellico Dam (and were discovered in another "final habitat" in 1980). Finally, there was the deadly knuckle, the snake snake that bit its handler and died—of stress. Among his other deeds, Khomeini left in exile in Iraq without paying his rent and utility bills, leading many analysts to believe that his welching was the spark that set off the war between Iran and Iraq. Khomeini also won the "Mr. Photogenic" award. Abbie Hoffman led off the final five, just for coming back from anonymity at the very moment his autobiography was published. Hoffman also won the "Mr. Credibility" award for his claim that the two events were coincidental. The third place runners-up, George Brett's celebrated hemorrhoids, barely edged out Abie Hoffman, but were substantially behind the Ayatollah Khomeini, the second place runner-up. loser, Roberto Duran. The champ lost his stomach for the charade that professional wrestling and boxing demand. He quit fighting in the eight round of his fight with Sugar Ray Leonard, blaming his loss of heart on stomach cramps. First runner-up was Jimmy Carter. Carter also came in second in another important race. He was heavily favored to win in the BTN competition until the final moments of the campaign when the eventual Bottom Loser pulled off his upset. Which brings us to the newly crowned bottom JIMMY CARTER ... The Bottom newsmaker [Image of a man in a suit and tie]. Duran also threw a quick and popular fighter's verbal combination on successive days after the fight—he retired and then unretired. Leonard was left wondering whether he should retire. The fight promoters were left counting their million. Boxing fans were left holding the bag. Jimmy Carter was left in a very important position. If the Bottom Loser, Duran, should be unable to perform the functions of his office, owing to *tummychee* or whatever, Carter would have been activated and to carry the Bottom Twenty Newsmakers torch held forever low. No musical trend dominates 1980 By DANNY TORCHIA Guest Columnist The biggest musical trend of 1980 was that there was no big music trend. PUNCHING DANCES 1983 Guest Columnist Disco didn't die completely. New Wave was not the 1800 edition of the British Invasion, mainstream rock still held its ground and hybrid forms of popular music—jazz-rock, musical-rich and anything else that could be combined—found a place in the musical scene. The recession had an enormous effect on music. As album prices rose because of inflation and increasing petroleum prices, it became more selective in their buying habits. People rarely bought two or three albums at one time as in the past and they rarely took chances with unknown artists. Established performers established track record albums sold well. Music in 1980 reflected the state of things in general—jumbled and confused. The industry seemed to be waiting for that revolutionary performer who would wipe the slate clean and change the whole scene, as Elvis and the Beatles did. A New Wave act eventually might do this, but not this year. The giant sales, predicted for a couple of years, didn't materialize. As in the case of "The Cure," music that not a lot of airplay did but did not. There were exceptions. Talking Heads and the Clash, two groups that represent the best of American and English New Wave, each had albums that sold well. More importantly, both groups had hit singles, which is the only way New Wave will find a mass audience. There were other New Wave hits on the charts. Gary Neuman had "Cars," Pat Benatar, while not really a New Wave fan. He was one of the "Hear-breaker" and "Hit Me With Your Best Shot." Aside from these exceptions, New Wave stayed on the album-oriented stations. At its worst, New Wave was merely an excuse for poor musicianship and dumb lyrics. At its best, its short songs with good beats and catchy melodies were a wonderful change from the empty indulgences by many rock stars. Disco, while fading, still showed some signs of life. Most of the disco groups dealing in one chord monotonism and a beat that would turn your brain to mush are nowhere to be heard. Where were the latest hits from Foxy, Almee McKinnon, or a few of the top disco acts of a few years age? Disco went back into rhythm and blues, where it came from originally. Established R&B performers such as Diana Ross, the Commodores and Earth, Wind and Fire had albums that featured danceable music, but were not necessarily disco. But despite the fading of disco music, there was still at least one outreight disc hit, "Funky Town." by Lipps Inc., a group that wanted to judge judging from the name, a one-hit wonder. What the public was buying was the music of mainstream rock performers. This included anything from Ted Nugent, whose brand of heavy metal still sold well, to Jackson Browne, whose soft style has evolved somewhat to a harder sound. Seger, Boz Scaggs, the Rolling Stones, Peter Jackson, the Doobie Brothers and John Lennon. Undoubtedly, the biggest event to shake the music industry was the Who concert tragedy in Cincinnati last Dec. 7, included here and released after most of the music roundups for 1979. Several performers like Browne, perhaps feeling some pressure from New Wave, changed their styles and added some of the pared-down sounds that characterize New Wave. Some who did this were Linda Ronstadt. Chicago and Billy Joel. Major artists release albums during the year were Stevie Wonder, Pink Floyd, Bob Though investigations failed to make clear exactly who was at fault, most authorities blamed a combination of inadequate security and lack of vigilance. None of some of the survivors and relatives of the 11 killed will tie the case up in court for some time. musical milestones during the year were the 15th anniversary of the Grateful Dead, the 18th anniversary of the Rolling Stones and the 18th anniversary of the death of jazz great, Charlie Parker. Deaths of notable music figures included lyricist Richard Rodgers (who actually died Dec. 30 of last year), Annunziu Panlo Manovani, 74; the master of music joy; jazz pianist Bill Evans, 51; and John Bonham, the drummer of Led Zeppelin. Picasso art show highlight of 1980 arts By DAVID STIPP The biggest art show of 1890 was a retrospective of the works of Pablo Picasso, which opened in May at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Guest Columnist Hailed as the greatest show of the greatest artist in the greatest museum of modern art in the 20th century, "Pablo Picasso: A Retrospective" brought together 1,000 works displayed along three miles of corridors. The entire museum was given over to Picasso. As the most widely publicized artist of the second half of the years ago, the Picasso retrospective represented a kind of farewell to the master by the first American museum to recognize his genius. When he died in 1973, Picasso left behind seven decades of painting and sculpture. His work, which represents the whole range of modern expression, was displayed in chronological order in the New York show, from his early sentimental imitations of Burne-Jones, through the blue, rose, Cubist, classical and surrealistic periods. Another massive retrospective show this year was presented at the Royal Academy of Arts in London for the works of Stanley Spencer. Long considered an idiosyncratic footnote in the history of 20th century art, Spencer has been increasingly appreciated since his death in 1969 and is now regarded by many as the most important English painter of the century. Spencer was influenced early in his career at the Slade School of Fine Arts by the Renaissance masters he studied there. He returned to his native village of Cookham, he adapted the themes of the Renaissance with a new interest in his early works was a portraital of the birth of Christ in the fields near Cookham, a rendering of Christ carrying the cross through the streets of Cookham and The works of a very different artist, Isamu Noguchi, were celebrated on the artist's birthday in March in three simultaneous New York exhibits. Noguchi, considered the pre-eminent American sculptor, has become famous for his ballet and theatre sets, monumental fountains, playground pieces and most of all for his city plazas. In the plazas he has combined the careful use of space characteristic of the Japanese with the vigorous modern Western art that he is a highly accomplished craftsman, Noguchi prefers a light touch—his goal is often to create sculptures in which the least possible amount of change has been imposed on his material natural form. There were two large exhibitions of non-native art in the United States in 1880—an exhibit of 16th century Persian painting at the National Gallery in Washington and an exhibit of Chinese bronzeage art at the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art. "The Last Superior," showing Christ and his disciples in a Cockburn pub. The Persian exhibit featured miniatures commissioned by the Safavid dynasty, mostly in Tatrib. Called by critics the greatest period for miniature painting in history, 18th century Persia produced portraits so tiny and exquisite that National Gallery curators were forced to supply magnifying glasses to its visitors who wanted to explore the miniatures in detail. The most remarkable part of the Chinese exhibit was six life-size tera cotta warriors discovered in 1974 by farmers digging a well in the Shaanix province. These warriors were part of a 7,000-man army of such figures buried with Emperor Qin Qin Shuhuangchi in 210 B.C. Shihuangchi, who was always grandiose, reigned over the completion of the Great Wall. Another international art event in 1980 was the awarding of the International Pritzker Architecture Prize to Mexican architect Luis Barragan. The prize, which is equivalent to a Nobel Prize in architecture and includes a cash award of $100,000 was given to Barragan for his Ac "Dieu medici has Yir Docte includin goats' Ginse become energy people extr creation of what the award committee called "unforgettable gardens, plazas and fountains—all magical places for meditation and compassion." Barragan's specialty is the walled garden, and he explains his preference for small structures that emphasize the beauty of the interiors' work with the credo that "Any work of architecture that does not express serenity is a mistake." SHI illustr acupu Hille on a medical the Jap A st showed averaged said. years "G "Doo he m docto She binatic availa Some of the other notable stories in the world of art in 1890 were the opening of an American wing after five years of construction at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the opening of a museum devoted to the history of glass by Corning Glass Works in Corning, N.Y., a retrospective on Edward Hopper at the Whitney Museum in New York and the largest art auction in history in New York, in which $55.4 million of art was sold in five days. "I H acupr discon "M I got confr Cor an ef Hille She acup Caes The University Daily KANSAN (USPS 409-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday durc day June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $2 a year in Springfield County and $18 for six months or $2 a semester, paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University Dalkan, Flint Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansan Telephone Numbers Newroom- 664-4810 Business Office- 643-458 Editor Business Manager Carol Beer Wolf Ehlau Strahler General Manager and News Adviser Kushan Advisor Rick Musselman Chuck Chowman University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 taff the are he the at, ed ed ed zzz the Page 5 Acupuncture From page 1 "Diet is the most important part of oriental medicine," she said. "You must know which food is rich in vitamins and minerals." Doctors also use many herbs, Hillsheim said, including animal substances such as dried bats, milk and goat's milk. aimed in- com- smaller than small than is not as the opening of the enjoyment ass by a inquiry hunting kansas y dur- idays. 606455. a year out ester, versity manss. Ginseng is one Japanese herb that has recently become popular in the United States as an energy booster and a sex stimulator, said, but it is not without its caution because it is potently mal. Hillesheim said she thought Japan's reliance on a combination of oriental and Western medical techniques resulted in the longevity of the Japanese. A study by the World Health Organization showed that the Japanese had the longest average lifespan among people in Asia, she also found that Japaners averaged 77,80 years and men a averaged almost 74 years. She said she hoped to see a similar com- pany in the U.S. or oriental medicine available in the United States. "I hope someday you can easily go to an obstetrics clinic," she said. "I'd depend on your health." Hillsheim said. SHE SHOWED "Downsister" comic strips to illustrate the dizziness Westerners had shown for them. "God help me! Chinese needle torture!" the "Doonesbury" character uncle Duke says when he must have his appendix removed by Chinese doctors. "My God, this is no time for dill weed and sage. And my brother is in trouble," says when confronted with China's finest herbal medicine. Contrary to Duke's misgivings, acupuncture is an effective pain killer and surgical anesthetic, but it does not She showed slides and a film scene of acupuncture being used as an anesthetic for a Caesarian-section birth and a tooth extraction. She said acupuncture used the flow of energy through the body to locate points along meridians of the body. The body has 26 meridians, she said, and about 800 points. Each of them is a part of the internal part of the organ(s). She inserts the internal organs. "The internal organs relate to the surface of the body," Hillsheim said. "Through stimulating the surface of the body, you can really stimulate deep in the body." She said practitioners could check on the condition of a person's organs by taking his pulse. "It itakes enormous skill and practice to tell the condition of different organs," she said, "but a practitioner has to develop that sensitivity." HIGHLY SKILLED doctors can tell time simply by touching the crystal of a watch, she said. rulesheim said that although scientists had not yet verified the energy flow of the body, acupuncture was a physical practice and did not involve the use of needles — which ralled on the patient cursing himself mentally. "It's not psychosomatic at all," she said. "For centenarians, animals have been treated by therapists." She said acupuncture was used on cows, horses, goats, chickens, dogs and cats. Hillesheim demonstrated some techniques of acupressure and of an oriental heat treatment that uses the heat and the smell of a burning herb, the mugwort. If mugwort isn't around, a burning cigar will work. Hillems said. "But don't touch the skin. Hold it close," she said. She said acupressure could cure headaches, backaches, earaches, stomachaches and tired eyes. eyes. "I know this is really old-fashioned stuff, really non-scientific looking," Hillsheim said. "But it works." Finals offer study tips that can help a student pull his semester out of a nosedive. From page 1 "If you're in a crash and burn situation, you had better structure the time you have left this semester," said Dick Johnson, assistant director of the Assistance Center. "you had better build a study pattern that will allow repetition, because repetition is the key to learning," he said. learning, he said. Every day before the final, he said, students should review class material in one-or two-hour sessions. "Smaller concentrations of study repeated over a long period of time are 100 times better than spending all day or all night studying," he said. If a student is faced with 15 chapters to study, Johnson said, he should read the chapters gradually and take time to return to what he already has read. already has it. It is also effective to read each chapter and write a summary, then review the summary before reading further. "This will help you get the details and learn the book's theme," he said. IN MANY CASES, it is helpful to study with a classmate. Discussing difficult ideas can help both students understand them better. "You will be learning new things, comparing what you know," Johnson said. "You're forced to summarize, and you're forced to think in concrete terms." Two days before their finals, Johnson said, students should get plenty of sleep. A recent study has shown that when people stay out on two days to recover completely, Most of the Assistance Center's suggestions for effective reading, writing and test-taking are outlined in a free handbook, "Academic Skill Harness", which is available at 128 Strong Hall. ACCORDING TO THE handbook, it is best to review in depth on the day before a difficult final. Go over chapter summaries, italicized sections and class notes. On the day of the final, Johnson said, don't overeat or wear uncomfortable clothing. Most importantly, be relaxed. "You should definitely be cool," he said. "Be positive when most people are freaking out." Before answering the final, read the entire test. This will reveal the exam's main emphasis and help determine how the test time should be divided. Many students agonize over a five-point question, then don't leave time to answer a 30-point essay on the last page, according to the handbook. After completing the test, check for unanswered questions and careless mistakes. When the exam has been graded, review the answers, paying attention to what was done right and what was done wrong. Try to learn from the experience. It also is advisable to read the directions carefully. Words such as compare, discuss, evaluate and examine have different meanings and ask for different answers. Following directions is more than half the battle when taking a test, according to the booklet. Answer questions in any order that is comfortable. Successfully answering an easy question first may be reassuring and may help to break the tension. When answering questions, keep an unhurried pace and not try to give a question more attention. JOHNSON suggested that students arrange their class schedules to include daily study sessions. The review and study patterns used during the week before finals should be used throughout the semester, he said. One method is to study in short, frequent sessions. For example, the Assistance Center advises students to review class notes for 15 minutes before and after every class. "Most students take notes in class, then put them away," Johnson said. "They read a chanter, summarize it, then put it away." 10 nep students develop better study skills, the Assistance Center conducts workshops during the fall and spring semesters. The workshops teach effective reading, listening, note taking and study skills. The first workshop next semester, which will last from two to four hours, will be held in late Ceramics and silversmithing students are selling pottery and jewelry in the Kansas Union lobby this week to raise money for their departments. However, if a class seems impossible, even with the help of a tutor, students can follow the advice of one KU junior. "Drop back five yards and punt it," she said. Artisans sell pottery, jewelry The sale began Tuesday and will end tonight at 6. "Our proceeds are going to fund a visiting artist in the spring," said Gary Bloom, Dayton, Wash., graduate student and a member of the KU Ceramic Guild. The silvermurs also are trying to raise money from their association, according to John Overland Park area staff. "Some of the money will go toward students and some toward the department," Dillon said. "It's not all that much." 1981-1982 1981 - 1982 FINANCIAL AID Office of Student Financial Aid: 26 Strong Hall 1981-1982 FINANCIAL AID FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY Great Savings on Great Food! French Onion Soup ...75° Covered with melted mozzarella Reg. $1.25 Submarine...$1.75 Salami, ham, bologna, American and Swiss Reg.$2.39 cheese—lettuce & tomato on a hoagie bun. Admission - $3.50 or $3.00 with KUID Beer, Pop, and Refreshments Available! Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa 841-8271 SUA Special Events NO Presents With Black Frost Tuesday, December 9th in the Kansas Union Ballroom at 7:00 p.m. Grembriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEN Cheese Empirium Shooting Star Sun.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. & Sat. 11-10 An End of Term Party/Concert Featuring JIM MORRISON the holiday season in clothes from Mister Guy lawrence's only contemporary traditionalist for men and women ... Christmas hours: M-T-W-Th-F 9:30 8:30 Sat.-10:30 6:00 Sun.-1 5 MISTER GUY 920 MASS 842 2700 Page 6 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 ICE COLD SPRINTS CHILLED CASE BENNETT Retail Liquor 801 Street Center 801 Street Center 842 7222 LAWRENCE JERRY SKA FILMS Thursday, Dec. 4 Horsefeathers A classic Marx Brothers movie, with Groucho, as head of Darwin College, get into a rocky business trip with Hudley J. Written by S.J. Pellman. With it we have Laurel & Hardy's *Oscar-winning* short The Music Box, in which the gang play games you can logine (30/70) min. BW: 7-30. Friday. Dec. 5 Superman S The Man of Steel returns in an all-star spectacular which convinces you that a man can fly. Christopher Reeve and Jeffrey Epstein, with Lola Lane, Gene Hackman is nasty baddie Lex Luther, and Marlon Brando is godlike Jon Eil in this epic, aw-sweeping film. Plus: Max Riesler's cartoon *Dickie* (142/10 min). Color: 3:30, Light: 6:30. Saturday, Dec. 6 Saturday, Doe's Superman 3:30; 7:00; 10:00. Sunday, Dec. 7 Lord of the Rings (1978) Ralph Bakki takes on the seemingly impossible task of translating J.R.R. Tolkien's massive, minutely detailed saga and succeeds. A milestone in the history of literature, production brings Tolkien's imaginative world to life. (131 min.) Color: 2:00. less otherwise noted; all films will be in the Kansas Auditorium in the Kansas University Week Room, Fidley, Saturday, Popular and Sunday films are $1.50, Midnight films are $1.69, USA TV, Kansas Union, 4th level, information 884-6500 or smoking or retirements allowed. FREE salad & small drink with any sandwich when accompanied by this coupon. (Six salads to choose from!) Like a Good Deli Sandwich? Try the new Stuffed Pig! THE STUFFED PIG "PURVEYORS OF FINE SAUAGES" Hours: Mon-Th.11:30-8 Sun 12:8 Fri-Sat 11:30-10 2210 Iowa Behind Safeway Good thru 12-19-80. Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 Bucky's Take a Turkey Break Double Cheeseburgers Two for Only $1.69 Good Thru Sun. 12/7. Bucky's Bucky's HAMBURGERS BULL FIGHTING come as you are . . . hungry 2120 WEST NINTH Pat Methen\ with DeJohnette\ Haden/Redman PAT METHENY 80/81 Pat Metheny, guitar. Dewey Redman, tenor saxophone. Charlie Haden, bass. Jack DeJonette. PAT METHENY 2012 THE FIRST AUTHORIZED WEEKEND 80/81 Not intended for use in the UK. Also available: Pat Metheny Group (ECM-1-114 American Groughe) (ECM-1-115 ECM Chick Corea and Gary Burton In Concert, Zürich, October 28, 1979 Chick Corea, piano Gary Burton, vibrasharp. CHICK CORREA GARY BURTON IN CONCERT New Book! New Year! ZURICH OCTOBER 24 1999 STEVE REICH The Celestial Hawk Keith Jarrett, piano. Syracuse Symphony, Christopher Keete, composer. Octet Music For A Large Ensemble Violin Phase Also available: Crystal Silence (ECM 1-1024) Dual ECM 1-1140 (ECM 2-1182) e (ECM 1-1024). at (ECM 1-1140) Symphonic music by Keith Jarrett KEITH JARRETT The Celestial Hawk The Celestial Hawk Octet/ Musica for a Large Ensemble, Ion Phase Musica Shem Gubbim, violin Shem Gubbim, violin First recordings of new compositions by Steve Reich Also available: The Köln Concert (ECM 2-1064), Sacred Hymns (ECM 1-1714), Solo Concerto (Bremen, Lausanne) (ECM 3-1035) Eberhard Weber with Colours Little Movements (ECM1-1186) ECM 1-1175 Jan Gerberek improvisations for saxophone and church organ Aftentland (ECM 1-1169) (ECM1-1168) JACK DoJOHNETTE Also available: Music for 18 Musicians (ECM 1-1129) Jack DeJohntte's Directions (Aberroche / Bowie) Live in Europe Also new from ECM: The music of Steve Swallow, the words of Robert Cresley from ECM 1110 New Directions In Europe New Directions In Europe in museums, drums, Lester Bowen trumpet, Lester Holmes bass, Marcello Fusco bass. (ECM1-1157) RALPH TOWNER Solo Concert Also available: Special Edition (ECM 1-1152) New Directions (ECM 1-1128), Gateway (ECM 1-1061) Solo guitar concer Ralph Towner (ECM 1-1173) Solo Concert Ralph Towler, 12-string and classical guitars Also available Old Friends, New Friends (ECM 1-1153), Matchbook (ECM 1-1056). Also available are recordings by Chorca Corona, Danny Brown, Robert Burton, John Abercrombie, Steve Kunin, Goldberg, Eddie Giammari, Michael Frost. (Liverpool) WARNER BROS. KIEF'S 25 DISCOUNT RECORDS & On ECM Records & Tapes Manufactured and distributed by Warner Bros. Records Inc. ECM S 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. Discrimination BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. BETTER DAYS Besides Roltman, there is one other part-time female professor in the math department. Himmelblau said that in the past five years, there had been very little recruiting because there had been no permanent faculty openings. From page 1 Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said that the University was working toward hiring more women, but that it took time. "As we see more women entering fields they have traditionally ignored, we will have more women to choose from," he said. Cobb said the discrimination against women was a community problem as well. "Women do not have a community base support group. They come to Lawrence for a few years and then move on." Cobb said that as more women entered the work force and were promoted to management positions, women would have more role models and be more willing to seek bigger and better jobs. Banks agreed that there needed to be more role models. But in the process, she said, men still expect women to be supernualified in order to be hired. THERE IS AN internship program coordinated under the associate executive vice chancellor, William Hogan, designed to provide an opportunity for women and minorities in undergraduate administration post to help them compete on an equal footing with white males for future jobs in academic administration. Calling the program ridiculous, Banks said, "It's too bad the program is set up for women and minorities, because I can think of a lot of men who could benefit from the internship." "It's just a good way to gain some experience without a long-term commitment," he said. Nobleza Lande, professor of apeech and communications, is enrolled in the institute. "Historically, women have been discriminated against," Lande said. "They have been conditioned to think they are followers rather than leaders. It's too bad we have to have such a program to train women, but it's a good program. One has to be qualified to apply for jobs." She said she also worked with the associate vice chancellor of international programs, George Waggoner, and with the associate dean of the law school, Deann Tacha, on her action goals and timetables. Working in the office of academic affairs, Lande said, she attended a variety of meetings including conferences and academic council meetings. Edwards said that affirmative action on campus was moving in the right direction, with work beginning on affirmative action goals and timetables. Lande said she thought the af- flicient action office was trying to do its work. tao joo. "Right now I think Mike Edwards is doing a lot," she said. "One can only do much, you know." "We need to change hearts and minds and the office of affirmative action is concerned with filling out papers," she said. Roitman said, however, that she had a very low opinion of affirmative action. "People are frightened of complaining," she said. "If you call your colleagues names, you are afraid they won't accept you or your accomplishments. So you don't complain and the problem remains." EDWARDS AGREED that his office did a lot of paper work, but, he said, “Affirmative action is everybody's business, in the monitoring and recording and other tasks,” there has to be documentation provided." Roitman said that perceptions needed to be changed, and that this could be done only on an individual basis. "I think the University needs to do more in terms of representing affective classes and I think the University can," Edwards said. Edwards said his office was not monitoring the hiring of university personnel. The hiring of university personnel. But individual complaints have to be reported in order to be acted on. In order to be acted on, women do the formal complaints, or they do, they don't follow on through them. "People think we are a panacea for all problems—that we can do all things for all people. We cannot be all things to all people. We can we can do takes time," Edwards said. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! YOUR STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU Academic Affairs Communications Culture Finance and Auditing Minority Affairs The Student Senate is now accepting applications for membership on the following standing committees: Student Services Sports Student Rights Elections (sub committee) Apply in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union Delight Holiday PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE Dresses...25% off Skirts...20% off Pants...25% off Blazers...25% off Cotton Tops...25% off All Other Merchandise 10% off Special Today-Cotton Tops... 30% off Special on Friday-Pants... 30% off Special on Saturday-Sweaters 20% off Sale Starts Today and Ends Saturday. Open til 8:30 pm Tonight. Clothes Encounter Holiday Plaza ~in step with your style 843-5335 25th & Iowa University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 7 Very few beer drinkers can pass this test. Can you? If you can taste which beer is which, you know beer every which way. R 1 Three major premium beers have three different tastes. But if you can taste that Bud is Bud, Miller is Miller, and Schlitz is Schlitz - blindfolded- you are probably in the top 10% of expert beer tasters. Like to test your taste? Then, on with your blindfold. The Master Brewer decides. The Master Brewer determines how a beer will taste. Brewers are constantly adjusting, experimenting, improving their beers. For example, Schlitz. Three years ago a MasterBrewer came over to head up Schlitz. For 40 years Frank Sellinger had brewed some of the best beers in America. beers in America And he came to Schlitz to make his best beer ever. Miller Budweiser Miller Budweiser What makes beers taste different? Hops are a major factor. Too much hops can make a beer bitter. Too little leaves it bland. Barley malt is important, too. It gives a beer "body" and adds a mellowness. The balance of the two is what makes a beer taste smooth. Have a friend pour all The perfect beer is the beer that tastes perfect—to you. three beers into identical glasses and label them 1,2 and 3.Now you taste and identify each beer.Whether you guess all three brands right,or all three wrong,you'll know which tastes best to you.Don't be surprised if it's not your brand. To get a better picture of each beer's taste, rate its flavor characteristics from 1 to 10 on the scale at the right. The best beer is # Refreshing Faintly sweet Full bodied Smooth Mellow Mild Full flavored | | | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Flat | Too bitter | Watery | Biting | Too strong | Overly carbonated | Bland | Place beers' numbers on each scale from 1 to 10 Beer #1 is ___ The last word is yours. To Frank's taste, today's Schlitz is the smoothest beer you can buy. But taste for yourself. Your decision is what counts. Schlitz Today's Schlitz. Go for it! ©1980 Jos Schultz Brewing Company, Milwaukee. WI Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Housekeeping staff still vexed by labor troubles By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter Last year at this time, the KU custodians were battling their management. One year later, the department has new management. But the custodians and the management still aren't seeing eye-to-eye. "I think our morale has gotten higher since I got on board," said Dick Bivens, associate director of Facilities Operations in charge of housekeeping. "I really don't think that anyone's interested in us," said Maggie Cosey, a night custodian on the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall. "You just clock in and clock out, and nobody really cares. It's really getting to be a drag." The custodians' main complaints are overwork, lack of representation in the department and the new guidelines concerning absenteeism and tardiness. BIVENS SAID he had improved employee discipline and training and had increased communication between labor and management. the absentee and tardiness guidance were necessary to maintain discipline, help "At the time that I started, there was no discipline," Bivens said. "Now we explain very fully what we expect of them." He said the department was attracting better quality employees because it's spreading that the management expects Since his arrival, Bivens said, absenteeism has dropped from more than 20 percent to about 10 percent of it. Also had been as high as 45 percent, in half. In addition, he said, he has introduced regular half-hour training sessions to show employees how to use the new software. He also initiated weekly meetings with supervisors instead of monthly ones and restocked equipment that had been allowed to run low by the previous management, American Management Group. Bivens said that he hoped to continue improving the department, and that the institution of follow-up inspections of buildings was a top priority. THE HOUSEKEEPING department, in the meantime, is still in flux as the transition between AMS and Bivens progresses. Last year, the custodians charged AMS with overworking employees and harassing them into nuisance. Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities Operations, said the housekeeping department was still recovering from bitter disagreements with AMS that left some employees off the job and hostile to their management. The custodians formed the Custodian Action Committee in October 1979 to reform the school. The University did not renew its two-year contract with AMS in December 1979 and announced it would run its own housekeeping department. Bivens took charge of the department on Feb. 4.1980. Bivens said the University was better off running its own department. of thinking its own dept has, "I think that if they had been successful, they would still be here," Bivens says about AMS. "The they just expect too much of every janitor here," said Alfreda Rayton, a night custodian on the first floor of Strong Hall. "If Bivens came in and he was sitting on the second week, he'd think twice about the amount of work he's putting on us." FEW CUSTODIANS call for the return of the AMS, but there are some faults. Bivens said the department used engineering principles and time studies to determine the size of the custodial staff. "Our staff is adequate," he said. "We need further refinements as to where people are working." Sarah Coffelt, a fourth and fifth floor daytime custodian at Fraser Hall, said she thought her area was too large. "I can't get done what I want to get done," she said. "This building here, we work and work and work and work. We work and work and work and then it doesn't look very good. "There isn't anybody in the state system who works for hard." Anderson said. "There are a lot of people who work hard, but the amount of work that's assigned to a person is not unreasonable." Pet Gibson, a night custodian on the first floor of Strong, said custodians did high and low dusting and cleaned the rooms with dust-free blackboards and all windows and doors. THEY ALSO EMPTY the trash, sweep and vacuum the floors, mop and clean the bathrooms, offices and classrooms. "There's no way you can hurry through and do it all," said Fran Prough, a night custodian on the third floor of Strong. "I have to slice something every night." Gibson said. George Powell, a night custodian on the first floor of Malott Hall, said he didn't think engineering and efficiency are the same work involved in cleaning a building. "Their standards are too high," Powell said. "They measure by volume of square feet rather than by what needs to be done." There are about 145 custodians in the housekeeping department. The department also has three levels of work in the individual buildings, zone supervisors who are responsible for several buildings and two chief custodial supervisors who are responsible for the day and night shifts in buildings. Craig Paul, a night custodian on the second floor of Malot, said the staff would be adequate for cleaning the buildings if custodians would show up for work. "A lot of these folks here they'll miss four or five or six days, and then they'll wonder why their supervisor gets down on them," he said. "If you just put a minimum amount of work in here and stay out of sight, you'll be OK." New American Study Bible From Moody Press at your Christian Gift Center Paul said he didn't think the custodians were overworked. CROSS REFERENCE bookstore Mallia Shopping Center. Lawrence, Kansas 842-1533 HAIR ANALYSIS. CREATIVE PERMING AND COLORING HAIR STYLING FOR MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN 2 To Give A Really Good Haircut... time to talk to you about your hair, time to discuss alternative looks, time to teach you how to care for your new style and time to answer your questions. At Headmasters we believe in quality service and investing our time in you. Our time is always your time ... Let's spend some together for your good looks. Open Meeting: Su REDKEN most evenings til 8:00 "Well, it's a state job. That's the best way to sum it up," he said. HEADMASTERS 809 VERMONT LAWRENCE K5. 66044 913-843-8603 OPENINGS FOR SPRING TORO MAYORAL "Living conditions at Naismith are very adequate for a university dormitory. The food is good and the maid service is very well handled. The rooms are very nice and the staff are very easy to get along with." Bill Ledford, Sophomore Hugoton, Kansas Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features TONIGHT IS LADIES' NIGHT Get in free and receive a coupon for one free drink! GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd and Ousdahl "When we leave here at two in the morning, it's sparkling clean as far as I'm concerned," Cosey said. "But my wife is not so sure." It's "clean, only if something's wrong." SEVERAL OF THE custodians said that even if they managed to finish all their work, no one appreciated the job they did. Thank you for your business this semester. Steve Cookson Overland Photo SUA FILMS Presents "IIf I'm done, I'd at least like to have someone say, 'Hey, this looks nice.' I got to go home and do more cleaning. That's why I want some complements." The Marx Brothers in HORSEFEATHERS Plus: Laurel & Hardy in "The Music Box" Thursday, December 4th 7:30 p.m. Bivens said he tried to find supervisors who could deal with people. Woodruff Auditorium $1.00 "We need supervisors who know not only the nuts and bolts of the job but also how to deal with people on a one-to-one basis," he said. George Aeschliman, the night building supervisor for Snow Hall, said he thought tensions between the custodians and management were caused by what he termed "the club mentality" of the management. The management wields an invisible club and pressures the employees into working, Aeschiman said, instead of encouraging or complimenting them. "To some people, pressure might think that's what a lot of the problem is, but not really. "I would praise people for a good job. That gives them incentive to work. That's the way I see it. A lot of people don't see it that way." BIVENS SAID THE department gives people compliments. gives people compliments. "We are fair," he said. "We are compassionate when they have serious problems. We are genuinely interested in you." He did not succeed that this is a good place to work." If a letter praising a custodian is sent to the department, Bivens said, copies are sent to the custodian, placed in his campus file and posted on the bulletin board. Prough said that although the custodians were free to complain, she didn't think their opinions had any influence in the department. "I don't know that we have any voice, really," she said. "They'll list. But what gets done, who knows?" Cosey said. Cosey said she once complained when she didn't get her paycheck for the month because of a mix-up in procedure. The management was not sympathetic, she said. "They flat-out just didn't care," she said. "That's the way I see it." Coyle said she told them, "My hearing all you people say, 'I'm sorry' will not pay a bill I have. I want my work, just like you want your work done." She got an interest-free loan of 60 percent of her check, Cosey said, which she paid back when she got the actual check on the 17th of the month. The regular payday in the first of the month. "It still doesn't make any sense to me." she said. Absenteeism and tardiness guidelines are another area in the department that doesn't make sense to some custodians. The guidelines define chronic absenteeism as 12 unexcused absences in a year. The employee is warned after two absences, recommended for a five-day suspension after four absences, and recommended for dismissal six. CHRONIC LATENESS is defined as being five or fewer minutes late more than 10 times a year, and extreme lateness more than 30 times a year or more eight times a year. In both cases, the employee is warned and recommended for suspension before dismissal is considered. "I think the guidelines are fair," Bivens said. "I think they have been accepted by our force of people." "You either come in sicker than a dog or you go get a doctor's excuse," Charles Freeman, floor technician at Strong, said. "The only reason he's cut down absenteeism is because everyone comes in sicker than a dog." "A lot of doctors won't give you an excuse unless you make an appointment and pay them," Gibson said. Freeman said a doctor's note was required for an excused absence. Anderson said some people complained about the guidelines, but they were necessary to maintain discipline. Anderson said the housekeeping department would recover from the hostility between labor and management, then benefited from the AMS conflict with time. "The department has growing pains," he said. "I think it's growing in the right direction." The University of School of Fine Arts The 56th Annual Christmas Vespers Sunday, December 7 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Admission Free University Choirs Brass Ensemble University Symphony V TOP CASH for BOOKS TOP CASH for BOOKS ...by the armful or by the trunk full...we pay top prices now thru Dec. 20th. plus receive a 10% off blue discount chip good for purchases in the store. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 9 Bruce Springsteen THE RIVER "le River" is 20 new Springsteen songs of four sides. You know someone who'd like it. Rockpile SECONDS OF PLEASURE Rockpile is Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Billy Bremner and Terry Williams. Give "Seconds Of Pleasure." THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS The American debet by a group of very high-spirited Englishmen. STEVE FORBERT "LITTLE STEVE ORBIT" No, it's not Santa up there in the sky—it's "Little Stevie Orbit." KENNY LOGGINS ALIVE EARTH, WIND & FIRE Watch their faces light up when you give them "Faces"—a tasty new double LP from Earth, Wind & Fire. This Christmas give Money. Eddie Money. How can you go wrong? His first live solo album is the perfect gift for anyone who has sung along at Kenny's concerts. EDDIE MONEY PLAYING FOR KEEPS PETER LEE Give them what they want to hear (and hope they do the same). Have a heart, give Heart. Heart's "Greatest Hits/Live." Both on this double album. RANDY MEISNER One More Song heart Former Eagle, Randy Meisner, has the spotlight all to himself on "One More Song." KANSAS AUDIO - VISIONS A visionary work by one of the most innovative groups in rock music. Spend Christmas with Willie Nelson and his latest collection of great songs. WILLIE NELSON & FAMILY HONEYSUCKLE ROSE ELVIS COSTELLO TAKING LIBERTIES For the person who has everything, Elvis presents 20 songs conspicuous in their absence from his previous LPs. Billy Burnette Billy Burnette tears the roof of the house with the hardest rockin' debut of the year. Just what all your friends are looking for this Christmas: a new Cheap Trick. Chasep Trick Chasep Trick ALL SHOOK UP Great hits make great gifts, and Boz delivers smash after smash on "Hits" BOZ SCAGGS HITS! Gifts that go on giving all year long. On Columbia, Epic, ARC, Kirshner and Nemper Records and Tapes. AAC *Columbia Records* & *Epic* are trademarks of CBS Inc. ARC Records is distributed by Columbia Records. *ARC* are trademarks of the American Recordings Company Kindle Fire and Niemeyer Records are distributed by CBS Records. Give the gift of music. 1. 甲乙丙 2. 甲乙丙 3. 甲乙丙 4. 甲乙丙 5. 甲乙丙 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Housekeeping staff still vexed by labor troubles By JANENEUFELD Staff Reporter Last year at this time, the KU custodians were battling their management. One year later, the department has new management. But the custodians and the management still aren't seeing eye-to-eye. Some custodians disagree. "I think our morale has gotten higher since I got on board," said Dick Bivens, associate director of Facilities Operations in charge of housekeeping. "I really don't think that anyone's interested in us," said Maggie Cosey, a night custodian on the fourth floor of Wescoe Hall. "You just clock in and clock out, and nobody really cares. It's really getting to be a drag." The custodians' main complaints are overwork, lack of representation in the department and the new guidelines concerning absenteeism and tardiness. BIVENS SAID he had improved employee discipline and training and had increased communication between labor and management. The absentee and tardiness given students were necessary to maintain discipline. "At the time that I started, there was no discipline," Bivens said. "Now we explain very fully what we expect of them." He said the department was attracting better quality employees because it can spread that the company is good. Since his arrival, Bivens said, absenteeism has dropped from more than 29 percent to about 10 percent. He also said he had been as high as 45 percent, in half. In addition, he said, he has introduced regular half-hour training sessions to show employees how to use supervisors instead of initiated weekly meetings with supervisors instead of monthly ones and restocked equipment that had been allowed to run low by the previous payment, American Management Service. Bivens said that he hoped to continue improving the department, and that the institution of follow-up inspections of buildings was a too priority. THE HOUSEKEEPING department, in the meantime, is still in flux as the transition between AMS and Bivens progresses. Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities Operations, said the housekeeping department was still recovering from bitter disagreements that left some employees suspicious and hostile to their management. Last year, the custodians charged Assessing the employees and harming them in future. The University did not renew its two-year contract with AMS in December 1979 and announced it would run its own housekeeping department. The custodians formed the Custodian Action Committee in October 1979 to purchase the building. Bivens took charge of the department on Feb. 4, 1980. Bivens said the University was better off running its own department. "I think that if they have been successful they would still be here," Blivens said about them. "Bivens said about them." FEW CUSTODIANS call for the return of the AMS, but there are some flaws in the new system. they sav. "They just expect too much of every janitor here," said Alffreda Rayton, a night custodian on the first floor of Strong Hall. "If Bivens came in and worked in our place two or three weeks, they would have the amount of work he's put on us." Bivens said the department used engineering principles and time studies to determine the size of the custodial staff. "our staff is adequate," he said. "We need further refinements as to where we are." Sarah Coffelt, a fourth and fifth floor waitstaitime custodian at Fresher Hall, said she was well prepared for the event. "I can't get done what I want to get done," she said. "This building here, there are lots and lots of people in and around it. You have the work and then it doesn't look very good. "There isn't anybody in the state system who works too hard," Anderson "I think we need more help." said. "There are a lot of people who work hard, but the amount of work that's assigned to a person is not unreasonable." Pat Gibson, a night custodian on the first floor of Strong, said custodians did high and low dusting and cleaned the rooms with blackboards and blackboards and all windows and doors. THEY ALSO EMPTY the trash, sweep and vacuum the floors, mop and clean the bathrooms, offices and classrooms. "There's no way you can hurry through and do it all," said Fran Prough, a night custodian on the third floor of Strong. "I have to slice something every night." Gilson said. George Powell, a night custodian on the first floor of Malott Hall, said he didn't think engineering and efficiency were important in work of work involved in cleaning a building. "Their standards are too high," Powell said. "They measure by volume of square feet rather than by what needs to be done." There are about 145 custodians in the housekeeping department. The department also has three levels of supervisors: on-site supervisors who work in the individual buildings, zone supervisors who are responsible for several buildings and two chief custodial supervisors who are responsible for the day and night shifts of custodians. Craig Paul, a night custodian on the New American Study Bible From Moody Press at your Christian Gift Center CROS EF CROSS REFERENCE bookstore Malibu Shopping Center Lavender Katz 413-655-1800 HAIR ANALYSIS, CREATIVE PERMING. AND COLORING It Takes TIME To Give A Really Good Haircut... 2 AIR STYLING FOR WOMEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN time to talk to you about your hair, time to discuss alternative looks, time to teach you how to care for your new style and time to answer your questions. At Headmasters we believe in quality service and investing our time in you. Our time is always your time . . . Let's spend some together for your good looks. Open Mon thru Sat. Open Mon thirDat most evenings til 8:00 HEADMASTERS 809 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 913-843-6803 Pelota "Living conditions at Naismith are very adequate for a university dormitory. The food is good and the maid service is very well handled. The rooms are very nice and the staff are very easy to get along with." OPENINGS FOR SPRING Bill Ledford, Sophomore Hugoton, Kansas Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843- Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features. second floor of Malott, said the staff would be adequate for cleaning the buildings if custodians would show up for work. TONIGHT IS LADIES' NIGHT Get in free and receive a coupon for one free drink! GAMMONS SNOWMEN 23rd and Ousdahl "A lot of these folks here, they'll miss four or five or six days, and then they'll wonder why their supervisor gets down on them," he said. "If you just put a minimum amount of work in here and stay out of sight, you'll be OK." Paul said he didn't think the custodians were overworked. Thank you for your business this semester. Steven Cockrum Overland Photo SUA FILMS SUA FILMS Presents "Well, it's a state job. That's the best way to sum it up," he said. SNA FILMS Presents The Marx Brothers in HORSEFEATHERS Plus: Laurel & Hardy in "The Music Box" Thursday, December 4th 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium $1.00 "When we leave here at two in the morning, it's sparkling clean as far as I'm concerned," Cosey said. "But my mother is very proud of it, only if something is wrong." SEVERAL OF THE custodians said that even if they managed to finish all their work, no one appreciated the job they did. "If I'm done, I'd at least like to have someone say, 'Hey, this looks nice.' I got to go home and do more cleaning. That's why I want some compliments." Bivens said he tried to find supervisors who could deal with people. "We need supervisors who know not only the nuts and bolts of the job but also to deal with people on a one-to-one basis," he said. George Aeschiman, the night building supervisor for Snow Hall, said he thought tensions between the custodians and management were caused by what he termed "the club mentality" of the management. The management wields an invisible club and pressures the employees into working, Aeschilman said, instead of encouraging or complimenting them. "To some people, pressure might work," he said. "To some it won't. I think that's what a lot of the problem is." "I would praise people for a good job. That gives them incentive to work. That's the way I see it. A lot of people don't see it that way." BIVENS SAID THE department to give people genuine compilations. If a letter praising a custodian is sent to the department, Bivens said, copies are sent to the custodian, placed in his fileboard file and posted on the bulletin board. "We are fair," he said. "We are compassionate when they have serious problems. We are genuinely interested in helping others. We care more than overcome that this is a good place to work." Prough said that although the custodians were free to complain, she didn't think their opinions had any influence in the department. "I don't know that we have any voice, really," she said. really, the man "They'll listen. But what gets done, who knows?" Cosev said. Cosey said she once complained when she didn't get her paycheck for the month because of a mix-up in procedure. The management was not sympathetic, she said. "They flat-out just didn't care," she said. "The way they got it." Ooey said she told them, 'my hearing all you people say. I'm sorry' will not pay a bill I have. I want my work, just like you want your work "It still doesn't make any sense to me." she said. Absenteeism and tardiness guidelines are another area in the department that doesn't make sense to some custodians. She got an interest-free loan of 60 percent of her check, Cosey said, which she paid back when she got the actual check on the 17th of the month. The regular payday in the first of the month. CHRONIC LATENESS is defined as being five or fewer minutes late more than 15 times a year, and extreme lateness is more than 30 times a week or more eight times a year. The guidelines define chronic absenteeism as 12 unexcused absences in a year. The employee is warned after two absences, recommended for a five-day suspension after four absences, and recommended for dismissal six. In both cases, the employee is warned and recommended for suspension if they fail to do so. "I think the guidelines are fair," Bivens said. "I think they have been accepted by our force of people." "You either come in sicker than a dog or you go get a doctor's excuse," Charles Freeman, floor technician at Strong, said. "The only reason he's cut down absenteeism is because everyone comes in sicker than a dog." Freeman said a doctor's note was required for an excused absence. "A lot of doctors won't give you an excuse unless you make an appointment and pay them." Gibson said. Anderson said some people complained about the guidelines, but they were necessary to maintain discipline. Anderson said the housekeeping department would recover from the hostility between labor and capital. He admitted from the AMS conflict with time. "The department has growing pauses. I said, 'I think it's growin in the right place.'" The University School of Fine Arts The 56th Annual Christmas Vespers Sunday, December 7 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Admission Free University Choirs Brass Ensemble University Sympho V TOP CASH for BOOKS TOP CASH for BOOKS .. by the armful or by the trunk full...we pay top prices now thru Dec. 20th. plus receive a 10% off blue discount chip good for purchases in the store. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 9 RUCE SPRINGSTEEN THE RIVER "ie River" is 20 new Springsteen songs ofour sides. You know someone who'd like it. Rockpile SECONDS OF PLEASURE Rockpile is Nick Lowe, Dave Edmunds, Billy Bremner and Terry Williams. Give "Seconds Of Pleasure." THE PSYCHEDELIC FURS The American debut by a group of very high-spirited Englishmen. No, it isn't Santa up there in the sky—it's "Little Stevie Orbit." STEVE FORBERT "LITTLE STEVIE ORBIT" Watch their faces light up when you give them "Faces" - a tasty new double LP from Earth, Wind & Fire. EARTH, WIND & FIRE KENNY LOGGINS ALIVE His first live solo album is the perfect gift for anyone who has sung along at Kenny's concerts. EDDIE MONEY PLAYING FOR KEEPS This Christmas give Money, Eddie Money. How can you go wrong? THE PRESENTS ARE MISSING OUT OF THIS FILM. WE WILL BE RESPONDING TO THEIR REQUESTS WHEN THEY RETURN. Give them what they want to hear (and hope they do the same). RANDY MEISNER One More Song Former Eagle, Randy Meisner, has the spotlight all to himself on "One More Song." Have a heart, give Heart. Heart's "Greatest Hits/Live." Both on this double album. heart KANSAS AUDIO - VISIONS A visionary work by one of the most innovative groups in rock music. WILLIE NELSON & FAMILY HONEYSUCKLE ROSE Spend Christmas with Willie Nelson and his latest collection of great songs. ELVIS COSTELO TAKING LIBERTIES For the person who has everything, Elvis presents 20 songs conspicuous in their absence from his previous LPs. Billy Burmette Billy Burnette tears the roof off the house with the hardest rockin' debut of the year. Cheap Trick Cheap Trick ALL SHOOK UP Just what all your friends are looking for this Christmas: a new Cheap Trick. Great hits make great gifts, and Boz delivers smash after smash on 'Hits!' BOZ SCAGGS HITS! On Columbia, Epic, ARC, Kirshner and Nemper Records and Tapes. Gifts that go on giving all year long. AHL *Columbia* **Epic** are trademarks of CBS Inc. *ARC Records* is distributed by Columbia Records *ARC* **Epic** are trademarks of the American Recordings Company Knirnberg Records and Nemperman Records are distributed by CBS Records Give the gift of music. 1. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Page 10 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Israeli official to give speech next semester By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter An Israeli official has been scheduled to speak at the University of Kansas next semester, despite the disruption of Israeli speaker in mid-November. B'nal R'ith Hilile, a religious and social organization for Jewish students and community residents, will sponsor a speech by Emmanuel Lotem, consul for academic affairs at the Israeli consulate in New York. Ellen Kort, Hillel director, said yesterday that Lottern would speak Jan. 28 at the Kansas Union on the topic of political Situation in the Middle East." Campus security probably will be greater for Lotem's speech than it was for a talk given Nov. 12 by Ehdul Gud, the minister of Israel for the Midwest, Kortalz. Gol's speech, which was to focus on current relations between Israel and other Mideast countries, was delayed after 75-100 Modern students from various countries filled most of the seats in the Satellite Union conference room reserved for the speech. A few of the students demonstrated with signs and distributed literature. AFTER CONSULTATION with Gol and two KU police officers at the speech, Hillel officials decided to move to a private home west of campus. Kort said research for the speech had anticipated any trouble. The panel had not articulated any trouble. "The numbers and vocalism of the students were unexpected," she said. "We expected some protest for sure—it's a very controversial topic. Our programs in the past have had some minor protests, but we were always The campus police officers probably would have called for additional assistance if Hilliard had requested it, but the police officers were better to move the speech. Kort said. able to have the students ask questions at the end. We never had to cancel anything." "They (the police) weren't prepared for a mob, but neither were we," she said. "We didn't give them any indication that there would be such a problem. p196 "This time, the administration, would ask me what I will know what's happening beforehand." p205 A Palestinian graduate student who was at the Satellite Union said the students who had gathered there were not from any one country. They represented several different campus organizations, including Latin-American groups, the Iranian Student Association, the Muslim Student Association and the KU Committee on South Africa, he said. THE STUDENT SAID he thought Hillel could have gone ahead with the speech at the Satellite Union with no major disruptions. "Most of the students from the Mideast are graduate students," he said. "What do they expect us to do? Shoot the suv?" "The Hilibel members took advantage of the fact that they are American and know how to appeal to other American students. It's its cultural thing. Students know how to respond to questions and the customary way to react, and they are not always understood." Jim Denney, director of police for the Lawrence campus, said details for security at Lotem's speech had not yet been worked out. Final security arrangements usually are not made until one or two weeks before an event, and they depend on a number of factors, he said. "The amount of security depends first of all on the number of people expected," Denney said. "We also consider the potentially controversial nature of the speaker or the times, and the problems we have with a particular speaker or topic." Denney said that KU police had not expected any trouble at Gol's speech, and that two on-duty detectives had been assigned merely to stop by the speech and make sure things were going smoothly. "There are so many groups and so many topics being discussed on campus; there's no way it's possible, or there is no way we have police at each event." he said. "We cannot cancel a University event unless obvious public-safety concerns are involved," he said. "If a person wants to speak, our job is to protect him." 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) DRIVERS WANTED We Pile It On! ALMIGHTY EYE BAVE $2.50 Some members of the administration and the University Senate executive committee have expressed concern about the disruption of Gol's speech and about the preservation of free speech on campus. --- Post this贴 for your information. This is the only notice you will see in the UDK See what it is like to tangle with a Navy TOMCAT. On Monday, December 8th, Navy ROTC invites you to come to a Final Countdown. The producers of the film claim that the star of the show is Kirk Douglas. The Navy feels that the real stars are the Grumman Aerospace F-14 Tomcat fighters, and the pilots of Fighter Squadron 84 aboard the USS Nimitz. After the show, there will be Naval Aviators available to discuss with you the thrill of flying a $15 million aircraft at age 23. 864-3161 for information on obtaining your reserved seat. RESERVED SEATING ONLY. Moving will be held for our civilian guests. Pilots will receive a free demonstration flyer and aerobatic trainer. Make payment online, $100 a month tax-free and can lead to your own private flight. After the November incident, Acting Cancellor Del Shankel said that freedom of speech was important to the University and that he would have provided police protection for Gol if he had modified the problem beforehand. SMOKEHOUSE Hog Heaven Rib Special Enjoy Coca-Cola LAST HOG HEAVEN SPECIAL OF THE YEAR! No Compons Acreed With This Special. OLD GARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE All Our Meats Are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor. Hog Heaven Rib Special Enjoy Coca-Cola LAST HOG HEAVEN SPECIAL OF THE YEAR! No Coupons Accepted With This Special. 719 Massachusetts Lawrence Half Slab Big End $3.49 Half Slab Small End $4.99 Full Slab (to go only) $6.99 OFFER GOOD DEC. 3 - DEC. 7 WED. THRU SUN. TONIGHT IS LADIES' NIGHT Get in free and receive a coupon for one free drink! GAMMONS GAMMONS 23rd and Ousdahl 23rd and Ousdahl HOP TO WIN AT THE LOOMING CREEK DIET CENTER 12:00 HOME TO WORK AT THE LOBBING CENTER DIET CENTER By the "weigh" - how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa SAVE UP TO $5.00 ON TRIP TO OR FROM KCI *New Luxurious Van Transportation (Between Lawrence and KCI) FIVE TRANSALYXEAUX *(SERVICE APPROX. DEC. 13, 1980 BR2627) ARRIVE K.C. 7:45AM 11:15AM 3:15PM 5:15PM 8:45PM INTRODUCTORY FARE $17.00 adult fare one way (wag 22.00) $10.00 up to 12 years old canvass (wag 12.00) ARRIVE LAWRENCE 9:45 AM 8:30 PM 6:15 PM 7:15 PM ACI LEAVE K.C.J. 8:15 AM 11:45 AM 3:45 PM 5:45 PM 9:15 PM VAN INTRODUCTORY FARE $17.00 adult tarm one-way (reg. $22.00) $10.00 up to 15 years old everyday (reg. $12.00) AIR CONNECTOR INCORPORATED FOR reservation phone 149-2872 LORIANCE phone F323-8400 or phone your local travel agent introduce Your Fare Jan. 31, 1981 PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 MASS ST. LAWRENCE KANSAS UPSTAIRS Saxophone PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 MASS ST. LAWRENCE KANSAS LIFESTAIRS Piano Tonight The World's Best Trombonist URBIE GREEN 9-midnight $5.00 Cover Friday-Colt 45 TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS • NOVELTY ACTS TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS • NOVELTY ACTS Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, one of America's most exciting themed amusement parks, is conducting a series of auditions for performers to appear in musical reviews and street theatre. You can earn over $4,200 performing six days per week, and weekends in the spring and fall. Many of our former cast members have used this experience as a stepping stone to performing careers in New York, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. If you haven't seen a Worlds of Fun production, ask a friend who has... you'll be surprised! It's great fun, professional experience, and talk about exposure — more than 1,400,000 visitors are waiting to discover your Auditions are conducted from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 at the Training Table Restaurant at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri on each of the following five days: January 11, 18, 24, 25, and February 1. These are the only auditions this year. Don't miss your chance to appear at Worlds of Fun —the best stage experience in the Midwest. Registration is open from 9:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at each audition. For more information, contact the Show Productions Department, Worlds of Fun, 4545 Worlds of Fun Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64161; (816) 459-9276. Sorry, no jobs are available for actors or strictly instrumental acts. CTS --- University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 11 Acting that to the have if heoblem --- Local typists swamped by term paper demands The number of KU students wanting papers typed this week has outstripped the ability of some local typists to handle several Lawrence typists said last night. "If you have a paper typed by tomorrow at 8 a.m., we're sorry," she said. - Twyla Snow, typified for Iron Fence said she was booked for the week. Snow charges $1 for one page of double-spaced pica. Pica type has slightly larger characters than elite types and other features cost extra, she said. Snow, who works full time at the University of Kansas as a typist, she enjoyed typing term papers, theses and dessertations because she learned BARB JOHNSON, 1827 New Hampshire St., said she had to turn up 30 to 40 people writing papers typed last weekend. Johnson said she would not be able to accept another typing job until Dec. 10. Johnson, who is also a typist for KU, said she typed term papers for $1 a page. She said she preferred that students made appointments at least a week in advance, but that she would work on papers if time permitted. Donna Deck, Route 2, also has turned down a lot of students who wanted papers typed this week. Deck said she would not be able to accept any typing at school during the week. Deck said she preferred that students made appointments four to EMERALD CITY ANTIQUES USED FURNITURE LARGE SELECTION JUST NORTH OF THE BRIDGE --seven days in advance, although she sometimes worked in emergencies. COUNTRY Inn 843-1431 THIS SUNDAY, MAKE IT A BUCKET OF CHICKEN FROM COUNTRY Inn 843-1431 We Also Cater For Groups GMAT • GRE • OCAT There IS a difference!!! VAT·SAT GMAT • GRE • OCAT Schedules Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact "Most students get done a day before their papers are due, which makes it easier to study." 8112 Newton Overland Park Starry Hill Deck charges $1 a page for pica and $1.25 for elite. Centers in Median U.S. Circum (913) 341-1220 座 Mitchell L. All A Showing: Prints, Paintings, Photography Dec. 20, 1980 7 P.M. to 9:00 1521 W. 22 St. Terr. 749-5378 Interest required Keep This Until show date "We have several typists on call who we can bid out work to," she said. Encore Copy Corp, 25th and Iowa streets, will be able to type papers this week. Cindy Denny, assistant manager, said. Encore charges $1.40 for double-spaced pica and $1.55 for double-spaced elite. Ellen Warren, 15th and Illinois streets, said students needed to make appointments two to three weeks ahead of time. Warren and her partner both work full-time jobs and type part time at night. Warren said they charged $1 a page but were booked until next Tuesday. Even though Encore can take typing orders this week, Denny said that students should make appointments as far in advance as possible to ensure that the paper would be done to the satisfaction of the student. Mrs. M. Hays, 3227 W. Ninth St., whose service costs $1.25 a page, said she was not booked for this week. Hays, who types part time, said she had just returned from vacation last month. She had previously offered a typing service for seven years. GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE BENJAMIN 7:30 & 9:35 GRANADA DOWNTOWN TRAINING CENTER VARSITY DOWNTOWN 1. THE PRIVATE EYEB 7:15 & 9:00 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 Some times you watch, others you feel. DONALD SUTHERLAND BORN DONALD SUTHERLAND Ordinary People IVE 7:15 BST 3:00 MAT SAT 8:15 PST 2:15 HILLCREST 1 9TH AND IOWA TELEPHONE 822-8300 Mat Sat 2:00 HILLCREST 2 MILLCREST 2 THE ELEPHANT MAN Skits with laughs chosen for Rock Chalk Eve: 7:15 & 9:25 Mal Sat & Sun 7:15 HILLCREST 3 TELEPHONE # 850 6900 SISSY SPACEK 7.30 & 9.30 13 CINEMA 7:40 a.m. Sat & Sun Mat 2:20 Al Amine Mia Margo US MY WORLD A Funky Blues Show CINEMA 2 ALISE AND JOMA SPECIAL! The Classic Sub Four groups of fraternity and sorority members have been chosen to perform in the 31st annual Rock Chalk Revue. Caddy-shack Q. 15, 200 Song: South CHEVY CHASE emon tree 11 WEST 9th Sandwich, Burger, & Yogurt Shop Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Featuring famous submarine sandwiches ZIP-A-DEE-DOO-DAH! Walt Disney's $169 Enjoy Coke Alpha Gamma Delta sorority and Phi Kappa Pi fraternity, Kappa Alpha Theta sorority and Beta Theta Pi fraternity, Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Delta Upsilon fraternity and PI Beta Phi sorority and Sigma Chi fraternity were the groups chosen, Jim Rock Chalk producer, said yesterday. All entries were judged on content, music, set and costume design. "There is good variety in the shows, and there are also entertaining and humorous. Chastain, Chastain." The individual themes all center on the Rock Chalk theme, "The Last Rock." This comedy is about a contest in which somebody from hell has to go to heaven to win the contest. The trick in it is to raise a little hell, Chastain said. Alpha Gamma Delta and Phi Kappa Pell's perform a show titled "The Devil Waits" "Filling Good is Gold: A Denture Adventure" will be performed by Kanna Alpha Theta and Beta Theta Pi. No Coupons Accepted With This Special. and has to submit updated scripts on a regular basis to the Rock Chalk The show is about an Italian dentist who kills people with the gold on their wrist (Roberto Salgado). Upsilon show is called "A Change of Weights." The Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta The show's setting is at a fat camp where camp members try to get the last laugh on their counselor, Chastain show. Pi Beta Phi and Sigma Chi's show is Auditions for the In Between Act Playwrights Dec. 7, 8 and 9 in the Kings Union The show is about a family who must see a raid to see what gets the money of the family in their possession. Fourteen scripts from fraternities, secretes and other campus groups were written. The players selected will perform the opening, the closing and closings of the show. A draft job description has been sent to all faculty and staff; copies are also available from the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor. A search committee has been appointed by the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor to recommend a replacement ior Paul J. Wolfe, Coordinator of Academic Computing. Because of the importance of this position to the academic community, the search committee will hold an open forum on Friday, December 5, from 3:30-5:00, in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility to discuss the procedures to be followed, the job description of the position, and the qualifications for the position. All interested persons are invited to attend and participate. OPEN FORUM DIRECTOR OF ACADEMIC COMPUTING SERVICES The groups had to submit short summaries of their shows in September MASLING HOLLY J. J. Angela's Shoes holiday Sale Thurs-Fri-Sat-Sun Rock Chalk Revue is scheduled for March 6 and 7, 1981, in Hoch Auditorium. 20% OFF One Group Proceeds from the annual student show will help fund KU-YMCA/YWCA group projects. FRYE BOOTS SPORT & CASUAL SHOES 20% OFF DRESS & CASUAL SHOES $90.00 1 All styles Hours: Mon-Thurs 10-8 Holiday Places 10% OFF Fri. & Sat. 10-5:30 24th & Iowa NO COUPONS ON THIS SALE E Choose from our fresh selections for all occasions. And plan ahead now you won't forget anything to make. Planning a Party? American Greetings Creative excellence is an American tradition. ZERCHER PHOTO Hillcrest Center 919 Iowa Cards Downtown 1107 Mass Gifts We also have: Christmas Gifts! Need Cash For Christmas? Great Plains Numismatic Services continues to buy GOLD RINGS, CLASS RINGS, CHAINS, STERLING, FLATWARE, and other MARKED STERLING, SILVER COINS, DENTAL GOLD, COLLECTIONS & RARE COINS. - Gold Chains * Sterling Rings * Sterling Chains * Silver Bars * Gold Rings * Gold Coins with Coins Xmas 1980 Quality Jewelry or Investors Gifts For Collectors *Proof Sets* *Coin* *Rare Cases* Supplies *Mint Sets* *Gold* *Silver* 842-8002 Great Plains Numismatic Services RETAIL EAGAN BARRAND LIQUOR Make your plans now for flavorful festivities for the upcoming holiday. . SANTA CLAUS A New Concept That's Long Overdue Eagan-Barrand Retail Liquor Southwest Plaza Shopping Center located behind Hordeo's and Kate's on 10th Ave. 9:00 a.m.-m. OPENINGS FOR SPRING NOWHERE BUT TEXAS "I like the location, the people, the opportunities and the activities." Jen Marie Rau, Junior Houston, Texas Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-257 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features Page 12 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 KU shoots down Mavs By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawks put on a show last night to let the home folk see just why they are ranked seventh in the country. And what a show it was. The women's team totally dominated Northern Oklahoma and coasted to a 107-5 victory in KU's first home game of the season. Not only did Kansas, 7-4, win the game, it may have won some fans. In the opening of a double-header with the men's team, the women benefited from the crowd. And at the end of the game, the men's standing and cheering the women on. THE JAYHAWKS took the opening tip, and freshman Tracy Claxton scored the first 2 points. The scoring went back and forth for the first few minutes, and then they led. But that was as far ahead of the Jayhawks as they were to get. Chris Stewart popped one from the corner, her favorite spot, and then Lynette Woodard hit from the key to the game 12-12 with 11:20 left in the first ball. Suddenly, the once-lethargic Jayhawks came to life. They ran off 11 unanswered points to grab a 23-12 lead and kept on rolling. KU HEAD COACH Marian Washington said that the show her team put on was a difficult one because it was one of the more competition from the Mavericks. "We expected a little more of a challenge," she said. "They have been a very restless ball球." Northern Oklahoma, a junior college with an 8-2 record, won the NJCAA national championship in 1979. But Leo Canaday, the Maverick's coach, admitted that KU was more than his team was ready for. "We knew we were in for more than we could handle," he said. "I'm disappointed that we couldn't keep our compose. We made some bad passes Kansas was somewhat out of it early, but that didn't last too long. Washington's explanation for the turnback her team made was simple. "We decided to play," she said. "We didn't come out with intensity." SEVERAL PLAYERS were fighting colds and were tired from traveling. One player who responded particularly well was Clxton. The 6-foot post was all over the court, grabbing his give KU a second and often third shot. "I was getting in position much quicker than my opposition," Claxton said. "I'm getting more experience and confidence there. I feel really good out there now." Another player played good on the court last night. Shebra Legrant was in the lineup for the first time this season and scored six games because of a knee injury. Legrant played 18 minutes and scored 18 points. "I love it, I love it," she said. "I've waited so long." She said her knee, which was twisted in the scrimgum, was bothering her a little. "It's nothing I can't handle," she said. WASHINGTON SAID she wanted to bring Legrant back slowly, but did admit that the senior forward came back strong and seemed ready to go. But Washington has a problem. Claxton and Megan Scott have played so well this season, she said, that they deserved to start. She is working on some different combinations of players for the Hanover Christmas Tournament in New York Dec. 19-21, but was reluctant to say just what those combinations were. Louisiana Tech, The No. 1 team in the nation, and Long Beach State, No. 5, have been scouting the Jayhawks, and Washington said she SANTA ASTA Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift ASTA Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Deadline for Orders Dec. 8 4.5 oz. Chocolate Kiss Delivered With Each Order JIMMY CLIFF AND Third World Dec. 7th — 2 shows 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. Africa All Tickets $8.50 KIEF'S in Lawrence At Your Favorite Record Store In KANSAS CITY AND At The UPTOWN Box Office 3700 Broadway Uptown, 3700 Broadway Kansas City, MO (816) 756-3370 Conjunction SAS 106 1/2 YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY. 3:30, 7:00, 10:00 wanted to surprise them in the tournament. SNA FILMS Presents Friday and Saturday, Dec. 5-6 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium— No Refreshments Allowed Claxton and Woodard shared high point honors last night with 24 points each. Woodard also handed out six and eight steals and eight eighteen to help the KU cause. ALEXANDER SALK INO • MARILUN BRANDIO • GENE HACKMAN • RICHARD DONNER FILM DREWTORRES/Kansen staff KU had six players in double figures, including two reserves, Legrant and Robin Smith. Smith is the three long tenure player from the charity line for her 10 points. SUA FILMS Kansas shot 52 percent from the field, 60 percent from the free-throw line. Northern Oklahoma hit 70 percent of its charity shots, but could only manage 35 percent from the field. KU's zone defense proved too tough for the Mavericks, as the defense swiped the ball 23 times and blocked five shots. Most of Claxton's and Legrant's shots came from inside and Woodard constantly penetrated, hung in the air and scored from the key. | | PG | FT | TE | REF | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Eckels | 5 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Stout | 3-12 | 9-0 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Ware | 4-7 | 3-5 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 11 | | Dorellly | 6-7 | 3-5 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 2 | 9 | | Donally | 3-8 | 4-0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 9 | | Tucker | 3-4 | 3-2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 | 9 | | Tucker | 3-4 | 3-2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 | 9 | | Kramer | 3-4 | 3-2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 | 9 | | Kramer | 3-4 | 3-2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 8 | 9 | | Soquene | 0-0 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Soquene | 0-0 | 0-1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Jones | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | | Jones | 16-18 | 18-17 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 93 41 Norton 33 Iowa Mans | | FG | FT | REB | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Woodward. | 10 | 8 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 24 | | Meacham. | 1-2 | 9 | 6 | 6 | 1 | 34 | | Claxton. | 12-19 | 0-4 | 18 | 1 | 0 | 14 | | Lauschel. | 11-39 | 0-4 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 11 | | Legerant. | 4-10 | 3-4 | 6 | 1 | 0 | 14 | | Legrand. | 8-12 | 3-3 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 18 | | Smith. | 5-12 | 3-3 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 10 | | Smith. | 3-7 | 4-4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 10 | | Stewart. | 2-3 | 0-3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 4 | | Stewart. | 2-3 | 0-3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 4 | | Taylor. | 1-3 | 0-3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 2 | | Kelly. | 0-4 | 0-3 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 2 | | Kelly. | 0-4 | 0-3 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 2 | | Totals | 44-44 | 15-25 | 38 | 13 | 1 | 197 | Shebra Legrant grab a rebound in last night's game with Northern Oklahoma. Legrant, who sat out KU's first six games with an injured knee, pulled down four rebounds and scored 18 points to help Kansas at a 197-50 triumph over the Mavericks. Ready to help out Legrant is KU's Megan Scott. Trying to take control for Northern Oklahoma are Gayle Stout and Robyn Phillips. The seventh-ranked Jayhawks won their sixth game of the season; they have no losses. Northern Oklahoma . . . 20 30 . . . - 50 Kansas . . . 53 52 . . . - 107 --- Patronize Kansan advertisers Popcorn Popcorn Popcorn Popcorn Popcorn Popcorn ... Great for Christmas Giving! FOUR FLAVORS • Buttered • Cheese • Caramel • Cinnamon (Available in bags or 6 1/2 gal. tins) Don't Be Left Out ... Place Your Order Early! Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa 841-8271 Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium Sun.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. & Sat. 11-10 Holiday Plaza 2449 Iowa 841-8271 Greenbriar's OLD WORLD DELICATESSEM Cheese Emporium Sun.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. & Sat. 11-10 --- Go For A Winner NORDICA Rossignol Skis and Nordica Boots Why settle for less than the best? first serve first serve SKI & SPORTS SHOPPE 840 Massachusetts 841-0811 Evenings till 5:30 • Thursday till 8:30 WANT ADS PERSONAL CHRIMSTA TREE FARM. Beautiful PINE be open until all our selected trees have been cut. Drive East on Highway 10, four hour drive to Eagle off ramp, 10 miles 54-22-20. * 4 households of very good looking men Wanting ladies for friendship and hopefully we are. Are really people and we do much. We need more people and an anytime 811-5003. -summers 12-5 Do a friend a favor—send a professional tuck-in by r. w.vink. Call 841-573. 12-8 Frustrations relieved, grades not guaranteed, Celebrate your possible success or failure in style at THE CROSSING. 12-5 Hey Colorado show us more than your gorgeous gifts to beautiful ones in Track. We love all of them, and we can find them from all of us to "All of you." 12-4 Fat Man Walny, after 9 months, I think we should go the distance, like 9.999. You're appreciated, respected, needed and loved more than you'll ever know. Fat woman. Schwieble Your loving, supporting, an- noying wife. You know she's one that can end and land forever. It's the person you love, who has happened in such a short period of time. So be there, always. You're 12-4 best. **ZD** Lonely Computer Major desires Senior Tri- Delt. Must be Fine at an major, preferte- d to have a Bachelor's degree or equiv. required. Small text essential. Apply in person, or Call anytime for an applique 12-4 A. R. Ross are red, violets are blue, if you're not a good boy your life is through you. If you're not a good boy you must over the hill, now, but you will always be mine. You know who. 12-4 Hot sounds and cold beer will be brought to you by the Risin' HORIZON Band and the Entertainer. Monday night, Dec. 8th, Be there! Celebrate the end of classes with some sound toundi^2 Brass: HORIZON Band at the Entertainer, Monday Night, Dec. 8. Be there! 12-5 SERVICES OFFERED - DO EXCELLENT SEWING, ALTERATIONS AND MENDING! $3.50 an hour. Call 41-609-8128. 12-8 TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf Experienced typet -thesis, dissertations, selecting selecter Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-230-1 Experienced typem-let paper, thesis, mice, mice correction, Proofreading, corrected 845-0953 Repairs, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, editing, autocorrect, Self-Electronic Call. Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with the computer. Req's B.S., B.A. 842-669-8097 after 5 weeks, if fees are met. Experimented K.U. typet IBM Correcting K.U. typet IBM Correcting a Sandy, evening and evening. 748-750. FOR YOUR TIMING COMMENT ENCORE COPY CORPS 214.5 & iaccs. Holiday Plaza 843-200 IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re-liable, accurate. IBM icae/itea. 862-250 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. ttf Typti/Editor, IBM Pica/Elec. Quality Work, reasonable rates. Thies, dissertations welcome; edit/inyou. Call Joan. 842- 9127. **tf** Accelerate, experienced typist. IBU correcting Selectable. Call Danna 842-2744. For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra, 841-489h if Prompt service by experienced typist on elite electric typewriter. Proofreading, Mrs. Hays 843-1737. 12-8 Excellent Typist will type your papers. Call 842-8091. 12-8 DISPRESSION HEALTH BLOOD pressure, and blood bleeding of the ulcers schedule spring dissection typing now. March-April is in February-February is cooler. Pottery 842-4768 Reasonable rates. Quick service. IBM elements, 10 or 12 pitch. 843-8611 or 841-7668. 19.5 Person or persons to share apt. Furnished. close to store, on bus route. 841-9869. 12-8 WANTED GOLD--SILVER--DIAMONDS. Class rings. GOLD--SILVER--DIAMONDS more. Free pick-up, 814-4741 or www.freepickup.com. Non-smoking female to newly decorated, fully furnished 2 bdm. 2 bath Gatehouse apl. $130 + 1' utilities. Call 841-9790. 12-8 Buo-Silk-Trade. Gold, Silver and Cola. Cheetaw and get the best deal in town. Great Plaits Numeristic Services. 18th E. (5 downstreet Lawrence) 842-800-1286. 2 or 3 roommates to sublease 3 bdm. apt; 1/3 elec. all others pdk, on bus route. Vci. nice. nqr-2074. Ask for Dave/Mike. 12-8 Female to be beautiful new ig. house with 3 others for spring semester. Eowm $115 + 4 / utiles 5 min. from canopi. Call 811-6543. 12-5 Roommate needed for 2 bdrm. apt. Prefer non-smoking grad. female. $132.50 + 1% utilities. 841-6368 12-8 Female or male housemates Nice large room; +/- 2.5 utilities Call anytime 811-5033 mo. +/- 7 utilities Call anytime 811-5033 Male roommate to share bdmr. apu- furnished by bus route. Female roommate to share supplies apt. 4836. Keep trying. 105% , utilities. 4836. Keep trying. 105% , utilities. Female Roommate Needed for spring semester of college. Req. 10 minutes walk to campus. $255 utilizing room number and mileage information. Female computer for a 2 birmingham from campus; $150.50 plus 5% utilities. From campus: $189.75 Roommate for completely furnished 2 bdrm. 139-749-6300 or 1 gas call Eile 128-749-6300 748-749-3093 Roommate wanted, female Dec. grad for Overland Park area, non-smoker, Call 841-3718. 12-8 1 or 2 roommates for Jayhawk Towers 1st second semester. $125/mi. Call 844-7360 Housmates wanted, $25 mo. + 10th. student preferred, 50% Indiana. 1163 12-8 Mature = Female(s) (Preferably) to share very large 4-leaf home, 1/8 leaf, from campus. Must be tolerant of 2 cats. $5 +! using 749-769-6-8-p or before 8 a.m. on Friday. Female housemate for spring semester: 3 bdrm. house, 2 min. from campus; $92. +- utilities. Call 749-1950. 12-5 Need female roommate to share two bdrm. as furniture except for your rent. Rent $117.50 plus 1' utilities. On a bus route. 12-8 749-0966 Need one fun-loving but studious female roommate to share a close-to-campus 2 bdm. apt.; for the spring semester Call 841-9750. 12-8 Female roommate to share extra nice, furnished, 2 bdrm. 2 bath duplex. $115 +1% utilities. Call 841-8390. 12-8 Formal roommate needs: Large 3 bdmr. Large 1 bdmr. + i.electric. Call Joan 841-1325 12-8 Roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. in Jay- burg. $125.00 Utilities include 841-2732 Legislative Aides, January 12-April 10. no way, good experience, possible college cred. In lieu of Hoon, Host Gowns: Ferrice, Topka, *66614*, 891-3895-8994, 272-1592—evenings. 12-8 Wanted-Subjects to diet for experiment Write to P.O. Box 120, Lawrence, for more Good skiing company for Christmas holidays in Colorado. Call Jurgen 684-125-6240 Male or female roommate to share 2 bdrm. Minimum investment required except your $150, 749-5333, 12-8 Female, consummate; to share furnished 2 baths; to have sex with consented people sphare (pls. 1854-1857) includes utilities 1256 Person to share house: Excellent location in Rosemont with no room, $160 no utilities. Cai after check-in. Noti. studios, non-smoking female to 1824-50. $125 utilities and deposit. 794-218 8124-50 * 19 utilities and deposit. 794-218 Roommate wanted, female or male to share nice large 2 bdmr, town house $115 + $ electricity. Call John 843-1916 or 842-2001. 18.8 Male roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. 1/3 utilities. Call 843-125 after 4 p.m. I am making my annual Christmas migratory trips to Canada. I am making a cold mail at B44-732. Department of Commerce, HAWY 180. Roommate wanted to share 3 bdrm. 2 story apt. in house 1 bilk from stadium. $110.mo. + 1/3 ecle. Start Jan. 745,220. 12-8 Roommate, neat, non-smoker, to share two roommates. 60/m² plus 1/4 itsies. 12-8 Scott 749-1019 Roommate needed (Desperately!) Share 1/3 Roommate needed (Desperately!) Share 1/3/ costs. Towers. Call 841-9853 A.S.A.P. 1/2 Anyone but a DEAD HEAD wanted for a roommate. Call 841-7628. 12-8 Female roommate for second semester in large two-bdm. apt. Located on bus route. Rent $135 a month plus ½ utilities. Call Jennifer after 5:00 at 843-162-194. University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 Page 13 The University Daily KANSAN WANT ADS Call 864-4358 e large ms $90/ 841-5093. 12-5 m. apt.; e. Very 12-8 l. house r. Own m cam- 12-5 Colns. n town. 16th E. 12-8 bdrm. 3 minutes lies. Call 12-8 pt. Fur- ½ util- 12-8 s female campus. 2 ater. Call 12-8 raise, fur- 15 + 1/2 nice, fur- 15 + 1/2 12-8 il 10, no lege cred- SW 24h 96—days, 12-8 AD DEADLINES one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one-two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten one two three four five six seven eight nine ten CLASSIFIED RATES periment for more 12-5 finished 2 3 others ilities ex- 12-8 15 words or fewer ... Each additional word. mas holi- 8240. 12-5 > 2 bdrm. ur bdrm. 19.6 location preferred. Call after 12-8 e to share 1115 + ½ 842-2001 12-8 female to location. . 749-2618 12-8 ERRORS frm. apt. 843-1745 12-5 share two titles. Call 12-8 n., 2 story . $110/mo. 12-8 Share 1/3 A.P. 12-8 P. 12-8 ted for a 12-8 imester in this route. Cell 12-8 mester in bus route. ties. Call 12-8 to run Monday ... Friday 5 p.m. Tuesday ... Thursday 5 p.m. Wednesday ... Monday 5 p.m. Thursday ... Tuesday 5 p.m. Friday ... Wednesday 5 p.m. FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by calling the Kansan business office at 843-9476. The Kansan will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad. KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358 ENTERTAINMENT TRAVEL CENTER Domestic & International Reservations Reservations * Airline * Escorted Tours * Car Rental * Group Rentals International Student Specialists 841-7117 Center 1601 W. 23rd St., Lawrence KS Southern Hills Shopping Center 301 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, Rd. 9:30-5:30 M-F, 8:30-2000 Sat Belly dancer for your holiday parties. No stag functions. 841-353-9289 after 5 p.m. 12-8 ... GREEK SPORTS DESK FRIDAY, DEC. 5, 8:30 ROCK'N ROLL WITH ... You're all invited to come celebrate N.J.'s 40th anniversary of its first year for Headquarters. ibc, short-term counseling and crises intervention center. ibc, short-term counseling and Get Smart. Thursday, Dec. 4 from 8 p.m. till midnight at Off-the-Wall Kasey Wold, and Get Smart. Thursday, Dec. 4 from 8 p.m. till midnight at Off-the-Wall Kasey Wold, and partially funded by Activity Fees. 12-4 NASHVILLE REPLAY W.75*B AND BETCALF your midwest connection for 'rengenead rock' r noll 'n country music' BEST LIVE COUNTRY ROCK BANDS Monday - Saturday Hours 1:00 to Midnight SHOW YOUR COLLEGE I.D. GET YOUR FIRST BEER FREE K. U. HOLIDAY PARTY NIGHT December 19th 722-9735 for band info NASHVILLE REPLAY WITHOUT THE JAYHAWKS IS LIKE GOING WITHOUT COMING Guitarist BEER DRINKERS! 25e Draws Tuesday- Thursday 7:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m. East Side Tavern, 900 Penn. 12-8 --- FACILITY AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES FOOD, LIQUOR, OR BOTH SKI ASPEN/ SNOWMASS - 6 days/5 nights in a luxurious Snowmass $185 per person Charter bus option $85.00. FOR OVER INFORMATION CALL Need Christmas money? Buying SILVER-V Boyes 731 New Hampshire 842-8733. 731 New Hampshire 842-8733. □ Discounted additional days □ Free ski party □ Free mountain picnic □ Detailed skis or boots $180 3 days lifts at Aspen Highlands 3 days ski rental ANNOUNCEMENTS Get Ready to let lose! The Brass-powered entertainer, Monday night. Dec. 12 1-8 $85.00 INFORMATION CALL ROBBY 6:45 9:25 AFTER 6:00 YOUR OTHER AVAILABLE Original Arts & Crafts. Have fun and do your Custom Shopping at the same time. Learn how to create jewelry, pottery, weaving, painting, wood sculpture, embroidery, community Bldg., 11th and Vermont. 12-5 FOR RENT CON CALL ION CALLE **AIRONZA STREET DUPLIES XAVAILABLE** bathroom, study room, range refrigerator; dishwasher, upsal. central air conditioning; carpet and rugs; $50 utilities. Call 843-5790 or $20 utilities. 3 Bedroom Townhouses Renting now. Other townhouses, will be available; all attached garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Parkway Townhouses, 28th and Kassel, 749-680-5311. 3. bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt 4. kitchen, and family room, comfortable. Reasonably priced. Call 641-287-5900. Apt. and rooms for rent, newly remodeled kitchen and downtown. No phone. 814-550-7599 Spacious, 2 bdrm. apt. for 2 to 4 people. Upstairs, laundry and downstairs. No pets. Phone 844-755-2300. For fall or spring, Naisim Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of it, weekly maid service to clean your room and much more. If you're looking for a home or if an apartment isn't what you want, Naisim Hall, 1600 Hill Drive, 843-8529, if you call. Villa Captt Aprt. Unfurried 1 & 2 bdm. villa. available. Central, air wall-to-wall carpet, location. 21% block south of city. Call 642-875-3200 at 3:30 or an on time on weekends. For rent, nite apt. for men, next to campus. May work out port of call if Phone 841-8453. 3 bdm, townhouse with burning fireplace and cash gain. Will take 3 students. 200f **If** *you don't have a cash gain.* 2 berm, furruled mobile homes. Quitet quested $16,000 and up. Jaiyawk Court, $845. Quested $18,000 and up. For rent now or in December, townhouse, 2 bdrm. at Pine Haven Court 21st and 43rd floors. $675/month washer, full basement with washer and dryer furnished. 1½ baths. Close to shopping center, bus route. We pay water. $270/ person. Inside 1. lr yard. 1. yr. interest. No pets. Call 843-210-34 LY, IF YOU ARE LIVED OF CROWDED APARTMENT LIRED, YOU CAN ENJOY TIME WITH YOUR FAMILY. TEMPORARY DUPLICES OFFER, FEATURING HATCHET, ATTACHED BATH, KITCHEN, ATTACHED BATH, RATE RATE, ROOM - PERFECT FOR RENTALS, LOCATED BETWEEN 2nd and 3rd on WCBSN STREET FOR MORE INFOR-MA. A.M. TO 5 P.M.). DONT WAIT till the last minute to find a home in town. Townhomes will be ready for you in Jan. Townhouses will be furnished, conveniently located at 9th and Em- bury home. Townhouses for more info call 842-351-0000. For more info call 842-351-0000. NEW 4-LEX for competition for second semester. New Jersey FUNDRAISER, and COMPLETELY FUNNISHED. Conveniently located at North and Indiana, within a mile from campus. Phone: (8) 503-2412, 4455 (8 a.m. 5 p.m., or 814-1212. 12-8). STUDIO -sublease at Meadowbrook for烘焙 materials, kitchen equipment, washed, water and cable paid $205 841-896- 3715. Brand new 3-bdrm. duplex in super location, kitchen, appliance, draps, C/A, garage, $225, 841-5197 day, 842-9045 evening, 12-8 Spectacul 1军贴, arm in. trailingd. Gas and water paid. Bus stops in front of apt. Use of tennis courts. Bus calls. Pool 749-1948. 12-8 Christian Campus House has a few open 9:00-5:00. Call 842-6258, between 12:38-6:00. MEADOWBROOK TOWNHOUSE available on bus route. Phone 841-2410. Grab on bus route. Phone 841-2410. Grab on bus route. Phone 841-2410. To add to subshelpe: 2 hdm. apt. 5 min. from campus. Laundry facilities, dishwasher, free parking. balcony. water and trash paid. room: 478/me. $790. Call Suit 8541, 8541. after 2:30. Studio for sublease at Meadowbrook. Furnished, water paid. $205. Available Jan. 1 or before. 841-5735. 12-85 Roommate to share luxury condominium, roommate to share apartment, place close to campus. $140 mn. $41-60b Sublanea studio api. fully furnished. Lo- cal location $900 per room. Call 12-5 3471 or 841-5635. Like new—1 bdmr, apt. access from stadium, Sublease. 841-6315 after 5:00. 12-8 Spacious bdmr. for male in apt, with two students. Friendly. Pre-skilled january 1st—you decide $13/mo. plus 1/3 low utilizes 5 min. to campus. 843-4584. 12-8 Subaque b2dm. aptr, (4 beds) $80 per mm² b2dm. aptr paid %1 paid ½ paid ¼ paid ½ paid bus route. 941-9788. 12-8 Large, furnished one bdm, apt on bus route, $210/mo. 749-2419. 12-5 Very large main floor 2 bdrm. unfurnished room. Main lift. Bedrooms, off-street parking. Davie. 1st, 2nd, 3rd floors. Also only $290/mo. with $300 deposit. Utilities $450. Absolutely no petts. Jennie is 12 ft. 648. Absolutely no pets. Must subsale 2 bdm. apm, Jan 1 or before 10am (excluding FU) or for KU cars. New carret, 841-6098. Female Roommate to share 2 bdrm. fur- mental. On bus route $135.10 paid. 844-7681-128. 12-8 Available Dec. 22, 1 bdmr. apt. $190/no. + plus utilities. On bus route. 841-8265 or 841- 8247. 12-5 Available Jan. 1, Luxury duplex, Meadow- side, dbls, bdlg, $450, $480-381 or $490, $525-481. Non-smoking roommate needed for fitting up of the bed along with (Cali) Chuck Alexander at $125.00, (Cali) Chuck Alexander at $125.00, (Cali) Chuck Alexander at $125.00. 2 housemates, 3 bdm. house, furnished. 4 housemates, 5 utilities, 12- wood, 841-6417 Sublease nicely painted 1 bdm. apt. Water wall surfaces on stairs at front door 12. 844 or 181-831 House for rent. 4 blks, west of Carthus- ter, 210 sq ft. AC, disposal. Dishwasher. Avail. Dec. 21 for 1 or 2 responsible people, pref. 12-8 year lease with summers optional. 12-8 For rent: Furnished. Very large 2 bdmr. apt. Fireplace. Share utilities $300/mo. 1 bdmr. apt. furnished. Share utilities. on宅业. $175/ph. Phi. 424-6088. 12.4 Specious semi-furnished apt. in older home near K.U. Private entrance, hardwood floors. $198/mo. + utilities. 10-5 $42-$415. Evenings 1110 Conn. Pets k.o.k. No children. " Want to sublease beautiful 1 bdm.舵. Furnished, right off campus. Call 841-8555. 2 bdm. unfurished in 4-pix. Closet cnusp. and downtown in 8-pix. 12-8 811-945-6455. 12-8 Overland Park park apt. avail for sublease Feb. 12-24, 2016; $345-$485, 1-341-754-515 a. f. pcm. 5 a.m. 12-24, 2016; $345-$485, 1-341-754-515 a. f. pcm. 5 a.m. MUST SUBLEASE spacial, 3 bdrm. apt. Located one block from campus. Call 841- 5607, 9-10 p.m. Nest and well-cared 3 bdmr. house, with kitchen, carpeting, laundry room, carpeted, C/A, and kitchen appliances. $350. Call Mark 843-8323 or 842-0221. 12-9 New brand 3 bdmr. duplex at 305-11 volved location. C/A, Carpeted, garage, volved location. C/A, Carpeted, garage, 843-8323. Call Mark 843-8323 or 842-0221. Roommate/share 2 bbm. Trallridge贴印. In- partment. Potluck except bbm. $19/month. Potluck except bbm. $19/month. Sublease for spring semester 3 bpm. germ. Call 749-1346 for more information call 749-1346 after 8:00 a.m. 2 bdmr, nt, near bear on bus route 789-211, 789-211, Bryan or Chuck. Keep trying. 12-8 Spacious 1 bdm. Meadowbrook appt. Must sublease! Two balconies with beautiful view of sunset. Quiet. Water and Gas paid. Office. Randy 845-408 or 845-608 office. 12-8 PIN OAK TOWN Home NEW 2 bdrm. 11b. bath, very spacious & private w/microwave, dishwasher, range & ref. 6 mo. or yr. kitchen, range & ref. 6 mo. or yr. Call Ed Gulderdon 842-348-371. 12-5 1. Nice 2 bcdm, unfurnished apt, in small 84-51737, 84-6340, 84-5215, 12-5 84-51737, 84-6340, 84-5215, 12-5 SUBLET: Trailrille 2 bdrm. apt. Gas and water p. on Bus Route 78. 12-8 For sublease, two bdmr. completely furnished ant. With fireplace. All utilities paid except electricity. Available after 12-7-80. Jat at 74-083. No calls after 12-8-18. p.m. STOP PAYING RENT - Why not own your home within walking distance to KU, and downstreet. Call 843-1811, ever Harold Fox Institute, 804-7433. Heads 843-5433. Terns Estate, Inc. Possible position for housemat during 2nd semester: room, 1₁₃ blocks away, 12- 8-18, 749-621-271 Sublease or roommates. 3 bdm. Trallridge @ bus route. Start Jan. 18. 841-5554. Saves gas-Walk to class, 2 bdmm, gpm. with preferred travel time. Available January 1. Phone 844-659-128- 123. Available Avalanche up-in in older burns. Bums kidney, colon, stomach, liver, skin, kitchen and bath. No pets. $160. Ullite Beautiful, 1 bdmr, apt Elev. Free bus Cindy, 82-4444 Available now. 18-8 Deluxe room. Private home for mature, children. entrance, 2 rooms. west of campus. 843-782-9781. 12-8 Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them! 1. At study makes sense to use them! 2. At study exam preparation. "New Analysis of West- ern Civilization." Calls Bookstore and Oread Book Store. WATERBED MATTEESRS. $36,98; 3 year WATERBED MATTEESRS. $36,98; 3 year WATERBED MATTEESRS. $36,98; 3 year WATERBED MATTEESRS. $36,98; 3 year Alternator, starter and generator specialist. AUTO-MOTOR ELECTRIC, 843-906-9000, SUNLITE MOTORS. 1976 VW Rabbit, blue with black interior, 1950 miles. Very good condition mechanically and physically. Muddlein tires. AMK-4M Call: 841-263-4844. 12-5 Must sell soon! FOR SALE PHOTO IDENTIFICATION CARDS, proof positive, laminated in hard plastic. For design purposes, the stamped envelope to D&J Productions, de K Box 232, Tempel, Arizona AZ8321, 12-4 Vintage clothing and neat ole "junace" at 1026 S. 5th St., near the intersection of 3308 W. 6th, 11-15 Tues.-Sat. 222-224, ff. 877-948. MATTRESSEN, Orthopedic sets from $29. MATTHEW'S, Orthopedic sets from $29. MATTRESSEN, one block west of 6th and low walls. GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOTHES Europe- lean jerseys. T-shirts, slacks. Call us. 612-485-3000. www.worldwear.com 1975 TRS excellent condition, full sun roof. low energy. 30" x 20" of Bulgarian murals. Of Serbian inquiries only. Baldenwil 594-316-81 www.baldenwil.com More old stuff than one commonly has to do is to build a fountain. One special odor bit of Sterling and pottery this week. Emerald City, just north of Johnny's in N. Lawrence. Open Mon-Sat. 5-50. 1975 Suzuki CT-750. Must sell now. Good condition. Price $63.50-$68.50. Can be sent to 1201 Louisiana Road. 76 Pontiac Lemans, 4-aperiod, runs good, dependable. Call evening, 12:38-12:50 Canon 100mm with case. Has only been used for a 2 week period. 864-1303. 12-5 Bauerlium bumper pool table. Excellent Rectangular bumper pool table all balls included. 841331-after 5 p.m. 12-5 841331-under 7 p.m. 12-5 For sale: Large, sturdy, slightly worm early American couch. $50. Call 749-8451. 12-8 2-year-old townhouse, 1344 sq. ft. 3-ft. 1/3 bath. a car, garage费. quiet, ground in SW Lawrences. Assume loan. 82,600. B417-8755 or -1,255-0853. 18- Turntable - Techniola BL-1700. Direct Drive semi-automatic turntable. Excellent condition. First $100 takes or best offer. 749- 0006. 12-8 Motorcycle for male. 1973 Kawasaki 175 cc. New inspection sticker, 3,000 miles. $200. 841-2676. Keep trying. 12-8 Technics 45 watt receiver and a pair of Accoustic Research book shelf speakers. 841-1552. 12-5 Term papers coming up! Need a journalist's Christmas present? Silver-reed electric typewriter, Excellent condition, barely used. Mint-11/30-Old. Curt 864-2295-4500. Mine 11/30-Old. Curt 864-2295-4500. Yamaha Stereo amplifier, Pioneer Turntable, and Northface Down Jacket--all in excellent condition. Call 841-7641. 12-8 Must sell—1979 Grand Prix—like new, every option. T-ops $10,500 new, asking $8,200 or make offer. Call Chuck 643-640-1260 MT250 Honda 75. Excellent condition, engine recently serviced and overhailed by professional. Asking $500. Book value- negotiable. Mate 841-5327. See it 12-8 Beta Max 6 hour video recorders. Direct from factory—full warranty. $1100 retail now only $600. $42-2853. 12-8 One pair Brooks jogging shoes, never worn. Men's 8/19 $19; Women's 8/19 $23. Call 843-1312. 12-5 Two red chiffon formalns, worn only once, bridalmen. Great for Xmas or Valentine. Two red chiffon formals, worn only once, by bridesmaids. Great for Xmas or Valen- ties parties or wedding. Sizes 8/10 and 10/12. $20 each. Phone: 842-0424. 12-8 SOUNDENEFICIO STEREO. TURNTABLE. CASSETTE. RECORDER. 8 TRACK. AM- RACK. HEADPHONES. 18 RECORDS. 2 MONTHS LARGE. $350. 12-8 JEEP5, CARDS, TRUCKS available through government agencies, many sell for under £200. Call 602-941-8041 Ext. #3882 for your information on how to purchase. 12-5 Mamiya DXS-100 35mm camera w/ 55mm l. f. 18mm. Pli. 200mm Bnkullen lens bt. 2x converter, and camera bag $275 or best offer. Call evenings 622-6268. 12-8 NEW SKIS 190cm Kneel formal soft; WINDINGS never mounted, must sell 12mm Yamaha receiver CR 440, Tape deck TC 360 Yamaha receiver CR 440, Tape deck TC 360 condition soil separator: 842-8220. Cedar cheek垫 $20. Smith-Corona Manual Cedar cheek垫 $20. Smith-Corona Manual Gardner B450 -194 after 12:00. Vaughn B450 -194 after 12:00. Pair of aki mittens in 3018 Learned Hall Call 864-4494 and identify. 12-3 HELP WANTED TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES/ ORDERERIES: Will you share your work with us? Please contact our nursing home residents? Our consumer organization, Kansas State University (KSNI) need your help and input on nursing home conditions and your opinion on the care and treatment of you. We will be kept confidential. Please use this information when calling 617-290-4504, *Mass St.* 24, Lawrence, Kansas 60044. OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer, year, round Europe, S. Aner., Australia, All. Fields. $500-1280 monthly, Sightseeing. Free imm. Box, SB-sk 11K Corona Cardina. 12-8 12-8 $1500 to $3000 monthly working off-shore or in-house positions, necessitate work one quarter, net of benefits; list of companies hiring sample application. Owen International Dept. 24 I.P.O Box 644 Waco, Texas 76901. DEPT: Owen International Dept. 24 I.P.O Box 644 Waco, Texas 76901. Student assistants needed in records department 15-20 hours per week during school year and full year during school break and 15-20 hours per week during marker center, 1565 Engl Road. 12-5 Part-time help to light ligh- shiping, filing, and typing. Flexible schedule approximately 20 hours a week. A graduate in person at 12:59 p.m., 12 mile north of mall, 12:5 24:40 lunction. Henry's has opening for 3 persons noon hours M-F. Apply in person. Serious inquiries only. 12-4 NUBSES Psychiatric nursing provides a wide range of services for personal growth. We offer experiential fringe benefits including $120 or $188 monthly plus shift differentials. 2 Options may be available only once a month, night shift never hours: 4. Excellent continuing educational programs, holiday and sick leave. BCBLS life and death care credit. We welcome your application. Call Nursing. Osawatomie State Hospital. Osawatomie. Minority applicants encouraged. RESEARCH ASSISTANTS. Neurobiology Laboratory, Human Development Department. Degree qualification: B.A., (or B.S.) or Master's degree in medical and/or scientific sciences preferred; training and/or experience with chemical and biochemical cell fractionation and HPLC techniques. Contact Professor Elias Michaels or Dr. James Cohen. 864-789-8444. University of Kansas. CRIUERS CLUB MEDITERIANEAN. SAIL- FORD CLUB Office Personnel Counselor. SEND: Request Office Personnel Counselor. Send: Request Office Personnel Counselor. $1 handle for APPLYFOR- WORLD 135, 60129, Securitoy. C., 85800 WORLD 135, 60129, Securitoy. C., 85800 Applications are now being accepted for the position of Assistant in the office of Eudora. Starting data and salary open from September 2016 with application with means 66,665 or higher. We are an equal opportunity employer. Wanted: Respondible student or student assistant, maintenance, and odd jobs 2-3 afternoon. Apply by June 15th at Britton Terrace (Muskebrok) between 10-4. An equal opportunity employer—work may be required to apply. Application deadline Dedicated regular work hours to begin 12-5pm. LOOKING FOR A CHANCE TO TRAVEL? If you're getting out of college and won- nothing to do, come on a Tour Manager! In order to qualify you must have an appealing personality. You should be encouraging your tour groups to vari- ations in the city. America plus the possi- bilities of the nation. America plus the world wide. If interested send resume to the Travel Team, Inc. P.O. Box 807, Lawrence, KS 66044. Need part-time babybatter in my home for an adorable one year old girl. Monday-Thursday afternoons. Own transportation needed. Call 243-0758 after $90. 12-8 LOST- Brownie Roffe 84 Jacket. Lost at the dive. Called Mike Gretez at 843-398-128. 12-8 Call Mike Gretez at 843-398-128. HELP! My gray and white female kitten is female, fertile female, code 845-8687 PLEASE leave a message. LOST Now nliring 2 male singles for next semester. Must be uninhibited. Call ASTA SINGING TELEGRAMS 841-6169 for interview. LOST man's check wool sport cap size Buckle & Stocki & Sons, London 843-841-634 NOTICE ski W LODGING FOR $119 WINTER PARK SPRING BREAK SIGN-UP DEADLINE DEC. 23 FOUR DAYS— FOUR NITES $271 INCLUDES TRANS, LODGING, LIFTS, & RENTALS OR Sophomore Engineers AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477 A reorganized meeting for GSK will be held Thursday, June 26 at the National Research Foundation's International Research Union. It will address the issue of Gay and Lesbian needs in our community. This event is free to attend. Have The Navy pay you tuition. 864-3161 You like bread. We like bread. We'll trade ours for yours. THE CROSSING. 12-5 BATTERY SHOP Retail - Wholesale Gould & General BATTERIES FOR EVERYTHING Batteries Mastercharge, Visa 842-2922 1545 N. 3rd PERSONAL ART FROM POLAND Beautiful Christmas Paper crafts Paper cutouts Paper crafts on final sale. One for five, two for nine, three for four. South Park Recreation Center. 1141 Mass. 12-5 FOX HILLE SURGERY CLINIC—abortion Control, Counseling, Tubal Ligation. For appt. call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (912) 631-2400; call 10 W. 100th St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax: (912) 827-8460. 2-bdmr. 2-bath. sleeps 6. Kitchen, reasonable. Michael Cappolio. (912) 467-3910. Lightweight Durable Gift Idea Canvas Travel Bags Holiday Plaza M-Th 10-8 Sun 1-5 BAG SHOP PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. tf SINGING MESSAGES for all occasions. De- signing Telegrams. ASTA Signing Telegrams. 841-6169. Send a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas card for your loved ones. Send Singing Translugs 841-618-6000 12-8 No problem too small, no time too late. We are here to help Headquarters-414-2835. We are here to help you or drop by an hour. We never close. Partially funded by Student Activity fees. This Christmas give yourself and your children the gift of creativity. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure! Let Swells Studio make portraits for your family, celebrate with excellent礼品, prove professional to please you, Why accept any lesser 'less'? Call about our Christmas specials. Looking for the perfect gift? We've got it! ASTA Singing Telentarma 944-610-8677 841-7117 Taking a trip? We offer the lowest fares available. CALL TODAY! Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St, Lawrence, KS 988-755-5255 TAKE HOME A BIT OF KANSAS. You can find photo books on Kansas at the Spencer Museum Book Shop. 12-9 Your Luncheon Alternative We Buy used furniture. Phone 841-42444. 12-8 EXAM BLUES Prepare for a camp at the Spencer Museum Bookshop, open during gallery hours. 12-9 The University Daily Happy Hour 4-6 Daily CROSSING MISS PIGGY IS HERE! (for your favorite girl!) Museum Museum Shop comp with centerfield. Instant color passport, LD and resume photographs * Studi: 794-6191. 70 nutritious meal recipes. Send 5.00 for C-M-Sales. Big Carn, Okau, 74332. 12-8 Frustrated with studying? 2 KU Med Students seek attractive women to practice surface analogy. 1-677-0338. 12-4 Dear Pet, We made it. I hope you’re comfortable. You will be. We’re Super Bowl Bound. Understand that! ORDER FORM KANSAN ORDER FOOD 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 3 4 times times 82.75 83.00 .04 .05 1 times 2 times 4 times times times times 82.25 82.30 82.75 83.00 02 03 04 05 3 times 92.75 .04 NAME: 5 times $3.25 00 ADDRESS: PHONE: Page 14 University Daily Kansan, December 4, 1980 MUNSE 34 15 Tony Guy, junior guard, shoots for 2 of his 16 points last night in Kansas' game against Michigan. Guy has led KU in scoring in each of the first three games. KU, 2-1, was beaten by Michigan 64-52. 'Hawks lose to Wolverines 64-52 By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer When the Michigan Wolverines arrived in Lawrence Tuesday, they must have headed right for their Allen room, ready to make it like home. All over the walls they placed signs that urged the team to "Kill Kansas" and "Junk the Jayhawks." One of the most prominent was an enumerated description of what needed to be done to beat Kansas. "Stop KU's fast break" was the first item. Michigan did that with a full-court press. "Work our fast break" was second. The Wolverines did that, usually by breaking KU's full-court press. In fact, there was almost nothing on that list that the Wolverines didn't accomplish. The result was just as the list said it would be. KU was beaten 64-52. The Jawhavks record is now 2-1. THERE WEREN'T any names on the list, but the players obviously know that to win they have to get the ball to 6-foot-5 forward Mike McGee. They got it to him for 28 points, many of them on lavens and inside shots. "we kind of gear our offense to him." "He has to perform well for us to win." It was not that the Jayhawks didn't try to figure a way to stop McGee. Everybody tried, but nobody had much success. Darnell Valentine, Booty Neal, Tony Guy and John Crawford all guarded McGee at one time or another. full-court press and an awesome 2-1-2 zone. The result was only 22 points in the first half and a hole that the Jayhawks never got out of. "It's always that way," McGee said. "Someone's always holding on to me, and then they bring in someone else and then they bring in someone else that is just everybody's strategy." KU's defensive strategy was not what affected the game most. Michigan's strategy was the one that made the defense vulnerable, and that man-to-man defense. They got a tough "WE WERE PRETTY impatient, and they did an excellent job," Head Coach Ted Owens said. "When you get behind you get frantic on offense and take bad shots. It makes it tough to catch up. "We were trying to front him in the first half, but we weren't getting any strong side support. He's a very active player. The man was not very good at all against him." KU's bad shots led to missed shots, which might not have been a problem had KU been able to pull in a few offensive rebounds. Bad luck was part of the problem, KU's big men, Victor Mitchell and Art Housey, said. "One of the reasons that we couldn't get rebounds was that the ball was coming off long, *Mitchell* well knew what went the boards, only two or three of us were going. You have to have everybody in there blocking out. Art and I can take care of it, though, if the ball is not on the ground, I will give them credit. They hit the boards." The statistics were not completely lopsided in favor of the Wolverines. KU outbounded only 44-37., with Housey grabbing 10 to lead KU. REBOUNDING WAS one item that Owens said at the start of the season would need to be improved. Another was teamwork. In KU's first two games the teamwork was evident. Last month it wasn't, and the Jawayhs admitted it. "Tonight we just didn't play as a band. We were playing music." is it to. Sometimes it ite out of hand. "It's up to the point guard. He's the man who directs the offense. He's the man who makes sure he runs the show. We need the quarterback so that we can play as a team. As a team we didn't do a lot of things that we should have." The assist statistics point out the problem. Against Nevada-Reno, Guy had 10 assists. Against Pepperdine, Valentine had 11 assists. Against Michigan, the entire Kansas team had only six assists. Usually the shots came from outside, which was as close as the Michigan zone would let KU get. "They took their time and got shots," Crawford said. "We didn't." They took their time on offense and we shot too quick. We weren't patient enough." He was outscored only by McGee of Michigan. Valentine was the only other player for KU in double figures with 13 points. IN THE FIRST HALF, Guy may have been too patient. He shot only four times. In the second half, he took matters into hand when the Jayhawks tried to make a late comeback. He hit six field goals and finished with 16 points. Guy has led KU in scoring in all three games. Owens called McGee one of the best players in the Big Ten, but the Michigan coach, Friede, said that he doesn't have a team impress preseason predictors. "Right now, we have been picked for the trip. That's about where I think we belong. "This was a great Michigan victory. We didn't play well in our opener, and we didn't play well in practice. Kansas had a great start, and they have great players. This was just a great Michigan victory." JAYHAWK NOTES: Ricky Ross, the sophomore guard who quit the KU team earlier in the season, has returned to Lawrence to finish school, just as he said he would when he left. He was at the KU game last night. KU has yet to fill Allen Field House in two tries this season. Only 12,300 players have been added. Michigan has a 2-0 record. and 13,100 were in attendance last night. Darnell Valentine is within 73 points of tying Wilt Chamberlain for fourth place in KU career scoring. Don't expect him to talk to the Kansan about the record, however. He announced in the locker room last night that he would not be given a chance to play in the future. He would not explain his reasons for the decision, saying only. "You don't want us to win. You can put that in your paper." An announcement was made before last night's game that Ted Owens had won his 300th career game at KU Monday against Pepperdine. When he was introduced there were a few boos from the crowd, but he compliments, but these were soon drowned out by cheers. A standing ovation followed. KU graduate Paul Mokeski has started the last few games for the Detroit Pistons because of a recent injury to regular center Kent Beenson. KU will play Oral Roberts Saturday night in Allen Field House. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. Oral Roberts beat KU last season at Tulsa, Okal, when a last second shot by KU forward Mac Stullcup, never graduated, bounced away. | | FG | RB | REB A | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | McGee | 12-21 | 4-5 | 8 | 0 | 1 | 38 | | McCormick | 12-21 | 4-5 | 8 | 0 | 1 | 38 | | Heuserman | 1-5 | 0-1 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 2 | | Johnson | 2-8 | 0-1 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 4 | | Bodnar | 5-8 | 0-0 | 6 | 3 | 3 | 10 | | McCormick | 2-3 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 4 | | James | 1-5 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 4 | | Marty Bodnar | 2-9 | 0-4 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | | Marty Bodnar | 28-57 | 9-14 | 44 | 10 | 10 | 64 | Kansas stumbles into twilight zone again and suffers first loss A LANEWS | | FB | 0-0 | REB | A | PF | TG | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Magley | 5-0 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 19 | | Crawford | 2-0 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 19 | | Mitchell | 7-1 | 0-4 | 1 | 3 | 0 | 2 | | Mitchell | 1-1 | 1-4 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 18 | | Valentine | 6-11 | 1-2 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 16 | | Valentine | 1-1 | 1-2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 16 | | Neal | 4-13 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 18 | | Neal | 4-13 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 18 | | Michigan | 2-16 | 4-4 | 37 | 4 | 32 | -4 | By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer Sports Writer Some fans were amused, more were upset and the majority were stunned and angry. About the only people remaining in the stands as the game ended were Americans delegates from China, who had to be polite to their American hosts. If the Chinese were familiar with Kansas basketball, they would have known what had beaten the Jayhawks. It was the zone. Michigan started in a zone defense and stayed in the zone all the way to a 64-52 victory. "THE MICHIGAN ZONE was a good one," Head Coach Ted Owens said. "They were quick and active and good at matching up. " against a game, a good shot is not just good. We wanted to get the shot too quick. The quick-shooting Kansas team shot 38 percent from the field. The team was shooting the ball expecting a blocked shot instead of a basket. Owens said. "There were things we could have done to make it a fine game, despite the odds." Owens, who was honored before the game for winning his 300th contest against Pepperdine Monday night, said that he had been expecting the zone, which has plagued the fast-breaking Warriors and Cornell Valentine's arrival four years ago. MICHIGAN'S ZONE annihilated the KU offense even though the Wolverines normally operated in a man-to-man defense. "The zone we used was effective," Michigan Coach Bill Frieder said. "We wanted to shut Valentine down. We didn't want his quickness to hurt us. "We basically did a job on him." Boot Neal, who came off the bench Monday to spark KU past Pepperdine, was held to 8 points by the Wolverine zone. "We wanted the zone to put pressure on Valentine and Neal on the outside, and it worked." Frieder said. "They didn't hurt us on the inside." KU's INSIDE, in the large forms of Victor Mitchell and Art Housey, combined for 5 points, a fact that did not go unnoticed by Owens. "We've got to get the ball to the post more," he said. "Victor did not practice yesterday and had to be substituted for frequently. "Art has actually had only about two weeks of practice. Victor is new, he needs a lot more practice." "OUR REACTIONS were not good at all," Owens said. "We were outbounded by eight in the first half, and had four turnovers. That's 12 times Owens said that, while he did not want to take anything away from Michigan, he thought the Jayhawks were emotionally flat. we gave the ball to them in the first "We were lethargic." Owens is not as worried about KU's mental attitude going into the next game, against Oral Roberts Saturday night in Allen Field House. "Three days between games are better than a game every other day," he said. "This kind of game is good if you learn from it." Owens called a time out with 11 seconds remaining and down 12 points, perhaps to make sure the Jayhawks had learned. Verser named second-team All-American BvGENEMYERS Sports Editor David Verser has moved one stride closer to professional football and a position in the first round of the NFL draft next spring. Verser, a consensus All-Big Eight flanker for two straight years, was named a second-team All-American yesterday by the Associated Press. While the AP teams were being announced in New York, Verser was running sprints for a pro scout in Lawrence. The pros are high on Verser, so high that he is expected to go in the first ound of April's draft. Either Verser or the profer will the ceremonial umr will be the first receiver picked. UNTIL APRIL, Verser will be running sprints for more scouts and teams. waiting and wondering. Often, he will reflect on his four years at Kansas. "The last two years I'm going to remember for a long time," Verser said last night. "The first two years, those terrible two years, I'm going to forget." The best of the good years has come in 1980 when Vaser had 30 reception for 578 yards and five touchdowns. The team-4team All-America honor tops it off. "I guess it feels all right," he said. "But I hate two settle for second team." "I didn't expect to get anything because there were so many other receiverws that had better years and were on better teams that received bowl bids. I guess I got it because of natural ability." State's linebacker Ricky Young, a second-team selection. VERSER WAS ONE of only two players who made the first two All-America teams and came from losing teams. The other player is Oklahoma "My improvement came this year when I improved what I can do," Verser said. "I used to watch the ball go over my head, but now I keep on running and try to get it. And I've discovered that I can." His best catch of the season probably came against Kansas State. Wearing a two-defender strait jacket, Verser reached out for an overthrown pass. The ball nipped his fingers and froze in the air as he hauled it in. BEFORE THE DRAFT, Verser will play in the East-West Shrine Bowl in Palo Alto, Calif., Jail. 10. He also will play in the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala., Aba. Jayhawks, Verser, a soft-soplen senior from Kansas City, Kan., was the lone offensive weapon. The pressure was on and so was double and even triple coverage. As freshman tailback Michael Giles, however, the pressure came off Verser. "How did I do it?" Verser said at the table. "I just have to watch the film and find out." "I wish I just had two more years left here even though the pros are ahead," Verser said. "This is the first time that I got to play with a quarterback like Frank Seurier and with a running back like Bell, I wish I could stay." When this season started for the 4-5-2 JAYHAWK NOTES: David Verser was not alone in the Associated Press' All-America honor roll. Verser, a second team flanker, was joined by coach Mike Bell and senior noseguard $zan Gardner. Both were honorable mentions. Bell was one of 46 honorable mention running backs and Gardner was one of 51. THE NEW YORKER PREMI ITALIAN PIZZA SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $200 off ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer Birdsong shadows Suns But when it comes to playing both ends of the court, KC Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons says there's no one better than Birdsong. It was the Kings' defense that turned the game around. Trailing 51-4 to a team they had lost to seven straight times in regular season games, the team shot 77.3 percent on a 38-19 third quarter that pushed them in front, 82-70. The Kings finished with a seasonhigh 17 steals. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - When it comes to scoring from the guard position, only San Antonio's George Washington and then Kansas City's Otis Birdsong. "There's no one in the league on top of his game any more than Otis is right now," Fitzsimmons said after the Kings snapped a three-game losing streak with a 103-100 victory over Phoenix last night. Birdsong, the fourth leading scorer in the NBA with a 27.3 average, scored 28 points against the Suns, including a game-clinching 17-4 victory. It was the 23rd straight game that he has scored 20 or more points. SPARK SOME INTEREST CALL 864-4358 Don't be left out! Today at 5 pm is the final deadline for all ads in the Kansan this semester. By United Press International This year... put a personal touch in your Christmas giving with Sheaffer’s kit. Calligraphy Nancy Kuemmerlein demonstrates "Calligraphy for Christmas" December 3 & 4 from 12:30 til 5:00 pm. Kansas Union Bookstore, level two. Even a novice can make beautiful cards, gifts, invitations ... an ancient art becomes easy. The kit includes 'easy to use' can bridge pen, 3 calligraphy plus 1 water-crayon on 7 colors, practice pad β 'how to booket. Kansas Union Bookstores Main Store - Satellite Shop sugg. retail 8.95 sale price 6.95 2 The University Daily KANSAN PP TP 1 2 3 2 4 5 2 6 7 3 4 5 3 6 7 0 1 2 0 3 4 0 5 6 1 2 3 1 4 5 1 6 7 2 3 4 2 5 6 3 4 5 3 6 7 4 5 6 5 6 7 6 7 8 7 8 9 8 9 10 9 10 11 10 11 12 11 12 13 12 13 14 13 14 15 14 15 16 15 16 17 16 17 18 17 18 19 18 19 20 20 21 22 21 22 23 22 23 24 23 24 25 24 25 26 25 26 27 26 27 28 27 28 29 28 29 30 30 31 32 31 32 33 32 33 34 33 34 35 34 35 36 35 36 37 36 37 38 37 38 39 38 39 40 40 40 41 41 41 42 42 42 43 43 43 44 44 44 45 45 45 46 46 46 47 47 47 48 48 48 49 49 49 50 50 50 51 51 51 52 52 52 53 53 53 54 54 54 55 55 55 56 56 56 57 57 57 58 58 58 59 59 59 60 60 60 61 61 61 62 62 62 63 63 63 64 64 64 65 65 65 66 66 66 67 67 67 68 68 68 69 69 69 70 70 70 71 71 71 72 72 72 73 73 73 74 74 74 75 75 75 76 76 76 77 77 77 78 78 78 79 79 79 80 80 80 81 81 81 82 82 82 83 83 83 84 84 84 85 85 85 86 86 86 87 87 87 88 88 88 89 89 89 90 90 90 91 91 91 92 92 92 93 93 93 94 94 94 95 95 95 96 96 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Hiner was working on "one of many" term papers that are due in the few days remaining before the end of the semester. Former student leaders offer advice to Senate Matt Davis, student body vice president, handed over both the gavel and the grief in a joint hearing of the court. Before the old Senate departed, however, it elected from its ranks three new holdover senators for the new Senate, and listened to final legislation by Greg Schacke, former student body president. David Henry, former architecture senator; Shelly Schneider, former holder senator; and pam Lewin, former Nunemaker senator, were members of the Senate. I serve on the Senate and on University Council. IN BREIF FINAL reports, Schnacke and Davis urged both old and new senators to actively work toward making the Senate effective and respected. "I urge you to take an active role in committees and work really hard to give your opinions to administrators, state officials and to people on the national level," Schlucke said. Praising Snackne and many other hardworking senators he said never got recognition, Davis told the restless assembly, "No organization is better than its members. Student Senate will never be any better than the people in it. Shnacke said that next semester he planned to work actively with Associated Students of Kansas, the statewide student lobbying group, and with United States Student Association. "Your successes and failures will be pretty much a direct result of what you put into it." With that, Davis, who was elected a Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, bid the new Senate good luck, dismissed senators who had not been elected to the Senate, new student body vice president, the gavel. Abbott called the new Senate to order with 50 of the newly elected 68 senators answering roll call. Abbott told the new senators he hoped cutting the size of Senat from 120 to 68 senators proved to be a successful move. "Senate has come under a lot of criticism in the past, but I'm confident you guys will turn that around. Bert and I will attend every meeting and I hope you will too," Abbott said. Council approves grievance actions "When they see students are behind Student teachers, it can be confusing to listen to, and students may not pay attention." Abbott also told the senators that applications were being accepted for Senate executive secretary, Senate treasurer and Student Senate Chair. Committee chairman, all paid positions. The Senate will not meet again until classes resume in January. By CINDI CURRIF Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Changes in the University Judiciary that will streamline and organize the grievance procedure were unanimously approved by the University Council yesterday. The changes will become part of the Univer- sity's Rules and Regulations after they are approved by the University. The changes were recommended by a University Senate executive committee-appointed task force that worked this summer to revamp the procedure. ACCORDING TO Francis Heller, chairman of the board, he had procedures prior to the changes were continuing. The new procedure details from start to finish the method a person uses to file a grievance. A timetable of the grievance process is included in the proposal to ensure speedy action on A person has six months to file a complaint, according to the new procedures. The complaint must be distributed to Judicial Board members no more than 30 days after it is received. The Judicial Board, formerly the University Judiciary committee, will have 58 members, compared with the 89 members of the University Judiciary. After the Judicial Board receives a complaint, 55 more days are allotted to choose 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 expert witness must be made and the report should be finished. The council delayed action on the procedure changes that has no sem SenEx add a provision to the code. The addition states that hearings and appeals shall be recorded on tapes that will be placed in the University Archives. Only the people involved with the grievance, their representatives and the members of the hearing or appeals panel have access to the records of the proceedings. Transcripts can be made at the cost of the person requesting the transcript and after six months, the records will be destroyed unless the request for them proves a request against destruction of the records. OTHER CHANGES in the approved proposal include: See COUNCIL page 5 Lone Star's spirit lives on residents enjoy simple life By DIANE SWANSON Smells of crisp, frying bacon, ham and sausage drifted to the front of the kitchen. Three white-haired women dropped the first of the pancake batter on two newly purchased grills. Staff Reporter "This is a 'trial run', Dori Brands explained. These gaites are new and this is the first time we use them." The basement of the plain white church was beginning to fill up. According to Brandt, it was a nice size crowd for a Monday night supper, a monthly event sponsored by the Lone Star Church of the Brethren, and one of the few places where neighbors still got together to visit. Doris, a short lively woman of 54, and her brother J. W. Bassett, the Lone Star community on and off since 1945. "We just like it here," Royce said in a tone that suggested there was little else to say about the subject. THE BRANDT'S LIVE on 80 acres about a quarter of a mile north of the dozen houses comprising the town. Tucked away in a valley about 12 miles southwest of Lawrence, Lone Star has suffered the fate of many small communities in recent years, losing business after business because of a declining agricultural economy and a growing nearby city. "We were sorry to see the businesses go. It was sad to watch them burn down the general store several years ago. It had just become too much for us, but it was also the town's landmarks, you know." Doris said. There are no businesses in Lone Star now, only farms and the church. we don't bother as much as we used to." Do not use a bit wistfully, "there is still a closeness between us." "It's home," Doris agreed, a smile lightup in her eyes. "To call it to call it in the suburbs of Lone Star." Sitting down with a plate of whole wheat pancakes and fried eggs, Anna Flary, a 79-year-old See LONE STAR page 7 2017 HOUFESTIVE Monthly pot luck dinners are held at the church in the small community of Lone Star. Bus pass price increase predicted for next year Staff Reporter By DIANE SWANSON Staff Reporter Today will be partly to mostly cloudy and warmer, with a high near $2$, according to the KU Weather Service. Winds will be southerly at 10 to 30 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy and mild, with lows around 50. Skies tomorrow will be cloudy with a chance of rain. The high will be $9$. "KU on Wheels" will not be requesting a transportation fee increase next semester, Steve McMurry, Senate Transportation Board chairman, said this week. There is a strong possibility, however, that the board will request a in raise in bus fares and bus passes for the 1981-82 school year, McMurry said. At the board's request hearing last spring, the Student Senate increased bus fares from 25 cents to 35 cents and semester bus passes from $2 to $30. At the Senate's recommendation, the Board of Regents increased the transportation fee all students pay each semester from $2 to $6. It will turn sharply colder Sunday or Monday, with a chance of rain or snow. McMurry said an agreement was made with the administration that if a fee increase for fiscal Nonstudent bus passes cost $40. Weather 1981 was granted, the board would not request an increase for fiscal 1982. But to keep up with inflation, McMurry said, more revenue will be needed. "By increasing bus fares and pass prices, the increased cost of running 'KU on Wheels' would be placed on those that use the buses the most, the riders," he said. "We're not actively seeking federal and state aid now," he said. "Presently, the system works best as it is working now. We don't need outside assistance." McMURRY SAID he had no final estimation on what costs would be for fiscal 1982. But as costs keep rising, McMurray said, the question becomes whether it is better to keep charging students more or to accept federal and state aid. Although McMurray the Board was not seeking federal or state funding now, it might be that the budget is already underway. "It's going to be hard to draw that line," he said. Bert Coleman, student body president, said he did not favor federal funding because students would lose control of the bus system. "I don't like federal funding," Coleman said. "Federal funding brings in a lot of red tape, a lot of management problems." "We would have to have a local or state sponsor, and they would have actual control over the funds then, taking away the control the students have." COLEMAN ADDED that if more revenue was needed, the initial step would be to cut back services or increase the cost of bus passes and fares. "I would rather not do either," he said. "But to choose the one, I would choose to choose it rather than cut see." "Tings are looking good," he said. "The handicapped bus is costing more than we anticipated. We are overspend now $2,000 to $3,000 from where we thought we would be at this time, but by streamlining our service in December we should be able to save some money. I anticipate ending the year with a small surplus in the budget." McMurry said the board was trying to hold all According to McMurry, no routes will be changed, added or deleted next semester. And although he has no final statistics compiled, he has increased this semester by at least 10 percent. all buses, including the vans, will run their circuit, the regular timetable during final weeks. MOMA may be used. McMurry had no definite figures,however. transportation costs down, which would mean no expansion of services. All buses will stop running after Dec. 19 and will resume when registration begins Jan. 12. Iran-Iraq conflict forces students to work illegally Bv ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter The Tehran junior was escorted out of the building where he worked by an immigration officer about two months ago. Like some other lawmen in Lawrence, he was working without a permit. Bahman narrowed his heavy eyes and tried to fight back the tears that come whenever he thinks about the day he went to fail. "The officer handcuffed me and took to the police station downtown," he said. "He wanted to make sure I showed up for the hearing in Kansas City." Bahman's bond was set at $1,500. He could not post bail, and as a result, spent the night in jail. The next morning he was taken to a Kansas City, Kan. tail FOR TWO NIGHTS, he said, he slept on a bed below ground-level, or blanket in a cold cell under ground-level. After an immigration judge lowered his bail to 10, he posted a cash bond, Bahman was waived "When I returned home, I was in shock," he said. "I cried for several hours. I've never had even a traffic violation, but I was treated as if I had robbed or killed." Bahman's initial shock has turned to deression, he said. "I can't sleep or study," he said. "I just worry about my case." He knew it was wrong to work without a permit, he said, but he did it anyway because he thought the Immigration and Naturalization Service would refuse his application for a per- "I needed the money," he said. "There's hardly any money coming from my parents in LA." Many Iranian students, caught in similar dilemmas, have also been forced into the labor U. S. banks were no longer willing to cash coins drawn on Iranian banks until they received U.S. dollars. Channels for sending money to Iranian students in the United States narrowed drastically after the United States imposed economic sanctions on Iran. to six weeks to cash a check from Iran, Clark Coan, KU dean of foreign students said. Before the conflict with Iraq erupted, unemployment in Iran was running at 30 percent after a prolonged production cut. The Iranian-Iraqi war has resulted in Iranian students receiving even fewer funds from home. The bombing of Iranian oil refineries has led to a sharp increase in unemployment. All this has forced Iranian students here into the American system or without per-mentation in college or university. Iranian students 65+ Gell said Iranian students were discovered working in a variety of jobs. Approximately 1,080 cases for deportation have been initiated against Iranians in Kansas and Missouri between October 1979 and October 2003. Most cases dealt with students working without permits. "They work places that Americans work." he SOME OF THOSE students have risked deportation by working without a permit, according to George Gail, deputy director of the Mo. Inc. District office for Kansas and Missouri. Employees are not required by federal or state law to make sure that an immigrant has a work permit. said. "They work in fast food places, factories and anywhere else that they can find work." "A proposal for such a law comes up every year in the Congress," he said. year in the Congress," he said. Coan said the federal law would make employers liable for hiring immigrants who do not have permission to work. "Most employers don't even know what papers an immigrant should have to work," he said. "They probably hire immigrants without even asking for a work permit." ONE MANUFACTURING manager, who would comment only if he was not identified, said he did not ask for work permits, although he did send an essential employees show a social security card. Foreign students are able to receive social security numbers by using the same applications that U.S. citizens use, Cosn said. However, their students also must show that they have a valid vlaid. But foreign students are not caught for See STUDENTS pane 5 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Portuguese official dies in fiery crash CAMARATE, Portugal-Portuguese Prime Minister Francisco S Carneiro was killed yesterday in the flareup of his small private plane, said officials. Car Saureiro's eight-seat Cessna 410 plane exploded and burst into flames about one minute after taking off from Lisbon. Its Portela International Airport in Brazil was the scene of a crash. So Carreiro's ruling Democratic Party issued a statement saying there was no indication of sabotage. Sa Carneiro was a conservative, pro-Western politician who became Prime Minister Jan. 3, 1800. He was locked in a bitter presidential campaign and had just taken off to a rally in Inoport in support of his candidate when the crash occurred. Inoport is 175 miles northeast of Lisbon. Also killed were Ssu Abacessia, 38, the prime minister's companion; Fakhr al-Din Saadi, 37, and his wife; the prime minister's onestate chief and the two oilists. Inside a cabinet door and a desk, a plane appeared to have flown into electrical wires, lost altitude and crashed into a two-story Other witnesses said they heard a loud explosion and rushed from their dinner tables in time to see the small white-and-orange craft fall in flames from the sky. Flash fire kills 26 in New York hotel At least 24 others were treated at hospitals for injuries. Nine were admitted in serious condition. HARRISON, N.Y. — A flash fire broke out during an electronic equipment demonstration at a new hotel-conference center yesterday, killing 26 corporate executives. Many of the dead had been trapped in blazing, smoke-filled meeting rooms. injured in serious condition. Most of those killed died of smoke inhalation. Others burned to death, including five men found trapped in a closet and another five whose bodies were stacked up against a locked emergency exit door in a conference room. Survivors escaped by smashing plate glass windows with tables and jumping from the second-story conference rooms to the ground 35 feet below. Hotel guests still in their rooms fled through corridors and down stairways. The fire broke out about 9:20 a.m. CST in a conference room at the four-story Stouffer's Inn of Westchester, 20 miles northeast of New York City. Arrow Electronic Corp. was demonstrating new electronic equipment at the inn. It was not known how many of the executives killed worked for Arrow, but some of the victims were believed to be members of the firm's board of Fire officials said they believed an electrical malfunction had caused the fire, said Harrison Town Supervisor John Passidomo. "It was like an explosion where you don't have any impact," said Purchase Fire Chief Robert Makowski. "When you pour gasoline and throw in a match, there is a rush. That's what happened in this case. It was like a ball of fire, a flash fire." Carter to veto $9.1 billion funding bill WASHINGTON—President Obama said yesterday that he would veto a $9.1 billion abortion bill because it contained a strong anti-busid provision. Carter said anti-busing language in the bill would have imposed "an unprecedented prohibition" on government use of the courts to ensure that the courts did not discriminate. The anti-busing amendment was attached to a multibillion-dollar appropriation bill for the departments of state, justice and commerce. The bill also includes $100 million in federal funds. The amendment would have barred the Justice Department from going to court to enforce school busing for desegregation purposes. "I have often stated my belief that busing only should be used as a last resort in school segregation cases." Carter said in a letter to Senate Speaker Robert D. McCain. However, Carter did not veto the bill because of the busing amendment alone. Carter's decision was a complicated one, because he had to veto the entire appropriation bill to eliminate the busing amendment. "It would effectively allow the Congress to tell a president that there are certain constitutional remedies that he cannot ask the courts to apply . . . For any president to accept this precedent would permit a serious encroachment on the powers of this office," he said. A continuing resolution passed by the House and now in the Senate would provide funds to keep the three departments and other agencies operating through next June, but apparently also would continue the anti-busing provisions. Atlanta task force arrests suspect ATLANTA—A special police task force investigating the killings and disappearances of 10 black women has arrested a man for trying to grab a woman's phone. A police spokesman said it was not known whether there was any link between the abduction attempt and the other cases. Public Safety Commissioner Lee P. Brown identified the suspect as Ronald Larry Johnson, 37, of Forest Park, Ga. He was to face a city court hearing on charges of attempted kidnapping and simple battery later in the day. Johnson had been arrested about 6 p.m. Wednesday. Brown said 19-year-old Kent Merritt, a black youth, told police that Johnson and another white male attempted to pull him into a green van while he was walking on a southwest Atlanta street Nov. 25. The other man was, not identified. It was the first arrest by the special 35-man task force that was created more than two months ago in a massive effort to solve the baffling cases, All of the children found slain or listed as still missing were between the ages of 7 and 15. The Merritt case is the first to involve a potential victim more than 15 years old. MANHATTAN-Secretary of State Edmund Muskie said yesterday that the Soviet Union was reluctant to invade Poland because of the potential economic and diplomatic repurcussions, as well as the strong will of the Polish people. Muskie speaks on Russia at K-State "The Polish situation has gone far beyond the situation in Czechoslovakia and Hungary." Muskic told a capacity crowd of 1,800 at Kansas State The former Maine senator made the remarks in a question-and-answer session after his Landon series lecture. The Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact countries had invaded Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968. Mustie earlier had stopped in Teopeta to pay a courtesy call on the lecture series' namesake. 1936 presidential nominee Afl Landon. 93. Sidestepening questions about what action the United States might take if the Soviet Union invades Poland, Mustie said the Soviet understand that military action would jeopardize the benefits of detente, including important trade benefits. Senate committee selects Kassebaum WASHINGTON-Kansas Republican Sen. Nancy Landon Kasebaum yesterday became the first woman ever to be named to the Senate Foreign The only other woman to serve on the committee was Muriel Humphrey, who in 1978 served out the term of her deceased husband, Hubert H. Humphrey. In being named to the committee, Kassebaum was concerned with army limitations, U.S.-doviet relations, problems in the Middle East and other areas. Management also said her position on the committee could benefit Kansans. "One of the key responsibilities of the committee is foreign trade, and Kansas' economic health is wed to the success we have in developing export markets for our feed grains," she said. Bodies of nuns, lay worker found in San Salvador By United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador--The bullet-riddled bodies of three American nuns and a lay worker missing for three days were found yesterday in a common grave in rural El Salvador. Officials said all four women had been raped. In New York, a spokeswoman for the Maryknoll Order, to which two of the dead nuns belonged, said reliable Silkwood claims dismissed again A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman confirmed that the four bodies found were those of the three nuns and the lay worker. DENVER (UPI)-The 10th U.S. District Court of Appeals upheld a lower court yesterday in dismissing two claims filed by heirs of Karen G. Cunningham, a lawyer for both the Kerr-McGee Corp. and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. She said U.S. Ambassador Robert White was present when the bodies were unearthened from a common grave in Florida. The corpson's 24 miles southeast of the capital. in the suit, Skilwood's heirs said that Kerr-McGee officials had formed a conspiracy in November, 1972 to prevent the woman and other employees from organizing a labor union. The suit said the employees were placed under illegal surveillance, had their phone tapped and were followed. sources in El Salvador said the army had killed the four women. In the ruling, the court said an Oklahoma City federal court judge had acted properly in dismissing a civil rights suit against the company and accused that the heirs argued that the court lacked jurisdiction to take such action. The U.S. Embassy identified the dead women as Sister Dorothy Kazel and lay worker Jean Donovan, of a Cleveland-based religious order; Sister Ia Ford of New York City's Borough of Brooklyn and Sister Mauria Clarke of Bellevue to honor members of the Maryknoll Order, headquartered in Ossining, N.Y. gravites as being very upset. The four bodies were later taken to a San Francisco hospital. While refused to make any comment White was described by witnesses at the The four disappeared after Sister Kazel and Miss Donovan picked up the two nuns Tuesday at the capital's airport on their return from Nicaragua, airport employees and church spokesmen said. Judicial authorities in Canton Santa Teresa, near the plantation, said the women had been raped before they were "assassinated." The victims' bodies displayed heavy-caliber gunshot wounds in the back and shoulder. A photographer at the gravesite said two of the bodies were partially clad, and the others' clothes were in their bodies. The bodies were buried about six feet down. Local farmers said they had beard shooting and screams about 11 p.m. Tuesday night. They found the bodies of the women at sunrise Wednesday and buried them on the plantation because "they were not claimed by anyone." A spokeswoman for the Maryknoll Order said the nuns' friends believed that the Salvadoran military was responsible for the killings. 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The Sunflo 4 p.m. Thei Clyde Lindle The FELL alist R The the F 12:30 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 3 On Campus TODAY THE BIOLOGY CLUB will meet in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union at 4 p.m. TONIGHT ine INTERVARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet in the Regional Room of the Union at 7 p.m. Thely will be an OPEN HOUSE at the Clyde Torbemaugh Observatory in 500 117. TOMORROW Jon Lewis will give a TRUMP RETRE Murphy Hall at 8 p.m. in Murphy Hall at 8 p.m. THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet in Robinson Gymnasium at 7:30 'Pti Kappa Lambda will hold CONCERTO CONCERT AUDITIONS in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy at 9 a.m. THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION DE- VELOPMENT COMMITTEE will meet in the Union at 2:30 p.m. SUNDAY The SCRABBLE CLUB will meet in the Regionalist Room of the Union at The KU Endowment Association will hold its RETIRED FACULTY and STAFF HOLIDAY DINNER in the Kansas Room of the University at 12:45 p.m. The CHESS CLUB will meet in the Parkers in the union at 1 p.m. KU CHRISTMAS VESPERS will be held in Hoch Auditorium at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Ecumenical Christian Ministry will be SUNDAY 10 DEENING SUPPER at 10:30AM CIRCLE K CLUB will meet in 2006 Mahltat7 n.m. MONDAY An exhibition of work by JOHN COLLIER, HALLMARK PROFESSOR OF ILLUSTRATION, will be held in the and Design Building Gallery all day. Vocal Music students will be will be in the Strong Hall rotunda at 13:30 p.m. The KU COLLEGIUM MUSICIUM will hold an end-of-se semester concert in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy at 3:30 p.m. Carl Cook of Phillips Petroleum Co., will speak on "MEASUREMENTS OF SEISMIC WAVE FIELD" in 332 Malott at 4:30 p.m. The KU GERMAN CLUB will go caroling at 6:30 p.m. Interested people should meet on the fourth floor of the Union. SUA Indoor Recreation sponsors Robinson Gymnastics Lobby at 5 p.m. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will the Oread Room of the Union at 7:30 P.M. INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL VOICES will rehearse in 404 Murphy at 6 p.m. The BLACK CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP will meet in Lewis Hall at 8 p.m. TOP CASH for BOOKS ..by the armful or by the trunk full...we pay top prices now thru Dec. 20th. plus receive a 10% off blue discount chip good for purchases in the store. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. Post this ad for your information. This is the only notice you will see in the UDK. See what it is like to tangle with a Navy TOMCAT. On Monday, December 8th, Navy ROTC invites you to come to a free, private show of Final Countdown. The producers of the film claim that the star of the show is Kirk Douglas. The Navy feels that the real stars are the Grumman Aerospace F-14 Tomcat fighters, and the pilots of Fighter Squadron 84 aboard the USS Nimitz. After the show, there will be Naval Aviators available to discuss with you the thrill of flying a $15 million aircraft at age 23. Contact 864-3161 for information on obtaining your reserved seat. RESERVED SEATING ONLY. Attending will be held for our civilian guests. Navy trainers will receive a free demonstration of aerobatic trainer. Make sure you have registration, $100 a month tax-free opening or booking, that can lead to your final destination upon aircraft. OLD GARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE All Our Meats Are Slow Roasted Over a Hickory Log Fire to Give You the Finest in Deep Pit Smoked Barbeque Flavor. Hog Heaven Rib Special Enjoy Coca-Cola LAST HOG HEAVEN SPECIAL OF THE YEAR! Not Compens Accepted With This Special. Half Slab Big End $3.49 Half Slab Small End $4.99 Full Slab (to go only) $6.99 OFFER GOOD DEC. 3 - DEC. 7 WED. THRU SUN. SLAV 110 INTENSIVE ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN Spring 1981 January 15-May 5 Intensive course in elementary Russian providing the student with a complete survey of Russian grammar reading and speaking of simple English. 11:30:12.20 MTWR 4075 Wescoe Tamerlan Salaty Русский язык Lab 8:30 9:20 MWF 4075 Wescoe Anatoly Vishevsky 1:30 2:20 MTWRF 4075 Wescoe Anesa Miller-Pogacar COMMONWEALTH THEATRES GRANADA DESIGNER JOHN DENNER 1970-1975 GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE BENJAMIN R 7:30 & 9:35 Mon Sat 2:00 Mid Sat 2:00 VARSITY SOUNDS TOWN TELEPHONE 21045 THE PRIVATE EYEB 7:45 E 8:00 Mon Sat & Fri 9:35 7:15 & 9:00 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST I FOR INVESTMENT PROJECTS ...I can DO IT... Can't fit in need GASSES? Year of Mask & Mesh Influenza Infection in the UK Robin Williams Eve 7:11 & 9:20 HILL Crest 1 Some times you watch, others you feel. DONALD, SUTHERLAND MARY L. MOORE Ordinary People Eve. 7:15 & 8:30, Mat. 2:15 & Sun. 7:15 9:00 M Tue Sat. 8:00 9:20 HILLCREST 1 Can I DO IT ...fit it need GlasSES his FIRST screen role Robin Williams R Eve. 7:15 & 9:20 HILLCREST 2 Some time you were late TONAL DONALD SUTHERLAND MARY TYLER MOORE Catherine Purple R Eve. 7:15 & 9:30 Mat. 2:15 Sun & Sun HILLCREST 2 MISTER ATTARFLAGE, WHO CAN SAY YOU NOW? FASHION CAMOON R Eve. 7:30 & 9:40 Mat. 2:15 Sat. & Sun CINEMA 1 GENA ROWLANDS Glava R Eve. at 7:30 9:35 Mat. 2:00 Sat. &8:00 CINEMA 2 Z-1-A-DE-OO-LAN! Walk Blu-ray Song of South TEEN VIEWS R Eve at 7:30 only, Weekend Mat. at 2:10 CINEMA 2 Evenings "An aprofessional image of brilliance, nerve and dance..." HILLCREST 2 PROMETHEAT EARTHMOS, WHO LAST YOU NOVEN? MONTAGE Eve. 7 to 8: 9 to 20. Mit. 1 to 15: Sat. 6 Sun. PG A DEMONSTRATIVE WALK CINEMA 1 WESTERN WESTERN STREET GENA ROWLANDS Eve. at: 7.25 & 8.30 Mon 8:30 Mat 2:00 Sat 8:30 Gloria PG CINEMA 2 ZIP 4-DEE-000-LANH Walt Disney's Song & South TRENDING GARDEN Eve at 7:30 only. Weekend line at 2:10 CINEMA 2 Evening 9:30 only An appious display of brilliance, neve and Scenes of Visual Custum CINEMA 2 ZIP: A-DEE-000-LAH! Wait Disney's Song & South THE CINEMAS Eve at: 7:30 only. Weekend Mat at: 2:10 CINEMA 2 Evenings "An uproarious st 9:30 only brilliance, nerve and dance." R AIRPLANE ANNOUNCING CASH FOR BOOKS DECEMBER 8th-19th KANSASUNIONBOOKSTORES . . . Main store, Level 2, Kansas Union • Satellite Shop, Satellite Union Opinion Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Ladies in waiting It has been a few years since the majority of the American population referred to homosexuality as a grievous sin, excluding Amita Bryant, of course. But it will be several more years before even most of those who call themselves liberals will be ready to accept and promote the idea that homosexuals may marry, rear children and enjoy the rest of the conveniences of wedded bliss, such as joint tax returns, inheritance and insurance benefits. It will be a few years before nervous heterosexuals' skin stops crawling long enough for them to quit asking what will happen to the American family—mommy, daddy and two kidlies—if people of the same sex are allowed to marry. Two Lawrence women, who are bucking the system by trying to obtain a marriage license, face what could be an even more formidable obstacle than uncommitted public opinion. After all, this IS Kansas, the state that specifically outlawed same-sex marriages less than a year ago. Good luck, ladies. You're going to need plenty of it. But you will need patience even more. Although it's high time for Kansas legislators, attorneys general and other very moral midwesterners to accept that some boys don't love girls and that some girls don't love boys, they don't see it that wav. Thank goodness, we have come a long way from the days of Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland and their pre-pubescent romantic trials and tribulations. But it hasn't been far enough for even the liberals to be willing to admit or to move toward admitting that homosexuals are people with preferences, too. Someday, perhaps. Lone conservative voice has bittersweet semester The semester is over. The votes are in. and some campus wag has lifted his head up from the sand long enough to name me "campus neo-Nazi of the year." Well. you win a few and you lose a few. There were some pleasant reactions. The references in letters to the editor, for instance, BILL MENEZES PABLO CATALANO comparing me to other, more famous, conservative columnists were particularly enjoyable. There were two comparisons to James Kulpatrick, one comparison to William F. Buckley and my favorite, one reference to my "serebral clone" George F. Will But there has been more than praise generated by my work. And although constructive criticism is welcome in any endeavor, the form that much of the campus criticism has taken is alarming. At such comparisons I can only blush and mutter thanks. Who wouldn't enjoy being compared to people who are among the most respected and knowledgeable in their field? Voltaire may have been willing to defend to the death another person's right to express a contrary opinion, but on this campus, that sentiments like Voltaire, rarely makes an appearance. Narrow-minded people have always been a part of society, in all political factions. But what is disturbing around this campus is the form that the criticism, for the most part, has taken. Logical disagreement has given way to the use of buzz-words, such as "fasciist" or "nee-Nazi," by college students who should know better. The very atmosphere of ignorance and fear these letter writers allegedly attack is being generated by their own words. Name calling, in vogue during the recent elections, is all right if it is original and its purpose is true satire. Getting people to laugh at those one disagrees with a is much more effective weapon than bowing to the trendy crowd and joining in the mouthings of ignorance. And it iS trend, at least around campus, for the desperate few who cannot accept the workings of the real world to label things fascist or neo-Nazi if they do not mesh perfectly with their narrow view of the world should be. The work in these studies is only previously attained by wet rocks and clay. But I have faith in most of the people on this campus. They are not about to let their thinking become permanently warped by either the elitist intolerance of a Jerry Fallow or the mouthings of the allegedly liberal campus idiots. Conservatism has been around long before Falwell and his Moral Majority, and it will be here long after they are gone. They, like some of the conservatives, have a warped idea of what conservatism is all about. The labeling of a conservative philosophy, which is based on the premise that liberty is preserved by an ABUSENCE of government in our own country, is also less childish, ludicrous. To say the most, it is least. Nazi philosophy is about as conservative as Edward Kennedy's philosophy is communist. Yet some people still do not wish to make the distinction. But, as I said, I have faith that this is not to be the rule. If it does become the dominant form of criticism, what is to be of that great alternative of demonstration? My editor's ucers to the contrary, it was a unique, exciting experience to write a tongue-in-cheek column about women's wear that was viltified to a point where I was the object of two demonstrations and a 30-wimmin storming of the Kansan newsroom. I learned what it was like to know that my words were being read. I learned what the influence of the columnist could be. I learned how to avoid the office of the Women's Coalition. There are a lot of things that remain undone, however. A lot of questions remain unanswered on this campus, and it's hard to tell whether anyone will have the time or inclination to look into them. Free speech, the University's role in South Africa, the power of the chancellor's office and faithful pursuit of academic ideals are important issues. But has anyone ever attempted to find out why you can never find a table in the Wescoe Dell when you need one? Why do people who normally would walk or ride bicycles now drive "energy-saving" mopeds on campus? Why does it take seven Facilities Operations people to get ice off of six feet of sidewalk? Why don't the concessions people at football games save a few skulls and go to either paper or lighter plastic cups? Perhaps, from God knows where, someone will come along who has the time to ask these questions. Maybe, if the stars are right, the Kansan will be blessed with another columnist who can give the campus a different, if not always perceptive, point of view. Until then, I suppose the campus will have to get its paltry diet of conservatism from my "cerebral clone," or the "multisyllabic" William F. Buckley. But that's not all bad. With a little effort and a little openness, they might even learn to like it. And maybe they will remember that they heard it here first. DOGGONE IT, ED. THERE'S GOT TO BE AN ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCE AROUND SOMEWHERE. I CAN... I CAN JUST FEEL IT... WELL, PHRED. THERE GOES ANOTHER TWELVE MILLION DOWN THE DRAIN... NOWHERE, KAN. NUCLEAR POWER PLANT DANGER: RADIOACTIVE Richardson KANSAN 80 Alternative energy needs publicity It is a squat, brick building where I intermed this summer, in an easily overlooked town. It is one small beginning of many in the alternative energy movement, a part of a field with growing pains that is too small for its ideas, too big for its buildings. It is Alternative Sciences of Energy (ASE) magazine, 10 volume, to provide realization of a down-sized American dream. In 10 years, the magazine has grown from a newsletter mimeographed in a basement to a full-fledged publication with a readership of 25,000 in 55 countries. It is confidentially capitalist, relying on subscriptions and enthusiasm for its success. Its dreams are private. Practicality is pounded on the magazine's typewriters. ASE publishes largely technical articles on alternative energy systems and appeals to a readership of mostly engineers and architects. It also promotes alternative energy legitimizes a movement that has only recently gone from waving banners to businesses. As Abby Marier, associate ASE editor said, "Ten years ago when small groups of us were talking about alternative energy, people told us we should get serious about something feasible. Today we're consultants, architects and business people in alternative energy. "We're making money from alternative energy." heated buildings spiraled from 52 in 1974, to more than 50,000 in 1979. The budget for the government-sponsored Solar Energy Research Institute has increased by 20 times since its opening in 1977, from $5 million to $100 million. Yet if there are successes, there are reminders of work ahead. In the ASE office, one floor in a brick building, plaster falls all too frequently from the aging ceiling, contractors are in short supply and documents are crowded into a too-small space. It is the alternative energy movement in microcosm, at once overworked, understaffed, overcommitted and a movement with momentum. It is a movement emboldened by success. Since the early fifties, for instance, photovoltaic costs were sharply reduced from $2,000 per peak watt to $8-15 per watt. Meanwhile the number of solar Grown from speculation to sophistication within the last decade, alternative energy measures its history by what happened the day before. But progress is not a pat measure of an alternative energy future. Improvements are only as good as the policies that promote them. All too often, government and private SUSAN SCHOENMAKER 图 industry are at cross purposes in pursuit of the same goal. The research and development efforts of small alternative energy companies are often duplicated by governmental programs. In a further display of intelligent economic thinking, we suggest that alternative energy publicity vital to the success of both its programs and small company marketing. The result is high-priced programs and an uninformed public. In a recent study by the Arthur Little Corporation, 50 percent of Americans weren't even aware of government tax credits on alternative energy devices. Forty percent of the first $10,000 spent on the purchase of a solar, wind, photovoltaic or hydropower device can be credited against the purchaser's income tax bill. What appears as an apathetic public is really the result of a government that doesn't publish the alternative energy programs it practices. Whether alternative energy is even on the governmental agenda is in doubt after Ronald Reagan's election. In his campaign, Reagan suggested the elimination of the Department of Energy the major source of alternative fuel and the removal of the windfall profits tax. The windfall profits tax is supporting, among other projects, the Solar Energy and Conservation bank. In 1811 the bank is scheduled to offer low-interest loans to customer purchases of energy-funded homes, solar collectors, and the financing of retrofitting. Progress in alternative energy is just as easily replaced by federal procrastination. Without government cooperation, and forced to compete against federally-subsubsidized conventional energy, alternative energy is an empty argument. The same government that provides tax write-offs to oil field exploration, that funded the Alaska pipeline and insured nuclear power by $55 million, owes alternative energy equality. When the free market is a farce, no alternatives to governmental assistance. Alternative energy once begun is not easily ended. But without significant federal aid, it may be preserved at the expense of its decentralized philosophy. Already oil companies own 50 percent of the photovoltaic market, which is a potential centralized energy source. To exploit an expanding exploring or exploitable on a large scale through the development of wind energy farms. An oil company recently was the first in its field to buv out a wind company. Letters to the Editor Alternative energy in America today is still an unfinished aspiration for those who gave to its beginnings. Whether it will truly lead as a decentralized energy source depends on the technology that will be used, begun, are willing to continue until aspirations and acceptance finally meet. Once again, we, the Muslim community of Lawrence, find the name of Christ used by those who preslyze their religion of racial, national and religious bigotry. To the editor: Muslims denouncing Christian bigotry, narrowness We denounce the Crusade's base attempts to set up a psychological environment for racism by is distribution of the infamous and racist "virulent" "Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion." We denounce its official organ, "The Cross and the Flag." We denounce its role in fostering a climate that has resulted in a spate of racially motivated violence throughout the United States, for example. Wilmington, N.C., and Buffalo, N.Y. In light of this, and because we have so long borne the brunt of well-calculated attacks by similar bigots, we now take the opportunity to categorically denounce the Christian Nationalist We denounce its attempt to co-opt the Muslims' legitimate struggle against perceived inequities and injustices in the policies of the government of Israel. For those ignorant enough to question why Muslims would denounce the religious defamation of Jews, we have an Islamic tradition that says, "Whoever from among you se anindecency, he must modify it by his hand. if he cannot, he must do so by his tongue; if he cannot, he must do so by his heart (through disnoropal. etc.) ..." Karim Abbas Muslim Student Association To those who are frustrated by opposition to or questioning of certain attitudes you might hold, we say do not become so frustrated that you call for so-called alliances against the Muslims. We see such calls as incentive for society's bigots to be vicious viperous heads. They care not when they bite. To the editor: I have lost track of how many letters Kevin Helliker has had printed in the UDK, but I really enjoyed reading the one in the Nov. 14 issue! At first I asked myself, "is this a joke?" But then I realized that the letter was to be taken seriously. It rambled from first in Hood, to two men lost in a wormstow, and finally to a bur under a saddle. Drowsiness nearly overtook me while reading, until I came to his criticism of the judicial system for outlawing prostitution, gambling, drug abuse and suicide. He claims these are "victimless crimes." Helliker off base For those of you fortunate enough to have fallen off into a peaceful sleep before getting that far, Helliker made the assumption that, "given the freedom to do so, man will price himself right out of business." He continued with, "This assumption, which substitutes fear for facts, is the same assumption that led our judicial system such as each act as preemptive of drug use, and acts most commonly known as victimless crimes." Then for us, those he is trying so hard to enlighten, he adds, "A victimless crime is a contradiction in terms, a joke and a slap in the face of justice." First, I must make clear a point that Heliker has confused, that being the fact that the judicial system has NOTHING to do with the legislation of laws in this nation. The judicial system is empowered to enforce, not create, the laws of our nation and state. If you want to "blame" someone for the illegality of your "victimless" crimes then you should blame yourself, because the laws governing them were and still are being legislated by the representatives YOU elect. Seeing that Hellikler had confused two separate and distinct branches of government, I wasn't sure how to react. "I'm not timeless" crime. According to the eternal Webster's, a victim is "a living creature who is Mark Gillett Leavenworth sophomore If Kevin Helliker is so set on changing the laws of this nation, then he should stop spending his time confusing the public with erroneous data. Instead he should tell his representatives, both at state and federal levels that he would like something done. In an earlier letter, Helliker stated, "Your mind is your salvation." Helliker, you are utterly lost. killed, injured, or subjected to suffering." To be sure that each of Hellerk's "victimless" crimes in fact has a victim, let's apply this definition. The first two crimes, prostitution and gambling, have for years been the subject for debate. If anyone really hurt? I have my opinion, but it is primarily up to the reader to determine for himself if it is moral to have sex for money and put "earned" money up to chance. For the next crime it is important to note that drug use is not illegal in this or any country. Drug abuse is. It is illegal in other countries, in thousands of deaths and millions of dollars of property loss each year. Surely, among all this pain and suffering, we can find one victim. Suicide, or "the act of intentionally killing oneself," must also fit our definition. The victim causes the death (no doubt of that). But the fact remains, there is a victim. The University Daily KANSAN (BSF 595-640) Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday and Thursday through Saturday. BSF will accept Second-Class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas 60055. Subscriptions by mail are $13 for six months or $27 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $34 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester. Kansan Telephone Numbers Newsroom--684-4810 Business Office--684-4358 Postmaster: Send changes of address to the University. Dr. Kannan, Inst. Hall, The University of Kansas, Kansas City, KS 66105 Editor Business Manager Carol Beler Wolf Elaine Strahler Carol Beeler Wolf Elaine Strabler Managing Editor...Crystal Hughes Editorial Editor...David Lewis Campus Editor...Judy Woodbury Campus Editor...Amy Gossett Assistant Campus Editors Mark Spencer, Den Mousey; White Clydehunter Sports Editor...Gary Meyer Retail Sales Manager...Kevin Koster National Sales Manager...Nancy Claucon Sales Manager...Barrie Gold Classified Manager Advertising Makeup Manager Jane Buckingham General Manager and News Advisor Rick Hunter Kansas Advisor Chuck Hawkins University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 5 ringing, / and alk is as to energy the just as nation. forced dized is an easily aid, it of its com- italics alized wind brough An oil field to V is still have to d as a on the once until From page 1 di Hughhead David Lewis WoodBurrow off Jeffensen Whitcotes Whitcotes some Myerra nk Hoster Rabid Laird Tracy Cone Barr Laird Mick Musa ch Kwainson Students working illegally because they use social security numbers. Most students are caught after an acquaintance or co-worker tips the IPS on a person is working without a permit, Geil said. Bahman said that was what happened in his case. "The fear that someone will turn you in is the fear that you need the money, your work anyway," he said. One student, who has no work permit and did not want to be identified, said he was forced to get a job with an off-campus manufacturing house whose his parents did not have money to send him. "They are not employed," he said. Students can apply to work part time on the campus through the office of foreign student affairs. Full time undergraduate students must complete a half semester before they are eligible for on-campus work, and a graduate student enrolled full time is eligible to apply for an on-campus job immediately. Students are restricted to 20 hours a week during the semester and may work more hours during breaks and holidays. The student said he tried unsuccessfully to find on-campus jobs that would not require a work permit from the ISN. He had not applied for a job at the university. The immigration service rarely lets Irianans work." OBTAINING A WORK permit from the INS is more difficult for students, Gell said. Students must document the financial ability to pay tuition and board before admittance to the United States is granted. In order to be granted a work permit after being admitted for study in the United States, students must show that a certain change has occurred in their financial situation. "A student who has his government shipship would probably have no trouble in a work with a worker." Work permits are not broken down according to ethnic groups, Gell said. "But I believe few Iranians have been given work permits in the last two years," he said. Jeff Saadi, a former Tehran graduate student, said Iranian students who need to work believe the risk of deportation is there whether they work illegally or not. Saadi, who works with an on-campus research group and received both his undergraduate and masters degrees at the University of Kansas, said many students think they are in a no-win situation. "If they do not have the money to pay tuition, they're subject to deportation, and if they work without permits to get money for tuition, they're also subject to deportation," he said. Geil estimated that about 20 percent of the foreign students in the United States violated their status by working without permits. The severe backlash against their status were more apt to be apprehended. "It is no secret that Iranian students are being watched closely," Coa said. THE WEEDING OUT OF Iranian students who were in violation of their student visas began last year when President Carter ordered that the status of the more than 50,000 Iranian students in the United States be checked. The Iranian project, as INS officials have termed it, is an ongoing search to find Iranians who have violated their status by failing to enroll in a university, taking less than a full-time course load or working without a permit. Despite the intensified hunt for Iranian status violators, Saadi said he believed that about 60 percent of the Iranian students worked without a permit. "They would rather continue their studies than go back home at this time," he said. oant said the turmilor in Iran had made many students insecure about their future. "I iframans are called back to fight," he said, they would not hesitate to go. But things are so mundane that we don't even know what to do. Returning Italian students would not be able to find work or finish their education in Iran, he said. A friend, who recently returned to Iran, told Saadi that Iran had closed the universities. "The universities were closed," he said, referring to the destruction of a threat to the stability of his Islamic regime. Saaid, who has a masters degree in engineering, said that he had been waiting since graduating in May for a return of political and economic stability in Iran so that he could go home. Mohammad Amani, Mashhad graduate student said that his academic performance has decreased to zero since Iran's war and political crisis. "I probably won't find a job if I go home," he said. AMANI SAID HE would like to stay in the United States until Iran became more stable but did not think he could get an extension to stay in the country. He said he planned to leave next litigation, said he was hopeful that he will be able to stay. Amani, a petroleum engineering student, said he was not sure what the future held for him. "My lawyer told me that I might have a better chance of being put on probation if the hostages are released," he said. Bahman, whose deportation case is in Bahman was recently granted a work permit by an immigration judge. "I think my getting the permit is a good sign," be said. Council From page 1 - The Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals will replace the Board of Parking and Traffic Court. The duties of the board will remain the same. same: * Classified staff members will be placed on the Board of Parking and Traffic Appeals and the Judicial Board. In other action, the council passed the final examination schedule for the Spring 1981 semester. Because of a possible change in the Commencement date, the council delayed action on the matter until it was sure of Shankel's Commencement decision. *The Advisory Committee on Campus Advocates, who advises the university omphibians.* *A national database.* Monday to Sunday, Commencement will be Monday, May 18. Shankel rejected a recommendation from a Special Commencement Committee that would have approved the nomination. At the Faculty Council meeting following the University Council, faculty discussed the necessity for University Faculty executive committee continuity. George Worth, FacEx chairman, said that based on his own experience, he thought something had to be done to guarantee an orphan transfer of power from one chairman to the next. HE SAID that sometimes in his position, he thought he was "acting and talking like a new boy on the job." FacEx also unanimously endorsed a resolution against the faculty family fee for the use of Robinson gymnasium. Worth said, "The more pressure that is put on the executive vice chancellor, the more likely he will be to remove the fee." $4.50/dozen SAXOPHONE PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 MASS 51 LAWRENCE KANSAS UPSYTAWS TAKE A RAINBOW HOME WITH YOU. You've worked hard all week. So treat yourself to our Friday Flower Feature. You deserve a big, bright weekend. Our feature will make it even brighter. It's specially priced and ready to take home with you right now. Carnations $4.50/dozen Flower Shoppe 1101 Mass. Open 8:30 Mon-Sat. PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE 926 MASS ST LAWRENCE KANSAS LIFESTAND Tonight Something Different Rhythm & Blues COLT 45 9-midnight $3.00 Cover Weekend Special! Good on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. Save $1.90 on any size pizza. Our drivers carry less than $10. Get a free cup of Pepsi with the purchase of any pizza! $1 Fast. 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Get Smart tells audiences to wise up By BLAKE GUMPRECHT Staff Writer Staff Writer Frank Loose displays mude self-portrait photographs at art exhibits. Marc Koch plots his and more bizarre hairstyles to have his hair styled. Already he has it cut so angles to a V in the center of his forehead—like something you'd expect to see on an "AddamsFamily" shirt. Lisa Wirtman tots around campus atop a pink, spike-heated shoes in a mock tribute to Dora. It's all for reaction. They are Get Smart, only three months old and innovative bands in the Kentucky Kawasaki. Loose, Koch and Wertman, all three roommates and students, have the same idea when they hop on a stage with electric guitars, a bass and drums. While most area bands seem content to bang out cover after cover of rock'n'roll classics and recent favorites along with a few originals in the same dance style, Get Smart writes songs that are meant to do more than just fill up the dance floor. Their music is unusual and often ex-persistent. Many mainstreamers would simply call it a struggle. Hence the name Get Smart. "The name has nothing to do with the TV show," Koch says. "Oh, sure. I thought of that." But it's a definite statement. It deals with all the apathy, the feeling that there's nothing you can do." Indeed, Get Smart is not just another pop band. It's a cliche, and they have something to say and they say it through music. The lyrics are written first. The music comes later. "We're trying to show them that there is more to the world than what you see in J.C. Penney and Montgomery Ward." loose says. "We want people to understand that smart thought of using, but Smart sounded better." Get Smart sings its social commentary with songs like "Numbers and Colours," a subtle anti- war song, "Justice in Full Motion," inspired by the 1960 film, "A Beautiful Day was Different." Koch writes most of the lyrics. The band's melodies, furthermore, are well-structured and simple—almost sparse—and the lyrics easy to understand even through a muddy sound mix. Get Smart has only been played together since August and has only played in public four times, excluding parties. Their most recent anniversary bash last night at Off-the-Wall Hall. "We don't want to overblown our lyrics with the music," Loose explains. "We want our lyrics to be free." They'll play again tomorrow night at a "Hock Against Reagan" party at 81/2 A/W $1,500 in Chelsea, NY. the Young Reagans, formerly Home Improvements, is also on the bill. Wertman and Loose didn't begin playing until last summer. Wertman bought her bass in June after acouring the classified for months, and later at a club where the drums along with albums a few weeks later. "This is the main thing for us right now," Loose says. Already, though, Get Smart has 14 originals and the lyrics for several others. Koch, furthermore, plans to skip spring semester to work fulltime so he can save money for the band. All three met while living in Oliver Hall in 1978. Both Koch, from the Chicago suburb of Morton Grove, II, and Loose, Lake Worth, Fla., senior, came to KU to study graphics. Koch, who has been playing the guitar since he was 13, was playing in another local band, the Fizz Tabs, when the three first talked of putting their own band together last semester. "I was very, very disappointed and angry," he says. "Here I had all these songs and ideas in my head and all they wanted to do was play Beatles and Who covers." thing over and over again . . . there's only so much you can take." Koch says. "We're trying to show people that different types of music can be interesting." Talk of originality dominates conversations with Get Smart. They don't like playing covers and have set a goal of introducing a new song at each performance. Still, it appears unlikely that Get Smart will ever gain the broad local popularity of the Debs, the Clean or even the Blue Rididim Band. Simply, they are not a dance band. Oh, their music is danceable, but their covers are few and unknown to most. "It's fun to play 'You Can't Do That' and things like that, but to keep playing the same Their music is unlike that of any other area band. "Our original material—you can talk all you want about Joy Division and the other people we like—but no one influences me but myself . . ." Koch says. "And the guys at the Wheel," says Loose, intertwining with a grin. The guys at the wheel inspired Get Smart's satirical "Moderne Boy" 'I'm living in a modern world/I'm sleeping with a modern girl/I'm dancing and beat/I'll have fun with the people I meet ...' Loose and Koch regularly stop at the Wheel for a beer. Loose, with his shirt always buttoned to the top button and his rat tail hair cut, and Koch, with his "beak" hair cut . . . well, they just don't fit in amid the Izod shirts, Top Siders and Calvin Klein ieans. "We like to watch them watching us," Loose savs. Says Wertman, "It's all a statement, just like our music. We're not trying to shock. We're just trying to have a reaction, to change people to think personally, as pink hair or bleached hair and just it's fine." Cultural forecast: entertainment may be next religion Bv KEVIN MILLS Entertainment Editor Spawned by the self-serving society of the 1970s, a new cultural force is poised to dominate American life to an extent greater than the government. Backed by big bucks, coddled by the mass media and devout of morality, entertainment is often a source of violence. L Yes, entertainment. Unlimited pleasure. Heaven on earth. As technology progresses, entertainment will ultimately create a utopian life. Perfectly programmed, available 24 hours a day, it will eliminate the hardship of contending with a flawed reality. I'm overstating the case of course. Entertainment is not, and never will be, a cure-all for our social ills. But with increased leisure time and a high standard of living, it has become reckoned with. And it shows no slim of lettuce up. The 70s saw a resurgence of attendance at American theaters and music halls. Moviegoers turned in doves for such sheer entertainment spectacles as "Jaws," "Star Wars" and "Gregle." Cable television has proliferated across the land. Wide-screen TV, once a concept in the stories of Ray Bradbury, is now a reality in most homes and office buildings for years, home computer sales have indicated that the public is ready for the next quantum leap in entertainment-artificial intelligence. Computers, with their wealth of knowledge and function, may someday allow anyone to become a filmmaker, a musician or an artist. When home computers are eventually linked to a world data bank, everyone will have access to the world's greatest library. Such fingerprinting could be useful for protecting homebodies, never wanting or needing to leave the protective shell of their computerized homes. The applications of home computers seem limitless. Already they are handling budgets, recording news and playing games. They have the capability to run a house (turn on lights, open doors, turn on thermostat), although the mechanical devices for such operations have not yet been marketed. As long as public theater and movie houses survive, technological advances will be made to keep the consumer happy. Soon, a movie may become a powerful physical experience as well as an auditory one. Movies 3-D and 3-D have already made motion pictures a bit more like real life. Theoretically, there's no end in sight. Perhaps by tinkering with the chemical and electrical balance of the brain's pleasure centers we may be able to experience the life of a flicker-eared "feelie" in the Orwellian sense of the term. Some speculate that this would mean the demise of public theaters and movies. Why film "Star Wars XIV" when it could be beamed directly to home computer terminals? But such reasoning ignores the communal aspects of public entertainment: audience participation, mingling at intermission, and, most importantly, getting out of the house. Barry Malzkberg, a science fiction writer and self-proclaimed "Jeremiah at four cents a word," said in the Jan. 1979 "High Times" that by the year 2010 everything will be entertainment. In the vein of Marshall McLuhan, he reasons that "after you've seen 'Mork and Mindy,' and the president being shot, it all becomes entertainment." He suggests that Mr. McLuhan will define the same death; sex, moral difference, visual difference. "The primary pursuit of Americans will be death. They're really turned on by death," Malzkberg contends. While such a dim view of humanity is shared only by the hardest of cynics, there is logic to the argument that entertainment could oversteep its bounds. The next great religious revival? Like entertainment offers something for everyone. Perhaps even life and death. Rock poets tap American spirit on new albums By MARK PITTMAN Staff Writer Listening to Nell Young's latest, "Hawks and Doves," one gets the distinct sensation that one is watching reurns of Election Night. Cronkite read the roll call of the states as the pressure mounted toward the Republican conservative tidal wave that swept the country. Each cut on "Hawks" wraps Young a little tighter in the American flag and answers the Reagan query; "Are you any better off now than you were four years ago?" This album is as spit in its personality as Young's last studio outfit, "Rust Never Sleep." Review You choke the dichotomy between New Wave and gold fok in "Rust." Young picks the widening rift between political ideologies as the theme of "Hawks and Dyers." ideologies as the theme of "Hawks and Doves." The "Hawks" side speaks with the voice of a 24-year-old autoworker who can't find a job, takes pride in the flag and stepped into the voting booth to pull the lever for Reagan. His wife did, too. She was going to attend a green that was going on at the college, and he remembers when you could buy a car for three brand. With melodies spun from fiddle and steel guitar, Young has brought the recession's blue-collar story to vinyl. The five songs on the "Hawks" side stick to themes of sacrifice, patriotism and sitting tall in the saddle—basic Reagan clichés. Since the plant hit the skids, the United Auto Workers union has been picking up his check, and he's beginning to lose his faith in the free-enterprise system. The "Hawks" centerpiece, "Comin' Apart at Nail," expounds on the uncertainty and frustration of this decade. ✩ rung singst. "It's awful hard to find a job/ On one side the government, the other the mob/Hey, hey ain't that right/ The workin' man's in for a hell of a fight." Reagan sang, "Get the government off the backs of the neocle." Whether through rock 'n' roll or political oratory, it is the message that is important. Young has adopted the person to illustrate a mood of America, from doves to hawks. On the flip side, Young reassumes his old mask of a lost little idealist adrift in a sea of cynicism. A soft, strumming acoustic guitar and a harp replace the country-swing mood of "Hawks." "On Doves," Young sings of the death of liberalism and the end of the "Lost in Space" generation. "Captain Kennedy." Young says, "If you are a patriot, you're safe, and now his son must go to war and 'kill good.'" "Hawks and Doves" is Young's testament to the events of the fall of 1980. It is musical journalism that neither condemns nor readily excludes. It taps a waltzing of the new American songbook, "I Can't Live Without You," bled. It is a spirit that is simply confused about where America is going and where it has been. The straight population has a morbid fascination with the sheer concept of heroin addiction. The needle brings out the worst in stigma and the ultimate in ecstasy, according to users. The fast lane was discovered by a skin-popper and widened by mainliners way back in the bebop jazz days. Rock 'n' roll history is loaded with casualties to Sister Morphine: Keith Richard, Eric Clapton, Mike Bloomfield, Lou Reed. ★★★★★★★★★★★ But any addict with sense realizes that "junk is a 9 to 5 gig like anything else." That statement was written by a 13-year-old boy in his first novel, "The Basketball Diaries." The boy, Jim Carroll, is now 29. He is been off junk since 1974 and has his first album, "Catholic Boy," out on the Ato label. "Catholic Boy" stems with the seamy side of city streets. Vapors pour from manhole covers, while pimps and dealers run over junkies lying in the gutter. Friends fall off rooftops stoned in the THE JIM CARROLL BAND Catholic Boy cough syrup and airplane glue. Henry Miller would be right at home here in the Tropic when he was a teenager. Jim Carroll's pedigree makes a listener's expectations almost untaintable. After the "Basketball Diaries" was published, Jack Kerouac, chronicler of the Beats, said Carroll wrote better than "89 percent of the novelists working today." Not bad for someone just out of grade school. When he was 22, his third volume of poems, "Living at the Movies," was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. His circle of friends includes Susan Sontag, William Burroughs, Alain Ginsberg and Andy Warhol. He used to date Patti Smith, the leather rocker, and shoot baskets with the then Lew Alecinder. "Catholic Boy's" lyrics deliver on that promise. Carroll reaches out and stops the heart. He then brings it back to beating with a blow from his vocal fist. He doesn't sing, he recites the words of the poem and gives his confession to a priest who cannot absolve him. In the purest sense, he is a Catholic boy. Carroll's band is what keeps him from becoming a morose Bruce Springsteen or a latter-day Lou Reed. Both the B Street Band and the Velvets were class musicians capable of welding poet's eyes to rock 'n' roll riffs. Carroll's band suffers from that New Wave three chord progression disease that marks the worst of that era, which has led to a melancholy tone, and does not vary from cut to cut on the album. They sound a lot of a lot like any garage band that might do soundtracks for lazy film Maybe it's intentional, but it's probably incompetence. The final judgment on the Catholic boy is that he already writes better songs than 89 percent of the rockers working today. The catechism that comes next album will be what wins him redemption. University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 7 From page 1 Lone Star the jack arrh narr of outlune of outlume was die of ole il. ilo he or, and blow the blees that the heart. im. In from or from a ad and ad and that within on the garage illims. in them that that that that old matriarch and Lone Star native, said she thought of the town as a “country village,” where everybody knows everybody else. She said, however, that she thought "the spirit of the times is different now. "We weed to depend on the community for so many things, transportation, communication ... well, for example, if you just don't seem like the same place." Barbara Fishburn, 26, and a third generation resident of Lone Star, said she thought the nearness of Lawrence and the increase in the number of women working had caused the atmosphere of Lone Star to change. "Lone Star is just kind of dying out. It will always be called a community, but as a together community, I just don't know," she said. Except for the cars parked in driveways and a few potted plants on porch steps, motorists see few signs of life when they drive through the town on their way to Lone Star Lake. a 200-room recreational lake and 400-acre park. A DOUBLE YELLOW stripe on the highway cutting through the valley now warms traffic of no passing. Dusty, gravel driveways branch off the one-lane blacktop to white clapboard farm farms with aging barns. Wood posts fence off property lines. A sign: "Lone Star Church of the Brethren" greets travelers as they drive in from the north. Many of the residents who live in and around Lone Star attend the Church of the Brethren, one of three denominations that actively advocates the simple life, pacifism and piety. The Brethren are included with the Men's Conference of the three historic peace churches whose members refused to fight in wars. "We hold to the Brethren ideas, but the church was built more as a community church," Anna said, nodding her head slowly. The town's social life has revolved around the church, she explained. It sponsored mother-daughter banquets, father-son suppers and a dinner party every January to celebrate everyone's birthday. She said it was also the meeting place at one time or another for the Fraternal Aid Society, the Ladies Aid, the Jolly Stitchers Club, the Literary Society and the Farmers Union. It had about 67 members in the 1920s, and church records now register about 98 despite the demise of Lone Star. Although the Church of the Brethren does not forbid television sets and recreational electronics as does its church, it has adopted Brethren, it does advocate moderation and simplicity, according to Tom Hostetler, the parish's minister. Hosteller moved from a Brethren congregation in a small town in Indiana shortly over a year ago. The Brethren churches tend to be in small towns and the church has been established where the simpler life ideology of the church is more easily followed. "We're a rural denomination," Weir said. "We rule the rural lifestyle isn't overwhelming." "When we think of the simple life we always think of doing without, more like the Amish or the German Baptist. No electricity. That's what I think of the Bible. We're compared to other people, I guess, probably do lead a simple life." JOINING THE CONVERSATION as she offered apple pie to the crowd, Barb's mother-in-law, Angie, 49, said she's been struck by the differences in their family lifestyle and that of others several times during the past years. "I're really struck me in the past two or three years, how different we really are," she said. "One instance was a friend of mine who is about 55. He invited me and my husband to have a drink, and the invitation said bring your own bottle of liquor. We didn't go, and it's that kind of thing we have just never done." She and her daughter-in-law both said, however, that they don't spend a lot of time thinking about how simple or how secluded their life is from others. "It's a life we've grown up with," Angie said. Lone Star was founded in 1875 by a man known only at Bond, who also became the town's first postmaster. In 1880 the first businesses moved in. APPLE PIE SCHOOL was built in 1895. Eight grades, at one time 50 students, were taught in the one-room building for more than 65 years. Enrollment went to 40 in 1920 and finally dropped to 12 just before the school closed in 1960. Kids are now bused to Wakarua Valley School. No one really knows when or how the town got its name. A star was drawn on the outside of the school's upper level, but has since been painted over and the school renovated into a residence. It sits across the road from the church on the northeast edge of town. Besides the school and the church, Lone Star once had a bank, a tannery, a cheese factory, a telephone company, a meat market, a feed mill, a doctor, a veterinarian, a wagon maker, a carpenter and a shoe maker. SUA FILMS Friday, Dec. 5 Superman S The Man of Steel returns in an all-star spectacular which convinces you that a man can fly. Christopher Reeve and Stephen King star in Lola Lane. Gene Hackman is nasty baddie Lex Luther, and Marion Brando is goddor Jokel in this epic, aw-impiring illus. Plus, Max Fleshers' cartoon 7:42 (142/10 min). Color, 3:30, 7:00-10:00. Saturday, Dec. 6 Superman 3:30, 7:00, 10:00. Sunday, Dec. 7 Lord of the Rings (1978) Ralph Bakhti takes on the seemingly impossible task of translating J.R.R. Tolkien's massive, minutely detailed saga and succeeds. A milestone in animation history he leaves in an awesome world life to 131 million. Color: 2:00 Monday, Dec. 8 To Have and Have Not (1944) Howard Hawks, with the help of Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacus (in her book) and Bill Nighy, in Himingay's novel into a classic screen adventure. The Casablanca brothers, who used their nighthair boat-and Bacus's singing (allegedly dubbed by Andy Williams), (100 min.) 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 $1.00. Midnight films are $2.00. The KU School of Art has a Union, 4th level, information 864-3477. No smoking or refreshments allowed. School's Out Sr. Class Party [Cartoon illustration featuring a group of five caricatured characters, each with distinct hairstyles and expressions, smiling or showing interest.] MONDAY, DEC. 8! Come out to Gammons for the first Sr. class party! Get in free with your Sr. class card! (If you don't have a class card, you can buy one at the door for $13.00.) Sr. Class Card Holders Receive: • a Sr. T-shirt (if you don't already ha - a Sr. T-shirt (if you don't already have one) * a free drink - a chance to win - $50 cash prize - 2 $25 food and drink prizes - lots of albums *You don't have to be a senior to enjoy the excitement of Gammons Monday night and every night this week! 23rd and Ousdahl South I SUA Special Events Presents An End of Term Party/Concert Featuring Shooting Star With Black Frost Tuesday, December 9th in the Kansas Union Ballroom at 7:00 p.m. Admission - $3.50 or $3.00 with KUID Beer, Pop, and Refreshments Available! 1957 Christmas '80 in clothes from Mister Guy for men and women. . . hundreds of items to choose from our fall collection perfect for those special people on your list . . . lawrence's only traditional clothier for men and women' . . . Christmas hours: M-T-W Th-F 9:30-8:30 Sat 9:30-6:00 Sun.-1:00-5:00 MISTER GUY 920 MASS 842-2700 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Annual Vespers Sunday night KU's combined orchestra and choirs will usher in the Christmas season with trumpet fanfares and candle-birth arrangements at the 68th annual Christmas Vespers. Vespers is a traditional Christmas performance sponsored by the School Of Fine Arts. This year, more than 400 KU and 100 industrialists, will per- form. To accommodate the 6,000 people expected to attend Vespers, there will be performances at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m., including a performance in the School of Fine Arts said yesterday. Before each of the performances, Albert Gerken, University carillonneur, will play Christmas selections from the Campanile. From a balcony window above the stage, the Ensemble and the University Handbell Choir will perform Christmas carols. darkened anditiorum and sing "O Come, All Ye Faithful." The Vespers performance will open as robed choir members walk into the The University Symphony will perform the prelude to "Hansel and Gretel" by Englebert Humperdink and Joan Sweeney, the Suite No. 2, by George Bisset. At both performances, collections will be taken for the Christmas Vespers Scholarship Fund, Meeser said. George Lawner, professor of or- ganizational sciences at the University Symphony Orchestra. James Ralston, director of choral activities, will conduct the University Choir, which includes students from the University Choir, Concert Chorale and Concert Chorale. A Balcony Choir, composed of students from the University Singers and the Concert Choir, will be conducted by Phil Orlando, assistant instructor of designtheb and Perry White, assistant professor of music education. Solstice Giving? spinsters books Librarians will retrieve books from the library daily, and they twice daily, the second probably at 6:30. Two levels of Watson Library's book stacks will be closed to the public on a rotating basis for the next several weeks. Kendall Simmons, stacks supervisor. Support a Feminist Business by Shopping at Spinsters. Simmons said yesterday the stacks would close so that workmen could paint the area and install a new sprinkler and lighting system. She said students should try to find their books before the stacks closed or ask to have them retrieved well in advance. CHRIS TODD/Kansan staff Books that the librarians retrieve right before closing will not be available until the next morning, Simmons said, and the librarians will not get a book for someone when they are not scheduled to. The schedule for closing and reopening the stacks is: Besides a full assortment of books, we carry records, T-shirts, buttons, bumper stickers and periodicals. Center stacks—levels 7 and 8 close Dec. 15, open Jan. 6; levels 5 and 6 close Jan. 5, open Jan. 20; levels 3 and 4 close March 1, open Mar. 1; levels 1 and 2 close Feb. 2, open Feb. 17; Watson stacks to be closed level-by-level West stacks—levels 7 and 8 close Feb. 16, open March 4; levels 5 and 6 close March 12, open March 13 and 4 close March 16, open March 31; and 2 close March 30, open April 14. Lawrence Hours: 1-6 pm Tuesday & Thursdays 10-5 pm Saturday TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT LAST Appearance Of The Year By Come Down After The Games Saturday Play At The Pladium ay NIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT LAST Appearance Of The Year By Come Down After The Games Saturday & Monday Play At The Pladium «LIQUID FIRE» And On The Last Day Of Classes MOFFET & BEERS BAND Doors Open 8 PM Pladium 9th & Mississippi 841-4600 Doors Open 8 PM Pladium 9th & Mississippi 841-4600 HISTORY OF THE CINEMA "Nalsmith has a good study environment, good food, a lot of good activities (sports, parties) and the chance to meet a lot of interesting people." OPENINGS FOR SPRING Larry Dollar, Junior Overland Park, Kansas Penny Graber, Wichita sophomore, left, and Anne Cortopias, St. Louis sophomore, middle back, entertain two children at the Pia Beta phi sorority, 1612 W. 15th St. Six-year-old Michelle Smith and Jack grande School, 6, look over the gifts given out at an annual Christmas party for students who attend the Woodlawn Elementary School. The party was sponsored by the Pia Beta phi sorority and the PhiGamma Delta fraternity. 1970 Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Hested swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT REGGAE, DANCE WEEKEND BLUE RIDDIM RAND with CARIBE WITH CARIBE SATURDAY ONLY SPECIAL—Free Bottle Of Beer Or Highball With Ticket From The Oral Next Week SATURDAY ONLY SPECIAL—Free Bottle Of Beer Or HighBall With Ticket From The Oral Roberts vs. Kansas Basketball Game 8 EDDIE SHAW AND WOLFGANG—FREFF Where the stars are 10 THE LOTIONS 11 THE DEBS with 7th & Mass. 842-6930 12/13 THESECRETSTS Lawrence Opera House Need Cash For Christmas? Great Plains Numisticum Services continues to buy GOLD RINGS, CLASS RINGS, CHAINS, STERLING, FLATWARE, and other MARKED STERLING, SILVER COINS, DENTAL GOLD, COLLECTIONS & RARE COINS. We also have: Christmas Gifts! Quality Jewelry *Gold Chains *Sterling Chains *Gold Rings *Sterling Rings *Silver Rose *Steel Gold X-MAS 1980 with Chains Gifts For Collectors *Proof Sate *Coin *Proof Sets Supplies *Silver *Mint Sets Great Plains Numismatic Services 842-8002 Come with us to the 16th Century charming dinner traditions of the Wassail Bowl, the strolling minstrels and the madrigal singers. Merrie Olde England and enjoy the charming dinner traditions of the The evening will begin at 6:30 with the Wassail Bowl. Dinner is at 7:00 nismatic Services Cost is $50 per person Call the SUA office for reservations up to two days prior to the dinner Tickets can be picked up between 8:30 and 5:00 on Monday through Friday of 6:00 to 7:00 on December 4 & 5. Thursday, December 4 and Friday, December 5. 1980 Kansas Union Bailroom SUA The Music Journal The 7th Annual Madrigal Dinner Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift ASTA Singing Telegrams 841-6169 4. 5 oz Chocolate Kiss Delivered With Each Order Ryrie N.A.S. Study Bible at your From Moody Press Christian Gift Center Mall's Shopping Centre ROSS CR EFFERENCE bookstore Mara Shopping Center Lawrence Kansas 842-1553 OPEN FORUM DIRECTOR OF ACADEMIC COMPUTING SERVICES A search committee has been appointed by the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor to recommend a replacement for Paul J. Wolfe, Coordinator of Academic Computing. Because of the importance of this position to the academic community, the search committee will hold an open forum on Friday, December 5, from 3:30-5:00, in the auditorium of the Computer Services Facility to discuss the procedures to be followed, the job description of the position, and the qualifications for the position. All interested persons are invited to attend and participate. 5 By DA Staff I MISS. STREET DELL 1041 MASSACHUSETTS Five joying thank Proje Lawru Resou St. Svi REUBEN SPECIAL $295 Hot Corned Beef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut, Served on Cottage or Russian Rye. Special Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Enjoy Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 9 5 Lawrence homes on sunny side of project By DAVE KENDALL By DAVE KENDALL Staff Reporter Five Lawrence homes will be enjoy sunny days more this winter thanks to the Neighborhood Solar Project recently initiated by the Lawrence Appliance Technology Center, 1101% Massachusetts St. ATRC received a $2,000 grant in Community Development funding to install various types of solar collectors at local residences. The project was designed as an experiment in community cooperation and as an educational experience in the installation of simple devices to capture The homes were converted during October, which was National Solar Action Mission. Volunteers supplied the labor, with the $2,000 grant covering the mortgage. Gary Webber, an ATRC volunteer who was a director of the project, said there were many people who applied for the devices to be installed in their homes. Selection of recipients was based on availability and orientation building site; qualifications meeting low-income guidelines; and willingness of the owner to participate. Syria to withdraw border troops BEIRUT, Lebanon—a Saudi Arabian mediator said yesterday that Syria had promised to withdraw its troops from its border with Jordan. A Syrian official confirmed that the crisis had been resolved, as far as Damascus was concerned. Fifty thousand Syrian troops, however, remained deployed along the Jordanian frontier. There was no imminent danger on when their withdrawal would heen. In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman said five planeloads of military spare parts and ammunition would be sent to Jordan within 10 days. Saudi Prince Abdullah ibn Abdel Aziz, back from a mediation mission to Darnascus and Amman, Jordan, said Syrian President Hafez Assad had given the trust gradually withdraw the grievance. In choosing the homes that were to benefit from the project, Webber said it was very important that the owners be interested in the solar concept. He also stressed the importance of proper maintenance. The success of the project depended upon people who were willing to get involved in the construction and maintenance, as well as an analysis of the efficiency of the devices, Webber said. Webber said that Lawrence was not well situated for optimum use of solar energy because most of the major streets in the residential areas run north and south. That meant that most area homes had greatest exposure to the east and west, directions not ideal for capturing the sun's rays. Both countries sent troops to the border after Syria demanded that Jordan stop supporting the Moslem Brotherhood, an underground terrorist organization bent on overthrowing Assad's regime. Another solar project created a greenhouse environment on a south-facing porch at the home of Fred Lubin, 601 Lyons St. Webber that attached greenhouses offer one of the most efficient and cost-effective means of capturing and using the warmth and light of the sun. Neva Blair, 1508 Haskell Avenue, also became involved. A passive wall wall collector was constructed on the south wall of her home. This heater was installed during the October project, covering 94 square feet. Materials cost $250. "We were lucky enough to get five people who were really interested," he said. "If it's to be a success, I think it will depend as much on that as it will on how well the devices have been designed." "None of the devices we built have been updated since the company said. We didn't have a lot of money. We didn't have a lot of money." The first person to benefit from the construction project was Lauren Allpress, 767 Maple St. A vertical solar collector was fitted to an outside wall of his house. A fan was incorporated into the system to assist the flow of air. can be bLOWed over the rocky or water, heating the air which in then heats it. "As you go farther along and get more serious about it, you can build a device that has water storage or rock storage." The second beneficiary of the project was Mark Larson, 706 Illinois St. Two window box solar heaters, costing $120 each, were built by the volunteers. One was installed at the Larson home, and the second was to be installed at the home of Hannah Leibengood, 946 New Jersey St. Both rock and water storage permit the solar devices to be used at night, allowing them to operate in a rock or water-filled container. After the sun goes down, air Webber said it was too soon to evaluate the project. With cold weather, still interrupted with brief warm spells, the residents had not had enough time to check the effectiveness of their collectors. The materials for the Allpress home's collector cost $340. It is expected to heat the home's living area on sunny days, even on cold winter days. 20% OFF All Boots! Men's & Women's Fashion & Western Styles As Low As $47.95 "Your Authentic Western Store In Lawrence" RAASCH WESTERN WEAR for All-American Wear! Holiday Plaza 25th & Iowa 842-8413 HOW TO FITM AT THE LOADING CENTER DIET CENTER By the "weigh" . how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa There IS a difference!!! NEW PREPARE FOR: MCAT•DAT•LSAT GMAT • GRE • OCAT VAT • SAT Scheduled Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact 8112 Newton Overtland Park, KS. 68209 (913) 341-1220 Educational Center THE NEW YORKER PROMOTHALIAN PIZZA THE NEW YORKER PRIMO ITALIAN PIZZA SUPER PIZZA SPECIAL!! $2.00 off ANY MEDIUM OR LARGE PIZZA Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Coke No Coupons Accepted With This Offer No Coupons Accepted With This Offer FJ CI Why Frye? FRYE No one has been able to duplicate our unique Frye look. Whether it's our exclusive Classic, Western, or Casual boot, Frye has a style to fit your lifestyle. It's part of what makes Frye boots impossible to duplicate. And quality is another reason they cannot be duplicated. Frye boots are benchcraft by skilled hands, not rolled off an assembly line. So while our styles may change, our quality and craftsmanship will always remain the same. The best. Available in men's and women's styles. Arensberg's = Shoes 819 Mass. 843-3470 Open Sundays until Christmas 1-5 1981-1982 FINANCIAL AID Office of Student Financial Aid: 26 Strong Hall OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! YOUR STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOU The Student Senate is now accepting applications for membership on the following standing committees: Academic Affairs Communications Culture Finance and Auditing Minority Affairs Student Rights Student Services Sports Elections (sub committee) Apply in the Student Senate Office B105 Kansas Union TWO STARS TOO HOT TO MISS Give the gift of music. RCA RONNIE WILSAP GREATEST HITS 559 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 7.98 599 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 8.98 Also available on B-track & cassette STORE HOURS: 9-10 Daily 10-7 Sunday GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Good Through Dec. 10. VISA' 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas RCA Give the gift of music. RONNIE MILSAP GREATEST HITS RCA GREATEST HITS WAYLON RCA RONNIE MILSAP GREATEST HITS RCA GREATEST HITS WAYLON RCA 559 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 7.98 599 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 8.98 Also available on B-track & cassette HOURS: aily GIBBON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Good Through Dec. 10. VISA 559 LP/TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 7.98 GIBSON'S DISCOUNT CENTER VISA master credit card Page 10 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 lemon tree 11 WEST 9th Sandwich, Burger, & Yogurt Shop Featuring famous submarine sandwiches SPECIAL! The Classic Sub $1 69 Enjoy Coke Offer Good Wed.-Sun. Dec. 3-7 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Independent Studv adds to curriculum Six independent study courses have been added to the KU curriculum, according to Bruce Erickson, assistant director of publications for Independent Study. Courses in meteorology, advertising, recreation programming, en- vironmental health, creative writing and high school forensics are now available. The courses were added because of an expressed interest in the subject areas, especially creative writing, Erickson said. The new courses can also fulfill Kansas teacher certification requirements if teachers receive prior approval from the state department of education or from their college or university. The three other courses are being offered for the first time. Meterology, advertising, and creative writing had been offered to Ms. Broussard. The three new courses were not offered when some of the teachers were in college and independent study gives a service to take them now, Erickson said. Each of the new courses carries three hours of undergraduate credit. AFRICA JIMMY CLIFF AND Third World Dec. 7th — 2 shows 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. All Tickets $8.50 KIEF'S in Lawrence At 1 Your Favorite Store Retail in KANSAS CITY And At The UPTOWN Box Office 3700 Broadway JIMMY CLIFF AND Third Ward Dec. 7th — 2 shows 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. Uptown, 3700 Broadway Kansas City, MO In Conjunction With SAS 106 I/Z (816) 756-3370 SAS 106 1/2 XPANDACHEK THE PERFECT CHECKING ACCOUNT Want a checking account that pays you money instead of subtracting a service fee? Give yourself the advantages of Expandachek: No monthly service charge No per-check charge No minimum balance No idle funds — your balance earns interest "No Bounce" protection optional on some accounts Now you can see why our credit union calls this the perfect way to check. Your money is always available for you to spend, and this service costs nothing to use but instead pays you dividends on your idle funds. You receive a monthly statement noting the checks that have cleared during the month (amount paid and check number), your deposits and withdrawals, and your current balance. Earned interest appears on statement at regular dividend times only. Try our way. Expandachek, the perfect checking account. It pays you to check. KU Federal Credit Union 101 Carruth-O'Leary University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 try our wav This service is made possible through an agreement between your Credit Union and the State Bank of Lancaster, Lancaster, Kansas. City's federal funding assured under Reagan Many cities, including Lawrence, had their worries about a belt-tightening Reagan administration eased this week as international conference for cities in Atlanta. Delegates to the National League of Cities conference were assured that federal support to cities was likely to continue during the next four years. An aide to President-elect Ronald Reagan told Lawrence commissioners and officials from other cities at the conference that federal revenue sharing funds and the Community Fund would be the basis for common federal grants to cities, probably would not be affected by proposed spending cuts. City Commissioner Bob Schumm, who returned yesterday from the conference, said he thought the outlook for continued funding looked good. "The Reagan administration wants to strengthen the economies of cities," Schumm said. "I don't think there will be a lot of budget cuts there." He said the new administration also could increase funding for empleo in the war zone. Lawrence depends less on federal funds than many other cities, Schumann sags. Lawrence doesn't use federal funds for salaries as much as other cities, he said, but instead uses them for improvements and programs. Schumm said that Lawrence officials also got to talk to people from other cities that had downtown or suburban malls like those proposed for Lawrence. Early orchards attended seminars on energy financing and employment at the USC. City commissioners have recently rejected proposals for both a downtown shopping mall and a suburban shopping mall. They have asked a Chicago city council to approve the proposal for one or two department stores and a rejuvenated shopping area downtown. Some cities at the conference are having problems that Lawrence would like to avoid. Schumm said. A mall developer who spoke at the conference told city officials that they should fight to keep malls out of their cities. Schumm said. A year-old suburban mall in Sioux City, Iowa, has already ruined that city's downtown, he said and a new shopping center is nearby, is also causing problems in that city. "We're going in the right direction," Schumm said. THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM ONE YEAR PROGRAM for ONE YEAR PROGRAM—for college sophomores and 1981/82 PROGRAMS FOR AMERICAN STUDENTS college sophomores and juniors. ■ REGULAR STUDIES — for college transfer students toward B.A. and B.Sc. degrees. SUMMER COURSES GRAUATE STUDIES — Master's, Doctoral and Visiting Graduate programs PLEASE CHECK DESIRED PROGRAM For Application and Information, write Office of Academic Affairs Name ___ Admirations and the higher university 114 AOES of the Americas, New York, NY 10036 (212) 840-5820 City/State/Zip BOOKS THE SCHOLARS' BOOKSTORE ALL 25,000 PAPERBACKS 1/2 PRICE 1401 Mass. 1401 Mass. 841-4644 = Crêpe Lovers Buy One, Get One Free Wea Kansa forum Genet By DA Staff Ir From banana-nut to apple, Village Inn has the widest selection of dessert crêpes in Lawrence. Bring in a friend and the coupon below for your free crepe! Now Thru Finals Week --- Res recom qualit diabet F. W biocch The jures Brave Weav poten which Crêpes Buy One, Get One Free Must present coupon. Expires 12-20-80 PR first prod conta for li Only gene prod DNA Cor DNA to loc Weav 821 Iowa Village Inn PRICES FOR HOUSE BREAUTARY Kani sessi liste idea A1 --- University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 11 Insulin breakthrough expected --- Bv DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter Research now being conducted on recombinant DNA could produce high-quality, less expensive insulin for diabetics by 1982, according to Robert F. Weaver, associate professor of biochemistry. Weaver spoke last night in the Kansas Union as part of a microbiology forum titled "Recent Advances in Genetic Engineering." 7 The term genetic engineering conjures up images of Aldous Huxley's Brave New World for many people, Weaver said. Nevertheless, it has the potential for great social benefit, of which insulin production is only a part. Diabetics now use insulin taken mostly from pigs and cows. Because of the subtle differences between animal insulin and human insulin, diabetics often suffer allergic reactions to the animal insulin that are difficult to treat. Weaver said. PRODUCTION OF HUMAN insulin first involves the cloning of the insulin-producing gene, Weaver said. Genes contain the basic chemical instructions for deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA. Only part of the DNA molecule has the coding sequence, so production, so that a fragment of the DNA first has to be isolated. Considering the complexity of the DNA protein molecule, the task is akin to looking for a needle in a haystack, Weaver said. Using a complex process, the isolated insulin-producing DNA fragment is isolated from the serum. where it can reproduce and it will give insulin in the process. Waverden, waverden. Human insulin produced in this fashion will greatly benefit diabetics, Weaver said. The possibility of allergic reactions to human, rather than animal, insulin should be greatly reduced. The same factor favors human insulin. Weaver said, human insulin could be produced in "almost unlimited amounts." A similar process is used to produce interferon, Weaver said. Interferon, a substance produced by the body as a defense against viruses, appears in cells in minute quantities to interfere with virus replication, be explained. INTERFERON WAS initially touted as a potent weapon against tumors, Weaver said. As advanced manufacturing methods enabled interferon to be produced in some quantity, more extensive testing of the substance tempered this enthusiasm somewhat, Weaver said. However, scientists are still optimistic about interferon's tumor-fighting properties, and more sophisticated recombinant-DNA techniques will lead to mass-production substance by 1983. Weaver predicted. Creating a hybrid of a cancer- and antibody-producing cell is a genetic-engineering project that could have important cancer-fighting implications. Dr. Brassistant professor of microbiology, who also spoke at the forum. Unlike normal cells, cancer cells are "immortal," Brown said. "They survive as long as they get the The Lawrence delegation to the Kansas Legislature will hold strategy sessions during the next two weeks to discuss ideas for the 1981 legislative session. Two meetings have been scheduled and informal talks are anticipated by three of the five legislators from Rep. Jesse Branson, D-4th District. "I've already instigated meetings of the entire delegation," Branson said yesterday. "The Lawrence delegation will be working very hard to see that." Area delegates to discuss '81 session Branson said that 25 advocacy groups were scheduled to meet with the deputy. The dept was assigned to Desc.15 in the Lawrence Public Library. "We call them pre-session hearings," Branson said. "These meetings were held last year and were productive and helpful." As the "immortal" cancer cells reproduce, they gradually crowd out the body's healthy cells and consume them. The immortal normal cells need to live. Brown explained. Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-46th District, said these meetings were first held by Mike Glover, former noministic representative of the 44th District. necessary nutrients for survival," he said. THE BODY'S lymphatic cells, which are stored primarily in the lymph nodes, the spleen and in the blood, are needed to combat the onslaught of cancer cells. Brown said. The lymphatic cells manufacture antibodies that specifically attack the invading cancer type. The pre-session hearings are a tradition started by Mike Glover and continued by Arnold Berman," Charlton said. Such a cell would be nourished outside the body, he said, with the antibodies it produced being used to combat the cancer. The ultimate goal of the genetic engineers, Brown said, is to create a hybrid cell incorporating the indestructible characteristics of a cancer cell with the lymphatic cell's abilities to produce cancer-fighting antibodies. The cell would need to produce antibodies that would "recognize the subtle differences between the cancer cells, if they indeed exist." He said. However, the lymphatic cells that manage damage to the short life span may die off, the effect is delayed. "This is perhaps the most difficult thing to find out, however." Rubies • Sapphires • Opals Pearls • Emeralds Gemstone rings from THE FOOD collected at the film will go to the food bank in the Salvation Army building, 949 New Hampshire St. and provide local by social service organizations McQueen where happy decisions are made 843.549 800 Masson On Sunday afternoon, three groups, including KU's office of minority affairs, will sponsor a film and will charge a can of food for admission. To aid such families, the Emergency Food Bank of Lawrence will have a special food drive this weekend to replainish its dwindling supplies. 809 Massachusetts Sorne families, however, do not even care of bountiful meals and special treats. Visions of roast turkey, bome-baked breads and mountains of other foods accompany many students' thoughts of the holiday season. The movie, a children's film titled "Captain Nemo and the Underwater City," will be shown at 1:30 p.m. Grand剧院,1020 Massachusetts Williams, assistant director of the office of minority affairs. All types of food are welcome, but the food bank has a greater need for canned meats which are rarely contributed, he said. SUA THEATRE SERIES Auditions for the productions of "Of Mice and Men" and "How the Wild Things Eat Us" "You're in a Good Man," "Charlie Brown" Saturday, December 6th Kansas Union, 1 to 5pm - Audition will read from the script of the play(s) they wish to be composed for - Open-Call format, registration table in main lobby. --- - those auditions for "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" may be asked to join Williams said the program was not - Advance preparation is not necessary. * If there are any issues with the equipment, contact the manufacturer. everyone welcome Awards and Recognition * Call backs for finalists; Sunday, December 7, from 2 to 4 PM WAXMAN Candles Inc Hours: 9:00 till 8:00 M thru Thurs. 9:00 till 6:30 Fri. & Sat. 12:00 till 4:00 Sunday 1405 Massachusetts Staff Reporter 'Bank' accumulates money for needy KANSAS UNION - UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS - LAWRENCE, KANSAS 64043 - TEL 712.864.347 Spencer Museum Book Shop BooksMagazines Posters Cards On the Visual Arts Open during gallery hours 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 The Student Senate is now accepting applications for the positions: Senate Positions Available Student Senate Treasurer Stud-Ex Chairperson Executive Secretary Applications are due by Monday, Dec. 8 Apply in person in the Student Senate office B105 Kansas Union HAPPY CHRISTMAS or more on all gift books in our SAVE 50% "That's one of the problems, actually. People are willing to give around the holidays, but they slack off during the rest of the year." WINTER TREES planned specifically for the holiday season. Christmas Book Selection. Christmas Choose from 100 titles! "The need for food is pretty consistent all year round," he said. "It's just the way the time worked out. -featuring titles in art, architecture, cookbooks, Shakespeare, antiques, poetry fantasy, chess & games, horses aviation, cars, travel, hobbies collectables, photography & nature, railroads, medicine and novels. THE OTHER SPONSORS of the event are the East Central Kansas Economic Opportunity Corporation (ECKAN) and the Emergency Services Council, a coalition of social service concerned citizens in Douglass County. KU Commonwealth Theatres donated the use of the Granada for the showing of the movie *Rocky*. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. According to Susan Beers, a caseworker for the Salvation Army, the Emergency Food Bank is stocked primarily by local churches, which are coordinated through Church Women United. Other organizations and private other contribute to the food bank, she said. "Right now, we have a declining food bank," Beers said. "KU's minority affairs office, which has a seat on the board of the Emergency Services Agency, is also needed to purchase the film if we would help coordinate the event." Rent for the film was less than $150, Williams said. She said people were most generous during the Christmas season. Beers said she was confident the food drive would be a success and hoped to get more people involved. "In the middle of July, one no thinks about people going hungry. We hope to do that this summer." 50c 50c Just one sandwich...it's that good! Schlotzsky's SANDWICH SHOPS 23rd & Iowa 843-3700 11-9 Mon.-Thurs. 50c OFF on a Schlotzsky Phone in and carry out 11-11 Fri., Sat. 12-9 Sun. Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Expires 12/17/80 The goods collected for the food bank are distributed to needy families in Douglas County by organizations such as the American Heart Association, Center and Ballard Center, Beers said. Schlotzsky's SNA FILMS Ralph Bakshi brings to you, J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings Presents Sunday, December 7 2:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium----$1.50 OPENINGS FOR SPRING (1) "I feel that the experience of meeting such a wide variety of people could not be found other than at a residence hall such as Naismith." Connie Long, Sophomore Overland Park, Kansas Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-857 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features Page.12 University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 KU victory could end worries BYKEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Two days ago there were many reasons to be optimistic about the chances of the Kansas basketball team this season. The Jayhawks had played well in two games, one on the road, and were 2-0. One zone defense, one superstar scorer and one fired-up bunch of Michigan Wolterines later, there is much reason to be concerned. Twenty-eight points by the defense and a poor two against a tough one are two concerns. There are more. ALL THESE CONCERNS could vanish with a decisive victory over Oral Roberts University Saturday night at Allen Field House. Toff is off at 7:35. A couple of days of rest should help the Jayhawks against Oral Roberts. Michigan was the third game in five days for KU. The Jayhawks are in the 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 Total Interior Enhancements • Signs • Graphics • Wall Art middle of five games in 10 days to open the season. Head Coach Ted Owens didn't want to make excuses after Wednesday night's game, but he did think that the schedule has worn down the Jayhawks. "I thought that we were flat when we were warm up," Owens said. "You can tell when a team is ready and I could see that Michigan was. America's Illustration Board Perfectionists for the Progressive Business "I don't know why we weren't. I don't think that we were physically tired but we were emotionally tired." Oral Roberts returns only one starter from the team that beat KU early in the season last year and finished 18-10. That one man however, is an important one to the Titans. Gat "Cat" Johnson scored 19 points against KU last season and held KU guard Darnell Valentine to only nine points. Some said that those were the most important statistics of that game. Roberts' games this season. The other starts have been Tom Prusor, a 7-0 senior center and Jeff Acres, a 6-4 foot-7 surprise be a pleasant surprise at forward. JOHNSON, A 5-FOOT-10 junior, averaged 10 points a game last season and provided the ball handling, just as he does this season. Two other returne- stees, Steve Bontrager, a 6-foot-1 senior guard, and Lance Williams, a 6-5 senior guard or forward depending on the situation, have started both of Oral --- Oral Roberts coach Ken Hayes calls Acres the best defensive player on the team and Acres has also played well under the boards, grabbing 10 rebounds in ORU's victory over Princeton and six in a loss to Oklahoma State. In those games, the Titans used both man-to-man and zone defenses. Hayes prefers man-to-man, but with any scouting reports at all from the Michigan game, he will probably be inclined to set back in the zone and wait to see if the Jayhawks will break it, like they did against Pepperdine, or rush the offense and take bad shots, as in the Michigan game. There won't be any question about the offense that the Titans will use. "WE HAVE ALWAYS been a running ball team and we will always be a running ball team," Hayes said. "Our team is to run and that is what we will do." THIS SUNDAY, MAKE IT A BUCKET OF CHICKEN FROM COUNTRY Inn 1843-1431 We Also Cater For Groups COUNTRY Inn 843-1431 If at any time Hayes decides that the Titans are going to slow things down, however, he will slow it down completely. Against Princeton, ORU employed of the almost the entire second half. SIGNS • GRAPHIC DESIGN ARTWORK • ADVERTISING SIGN SERVICE ART&SIGN The plan was to put four men in the corners and give the ball to Johnson. The goal was to force Princeton out of the 3-2 zone which it was using and into a man-to-man. It worked, ORU winning 66-61. KU's Jayhawns could not force KU out of its zone and it cost them the game. Despite the loss to Michigan, the Jayhawks won't be discouraged when they take the floor against ORU, according to senior forward John graffwright. EMERALD CITY ANTIQUE USED FURNITURE LARGE SELECTION JUST NORTH OF THE BRIDGE "I THINK we're going to learn from this," he said. "I don't look for the guys to be down. They won't be hanging their hands out and play good, that is what I think." ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ CAR RENTALS ■ EQUIPAEL ■ INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS Maupintour travel service travel service 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 JAYHAWK NOTES: Tony Guy continues to lead KU in scoring after the Michigan game. He has scored 61 points out of 20.3 a game while finishing 58 percent. CALL TODAY! Victor Mitchell leads the team in shooting percentage with 60 percent. The leading rebouncer is Art Housey of the Mt Valentine lead in assists with 23. Many of our former cast members have used this experience as a stepping stone to perform careers in New York, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. If you haven't seen a Worlds of fun production, ask a friend who has... you'll be surprised! It's great fun, professional experience, and talk about exposure more than 1,400,000 visitors are waiting to discover you. Auditions are conducted from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 at the Training Table atrium during the summer hours on each of the following five days: January 11, 18, 24, 25, and February 1. These are the only auditions this year. Don't miss your chance to appear at You can earn over $4,200 performing six days per week, and weekends in the spring and fall. Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, one of America's most exciting themed amusement parks, is conducting a series of auditions for performers to appear in musical reviews and street theatre. You can earn over $4 200 performing six days per week and weekends in the TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS • NOVELTY ACTS - the best stage experience in the Midwest. VIRGINIA HOPKINS Registration is open from 9:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at each audition. For more information, contact the Show Productions Department, Worlds of Fun, 4545 Words of Fun Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64161; (816) 459-9276. Sorry, no jobs are available for actors or strictly instrumental acts. Worlds of Fun Registration is open from 9:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at each audition. THE HAWKS ARE led by senior Lynette Woodard, who is 216 points away from the national scoring title for the N.Y.C. hockey team, a freshman from New Haven, Conn. Iowa State was 1-5 going into last night's contest with Drake University with a record of 5-0. The Cyclones average 59.7 points a game and give up nine in five. The other hand, has scored an average of 83.5 a game and given up only 53.5. That winning streak should continue tomorrow night when the seventh ranked Jayhawks meet Iowa State in the opener of a double header with the men's team at 5:15 p.m. in Allen Field House. would use a full-court press against the 'Hawks and that they couldn't afford to give anything up inside or outside. Iowa State doesn't have the height Kansas does, an advantage Claxton, Megan Scott and Legrant should be able to use. The three are KU's inside line, but the two dominate the boards. Iowa State's tallest starter is 5-foot-11 Gleason Gleason. Claxton leads the team and the Big Eight conference in rebounds with 100 and is second on the team in scoring 126. they couldn't afford to give anything up inside or outside. This season the Jayhawks have a 7-4 record. KU outscored its opponents by an average of 32 points a game and have dominated all but one contest. When basketball ability was handed out, the women who ended up at Kansas were not well represented. If Iowa State should shut down the inside game, KU still has Woodard, Mary Myers, Robbin Smith and Chris Stewart, all perimeter shooters. Woodward has found few defenses that she cannot penetrate in her career, ATTENTION: Members of the IMMORAL MINORITY see NAKED Communism! ku science fiction & fantasy association presents: JANE FONDA as BARBARELLA 7:30 9:30 MIDNIGHT FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY DECEMBER 5, 6 & 7 ADMISSION $2.00 3139 Wescoe By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor AFTER THE GAME with Iowa State, KU will take two weeks off to prepare for the Hanover Christmas Classic in Madison Square Garden. Talent-laden Jayhawks take on ISU Cyclones Shebra Legrant, who sat out the first six games of the season with a twisted knee, returned to the line-up Wednesday night and scored 18 points in 18 minutes. KU HAS YET to lose to Iowa State in the teams four meetings. SATURN KU runs up against first rated Louisiana Tech in the first round of the tournament its first top 10 opponent this season. "We always draw the good ones," Marian Washington women's basketball coach said. "If we win it, would be great, but if we don't, we'll learn a lot and come home and start working again. It's a good challenge." PROBABLE STARTERS First-year ISU Head Coach Debbie Bolger, said the Cyclones would use a full- time instructor to teach. Darmell Valentine ... G | 6-2 | Sr. Tony Guy ... G | 6-3 | Jr. Wayne Madden ... F | 6-7 | Jr. John Cawford ... F | 6-7 | Sr. David Magley ... F | 6-7 | Jr. GOAL BOWLER Gary Johnson. G 5-10 Jr. Stone Bontrager. G 6-1 Jr. Tom Prusater. G 5-3 Lance Waiss. F 6-5 Jacent Acc. F 6-7 Fr. Claxton said KU was going "all the way" this season, and that the high national rankings helped the team's morale. The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Presents The 56th Annual Christmas Vespers Sunday, December 7 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Admission Free University Choirs Brass Ensemble University Symphony V "It means a whole lot," Claxton said after KU's 107-56 victory over Northern Oklahoma Wednesday. "It inspires us a lot." KU's seventh place ranking isn't the highest drawn this season. Sports Illustrated, in the Dec. 1, 1900 issue, picked the Jayhawks to finish fourth. Washington was surprised by the rating. “It’s good for the players, but I remind them that the polls won’t do it for us,” he said. “When Sports Illustrated came out with their rating, I gulped. The New York trip will do a lot for us no matter what. We’ll on the court with the first and fifth ranked teams.” But Washington said that her team deserved to move up if the Jayhawks wanted to. "If we beat Louisiana Tech, they'd better move us up," she said. PROBABLE STARTERS KANSAS Lynette Woodard. F 6-10 Sr. Connie Means. F 5-10 Jr. Cheryl Scott. C 4-9 Soph. Megan Scott. C 6-2 Soph. Mary Myers. G 5-6 Fr. Jolene Leesman G 5-8 Soph. Tracy Eckert G 5-6 Jr. Jean Lewis F 5-6 Jr. Gleen Gleason F 5-11 Jr. Carol Hudgens G 5-6 Jr. "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" In the second Psalm God asks this question, and then answers it. He tells who the heathen are, why they rage, and the consequences. Webster says "a heathen is one who does not believe in the God of the Bible." This definition fits in with what God says in this Psalm. The consequences are that God laughs at man's rebellion, and that God loves man and vexes in His sore displeasure is not nearly the whole earth and the inhabitants in a state of voyest and fear? Psalma 2:1 and Acta 4:25 It is the devil in men that cause them to rage against God's Moral Law, His Ten Commandments! The devil, God and man's enemy. Christians are not immune from the devil entering into them. This statement is based on the doctrine of Jesus as the Son of God, "Blessed" because God had given a revelation as to whom Christ was, but then in the context of the same passage Jesus said to Peter: "Get the beehind me Satan: thou art an offense unto Me; for thy saviour恶 not of the beehind me Satan: thou art an offense unto Christ; 16:13-18. Peter was saved through the intercession of Christ who after telling him of Satan's desire to possess him said: "I have prayed for these —" "The devil gained entrance into Peter because of his ignorance and unbelief in the meaning of the sins of mankind, their substitute. Peter was not seeking his own selfish ends when he left all to follow Christ. He had gotten a vision of himself and had said to Him: "Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord!" He was seeking salvation, but even then he was in great danger when the devil got in him. (Today the church is lousy with those "who saviorest not of the things of God, but that those be of men,") or of the things of God, but that those be of men." God's wrath fell on Christ to atone for the sins of all mankind, and Jesus was so angry that they had no spiritual kinship with all with Peter. The devil also entered into another of Christ's disciples, held his ground, and finally carried him off to perdition a traitor and suicidle! He got into Judas because he was the most insane and insolent man in the meager means of the little "spinbait" band of Christ and His disciples. (Have you stolen something, without repenting and making restitution to the uttermost of your sins?) The devil might have known the devil knows he has a buddy, a friend and partner in a covetous, hoggish thief. That may account for the fact that the legion of devils about to be cast out one poor brother were caught in the midst of hogs. Beware of coveting that is another. "BLESSED IS THE MAN (=WHOSE) DELIGHT IS IN MEDIATE DAY AND NIGHT." PSAIL 1: 1 and 2. P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR GEORGIA 30031 Chris Craft the original rubber duckles royal college shop eight thirty seven massachusetts 843-4255 the original rubber duckles University Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Page 13 ANNOUNCEMENTS Need Christmas money? Buying SILVER- GOLD-COINS-CLASS RINGS. Boyd Coins. 731 New Hampshire. 842-8773. 12-8 ENTERTAINMENT Original Arts & Crafts. Have fun and do your Christmas Shopping at the same time. Hairy stems, jewelry, pottery, weaving, painting, woodworking. Community Bldg. 11th and Vermont. 12-5 your midwest connection for "rangate rock' n roll'n country music" NASHVILLE REPLAY K. U. HOLIDAY PARTY NIGHT December 19th SHOW YOUR COLLEGE I.D. GET YOUR FIRST BEER FREE BEST LIVE COUNTRY ROCK BANDS Monday - Saturday Hours 1:00 to Midnight 722-9735 for band info MEXICO Ballet dancer for your holiday parties. No after functions. 841-5398 after 5 p.m. 12-8 ROCK'N ROLL WITH ... ROCK N ROLL WITH PHRED GREEK SPORTS DESK ... BEER DRINKERS! 15' Draws Tuesday- tuesday. 10:30 p.m. p.m. EAST. 9:00 ppm. 100 ppm. EAST. 12:38 ppm. TRAVEL CENTER TAKING A TRIP? Travel Is Our Business. The LOWEST FARES available! As close as your phone . . 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, KS 9:30-3:30 M.F. 9:30-2:00 Sat Get Ready to iot lock! The Brass-powered HORIZON Band will be rickin' up at the Entertainer, Monday night, Dec. 8. Be there! 12-5 FACILITY AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES FOOD, LIQUOR, OR BOTH --ups, central air conditioning, carpet & off-street parking, unattributed, no jets $330 + utilities. Call 843-5730 or 842-1f --ups, central air conditioning, carpet & off-street parking, unattributed, no jets $330 + utilities. Call 843-5730 or 842-1f OPUS is back, Sat., Dec. 6. Lawrence Arts Center. 12-5 FOR RENT AIRIZON STREET DUPLEXES Available Air-conditioned study room, range, refrigerator, kitchen, central air conditioning, carpet & furnishings $300-$450; beds $900 or higher; beds $300 or更高; Call 843-7587 or 842-7654. 3 Bedroom Townhouses Renting now. Other downstairs houses, all attached, with attached furniture, all appliances, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Kitchen, 28th and Kaiden, 74ft. (Q57) 9 bedroom apt. and small efficiency apt. Close to campus. Utilities paid.quiet and comfortable. Reasonably priced. Price 843-879 or 843-195. tf Spacex. 2 bdm. apt., for 2 to 4 people. Fireplace, off street parking. Near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-5500. tf 2 bdm, furnished mobile homes. Quet let go to $189-$249, garage $162 and up, Jayhawk Court, 1750 N. 3rd St., Bronx, NY 10462. For fall or spring, Naimish Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of being in a room where it is, weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, fun schedule of zoning at home or if an apartment (at your home) or if an apartment (at your home) Naimish Hall, 1890 Park Drive, D-843-858, if you. Cavita Capit Apt. Unfurnished 1 & 2 berm- apts available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet, 24 x 24 blocks south of Hall. Call 844-784-530 for 5:30 or on time on weekends. Spaciosa 1 bdmr. apr. in Trailbridge, Gas and water paid. Bus stop in front of apr. Use of tennis courts and pools. Call 749-198-128. Need to sublease. 2 bdrm. apt. 5ml. from campus. Laundry facilities, dishwasher, free parking. balcony. Water and graffit valley. mail: 8725/mo. Call Cust at 12-5 12-20. for rent now or in December, townhouse, Hankell, east side of street, Carpet, diner, dryer furnished, kibbutz house, low room/ room $0.50 per person, yr contract, $0.25 per person Apt. and rooms for rent newly remodeled house and downtown. No phone Phone 414-500-3900. No jeff NEW DUBLEX AVAILABLE IMMEDIATE APARTMENT LIVING. YOU CAN ENJOY WIFI, COMMUNICATIONS, TURFEL EQUIPPED INCLUDE FULY EQUIPPED BATHS. WALK-IN CLOSERS, SEPA- TURED BATHS. BATE RAINING ROOM-PERFECT FOR BATTERY COOLER LOCATED BETWEEN 2nd and 3rd ON WISCONSIN STREET. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 443-4455 or 443-8128 A.M. TO F.O.P. (J.) 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplaces 643. 804-721-9500. Will take with students. 2500 fm. 643. 804-721-9500. DON'T WAIT ITT the last minute to find a place for second semester. All new Tiburon 2 and 3 bbm, units-furnished or unfurnished, conveniently located at 9th and Kenry Rd. A rookie hostage, a number of callers, 8 (45 m.-s.) p.m. or info. 121-82-12-8 NEW 4-PLX available for second semester. NEW 5-PLX available for second semester. COMPLETELY FURNISHED. Conveniently located at 9th and Indiaa, within 4455 (8 a.m.-5 p.m.) or 811-121. 12-8 4455 (8 a.m.-5 p.m.) or 811-121. 12-8 For rent, nice apt. for men, next to campus. We also work out part of room if Call 844-1858. Brand new 3-burner, duplex in super local location. Certified for RV use. **$235**, **814-707** day-unit, **$945-845** evening use. Like new -1 bdm_1 apt. acct from studium. Sublease. 841-6315 after 5:00. 12-8 Suburban 2 bdmr. ap (4 beds) $80 per room. Each paid; 4 beds. bus route. 841-978-6. 12-8 Christian Campus House has a few open- rooms. Call 842-6592, bed 12- 9:00-5:00. Subjectware station apL. Fully furnished. Lo- m, 1250 or 1300. Mail to: Call: 609-4371 or 841-5555. Female Roommate to share 2 bdrm. fur- mative. On bus route $135.忙 费: $48-7481.忙费: 12-8 STUDIO --ublahouse at Meadowbrook for brew beer, wine and dessert. nature, water and cable paid $205 841-886- 7927. Available Dec. 22, 1 brrm. apt. $190/mo. Utilities on bus. route B1-86-02-15 at 8:45pm. 12:45am - 12:55am Very large main floor 2 bdrm, unfurnished bedroom, with en-suite bathroom. Dae. ist. fireplace, off-street parking, alcoa. only mmo, with bedroom and bedrooms. Also only mmo, with kitchen and jennette at 6pm. must get me a cab from Jennette at 6pm. Available Jan 1. Luxury duplex. Meadow- side. $750. Refrigerator, dishwasher, appliances, dilar gar. $500. $825-382 or $1165-499. $1365-499. $1800-382. Large, furnished one bdmr. on bus route, $210/mo. 749-2419. 12-5 Spacious bdrm. for男 in mpt. with two students. Free December rent. Available on Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm. $13/mo. plus 1/3 low utilities. 9 min. to campus. 843-4584. 12-8 Studio for sublue at Mademoiselle. Fur- rst in 2013, 2015, 2018. Available JA-12 or before. 841-5735. Must lubricate 2 bdmr. apt. Jan. 1 or before 10 a.m. Ride on route 185 to KEIS- town, new carriage 841-0098 10 a.m. MEDAADWBROOK TOWNHOUSE, available quiet. On bus route. Phone 841-3490. Keep out of reach. Non-smoking roommate needed for spring semester. Call Chuck Alexander at 815-736-4000, along with Call Chuck Alexander at 815-736-4000. Sublease nicely painted 1 bdm. ap. Water 464 or 184-131 steps at front stairs of apartment 464 or 184-131 2 housesmnts. 3 bdmr. house, furnished. 4 housesmnts. 5 +/ ushiles. 12-8 wood. 841-6417. House for rent. 4 blks, west of Cararthur, 21st St., Doral. AC, disposal, dishwasher. Avail. Dec. 21 for 1 or 2 responsible people, prefer 12- hrs. leave with summers optional. 2135. 12-8 For rent. Furnished. Very large 2 brom. For rent. Furnished. Very large 2 brom. 1 brom. fern, furnished. Shave unlined. On inside. F Want to sublease beautiful 1 bdrm. apt. Furnished right off campus. Call 841-753-6092. Spaestion semi-furnished apartment in older home (196 nbr) utilities. 108-84-4810; Evening rent $235/week. Overland Park park, avail. for sublease Feb. 14-19, 315-762-8000; air. $25, 813-741-354 at 5 p.m. 2 bdm. unfurished in 4-plex. Close to 12 bdm. unfurished in 3-plex. Available immediately. 814-4045. 12-8 MUST SUBLAGE spacious, 3 bdm. apt. from campus. from Campus. 6067, 9-16 p.m. CAL 12-8 Sublease for spring semester 3 bdm. prt. for information call 749-1248 after 6 more information call 749-1248 after 6 Nott, and well-being in their home with a loving family. 10 yrs old. 2005 Coll Mark 8433-3235 or 8433-3286 2005 Coll Mark 8433-3235 or 8433-3286 Roommate/share 2 bdm. Trailridge apt. includes: Appliances, carport, tennis courts, pools. Furnished except bdm. $170/mo. utilities. Sublease Dec. 15. Call 499-128 For sublease. two bdrm. completely furnished ant. With fireplace. All utilities paid except electricity. Available after 12 a.m. Jumlim Jm at 784-0183. No calls after 12 11-8 Spacielus 1 bdm. Meadowbrook apt. Must sublease! Two balconies with beautiful view of sunset. Quit. Water and Gas paid on rent. Randy 843-4658 or office. 12-8 STOP PAYING RENT-Why not own your home? Call 314-760-2985, ever Harold Fox, all within walking distance to K.U. and downstown, Call 843-1811, ever Harold Fox, their Heads 804-3534, Them 12-8 Estate, Inc. 2 bdrm, ant. nant. campus, on bus route avail, mid-Dec. Unfurnished. $195/mo. 749-2211 Bryan or Chuck. Keep trying. 12-8 Posible住房 for housemate during 2nd summer; 11-59th of July; 3% block of samourn. 749-2219. John. 12-8 Brand new 3 bdmr. bdmr at 305-311 Northwood Lane near 2nd st. duplex w. deep kitchen appliances, off-season rate at $325 Call Mark 843-8238 or 842-0251 Nice 2 barm. unfurnished ant. in small complex. Close to campus. $265 + util. 841-5737, 864-4360, 841-5215. 12-5 SUPLET. Trailridge 2 bdmr. apl. Gas and water pd. On Bus Route 78. 12-8 Sublease or roommates. 3 bdm. Trailridge 841-995-6200 on bus route. Started Jan- 12-88 841-995-6200 PIN OAK TOWN Home NEW 2 bdm.1 bath, bath very spacious & private w/microware, dishwasher range 400 m. or. air. drive 450 Alabama. For 12-5 Call Ed Gadfiller 842-3487. Save gas—Walk to class. 2 bdmr. sat. In nearly new 4-plex close to campus. Will be available January 1. Phone 811-6556. 12-8 Available Jan. 1st to quiet student. 3rd floor walk-up in old house on, KU bus route 29. View of view at city 1. Bdsm. in bath. No pets. City 148. 12-84. 822-216. Deluxe room. Private home for mature, age 35+ entrance 2, west of campus, 843-787-881 12-8 Beautiful, 1 bdm. s. apt. Electric. Free bus Cindy. 845-6444 Available now. 12-8 Cindy. 845-6444 bublease spacioses, unfurledborn 2 bdpt. abrm, buckle $15.841-1466 or 824-1100. 12-8 $215.841-1466 or 824-1100. 12-8 New 1 and 2 bdmr. apts—3 and 4 New 1 and 2 bdmr. apts—3 and 4 Oak-Red Oak development. Some units available for atm installation. Some units available for atm installation. No pets. Kaw Valley Management, Inc. 841-606-1028. 12-8 3 bdm. house for rent. Available Jan. 1st. 1 bath-1 car garage, $35 per month. Kawu Valley Management Inc. 841-6089. 12-8 Senior Student needs roommate to share 2 roommates. Roommate is available January 1st 841-8233, 12-8 Available Now! Roommates(s) a. needed. Share 3 roommates to campus(s) Room #148-7291 Room #148-7292 12-8 GORAD 2 bdm, new appliance, complete installation. $275 plus utilities. M-148-$360 installed. 2 bdm. apt. for rent. Call 841-8938. Keep trying. 12-8 2 bdmr. gpt. available. Jan 15th. Close to 841-1030 and 849-7466. Furnished. 841-1030 or 849-7466. 3 bdm. Traillodge Townhouse for sublease starting Jan. 1, 1981. 2½ baths, fireplace, full kitchen, near pool and tennis court. Calls 192-6454. 12-8 Sublease 1 bdmr. api. live free in Dec. rent already paid. 749-0586. 12-8 Unfurnished four dbm. house. 10th and Missouri. Hot water heat; many windows. Avail Jan. 1. 842-2998. 12-8 Trailridge studio apt for sublease. Avail- lance dates: 1434-7238 or 1434-7268 rade management at 1434-7233. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them. Makes sense to use them. A study exam preparation. Exam preparation. *New Analyses of Western Civilization* Cites Mails Bookstore and Oread Book Cites. FOR SALE GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOTHES Euro- poral shoes Casual shirts Call shoes slacks Call shoes slacks call shoes WATERBED MATTRESSES. $36.98, 3 year watershed. WHITE LIGHT, 70. Mass. $45. SUMMER BEDS. $14.99. MATTHEWRES, Orthopedic sets from $29. MATTRESS, Orthopedic sets from $34. FURNITURE, one block west of 9th and low- er floor. Allegator, starter and generator specialist; ADR BLANCHE; ADR AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC; 935-806-2981; ADR ANGLE; ADR ANGLE MOTOR Vintage clothing and ole net "lunque" at jungle 1360 W. 6th-11, 5-tues-Sat. 323-236, ff. 3008 W. 6h. 11-5-tues.Sat. 323-236, ff. 1976 VW Rabbit, blue with black interior, 55,00 miles. Very good condition mechan- ically. Cali Mielten tine. ABM-28M stereo camera. Must sell soon! 143-566 or 125-58 1975 TR7 excellent cond. full sun roof, low elevation. 1976 TR8 excellent cond. et al. ereg inquiries only. Baldwin 944-316- 3082. 1977 TR9 excellent cond. 67 Ponty Lemans, 4-speed, radials, runs good, dependable. Call evening. #112-851-8188. 1975 Suzuki GT-750. Must sell now. Good price to come to 835-40-69. to come to 1201 LEMONA #15. More old stuff than one commonly has to handle. One such item is the several odd bits of Sterling and pottery this week. Emerald City. Just north of Johnny's in N. Lawrence. Open Mon-Sat. 12-5. 5-90. Rectangular bumper pool table. Excellent Rectangular bumper pool table. Excellent 841-8331 after pn. 12-5 12-5 2-year-old townhouse, 1544 sq. ft., bdm 360 street, age 20, formerly 23, age 80, sold in 1941. Lauvery #2, Attn: Abmaney Lauvery, 701-841-8730. Term papers coming up? Need a journalist's Christmas present? Silver-reed electric type- electric. Excellent condition, barely usec Similar. Price $220-$350. Mine, 12-8 $140/B. Curt. 864-2923. Technics 45 watt receiver and a pair of Acoustic Hearset book shelf speakers 12-5 For sale: Large, sturdy, slightly worn early animal couch, $50. Call 749-1051. -453 Yamaha Stereo amplifier, Pioneer Turntable, Various power supplies, 12-8 lent condition B41-841-5641. 12-8 Motorcycle for sale. 1973 Kawasaki 175 cc. 4-wheel drive. 5,000 miles. 841-6576. Keep seeing. usell 1979-1974 *Dinamic Prix* like new, every month; or make offer. Call Chuck 68430-6125. 120-765-6530. Beta Max 6 hour video recorders, Direct Max 6 hour video recorders, Direct now only $800. $824 - 2533. 12-8 MT250 Honda 75. Excellent condition engine recently serviced and overhailed by professional. Asking $500 Book value- not palatable. Mare 341-337. Come see! 11-28 JEEP5, CARS, TRUCKS available through Joe's Used Cars, 600, Cali. $499, $230s for $1000. Can deliver in 24 hours. Yamaha receiver CR4 440. TC4 deck TEC4 condition set separated! 842-829. 12-8 condition set separated! 842-829. 12-8 NEW SKIS 190cm Kneisal formal sof- lage never mounted. must sell. 1548. 12-8 1548. 12-8 Two red chiffon formalts, worn only once, two white gowns, worn only once, maries parties or wedding, sizes 8/10 and 12, black dresses, sizes 8/10 and 12. SOUNDDESIGN STEREO, TURNTABLE, HARDWARE RECORDING HARDWARE IRADIOADRESSS 18, 18 RECORDS. TWO MONITORS RECORDING Manisha Dell-1000 400mm camera/s $2,800 Manisha Dell-750 300mm camera/s $3,600 best off. Call Enlighten 845-825-128 12-8 One pair Brooks jogging shoes, never worn. 8½" i/8'9.1" Call 835-1312. 12-5 Cedar chair; $20. Smith-Corona Manual Cabinet; $89. Call 842-1950 after 5pm. 12-8 Call 842-1950 after 5pm. 12-8 Our drafting tables make the ideal Christmas Gift. (by individual) 842-7350. 12-8 CASSETTE JDECK A-105 CASSETTE JDECK memory,记忆 LED, memory,记忆 CAKLED, memory,记忆 $KAI BOOTS Women's size 7; barely used. SK45. 841-0678. 12-8 JOIN THE FAMOUS PACER OF HISTORY Unique portraits of you as Mona Luna, Napoleon or another famous figure from history. Learn about everyone. Learn about this new way to immortalize yourself. Send for FREE KEEPINGCARDS! code to H.H. Studio, Dept. K. P.O. Box $100; Kenwood KT-5500 AM/FM Stereo $125; Kenwood KT-4800 AM/FM Stereo automatic turntable $110; Friend Pioneer CJ-100 Cassette Deck, 3 heads, 2 motors $ 125; Philips Speakers 10/peaks 10/ 142-749.125.12 cure now. Mail your name, address and zip code to H.H. School, Dept. K, P.O. Box 10133, Kansas City, MO 64111. 12-8 Knight KAU 2500, Internship 400 pp. Nakamichi preamplifier and 20 watt power supply of Yamaha YH-5186. 13-28 e-mail: 864-1811. FOUND 7 pieces of furniture. Call between 10:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. 841-242-186 12-8 Pair of mittens in 3018 Learned Hall Cell 864,4429 and Identify 12.8 Found - Cepesio dancewear in Bailey Hall. Call 841-1824 and identify. 12-8 HELP WANTED To STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES, ORDERLIES: Will you share your work experience with us, as a public service to organization. Kansas for improvement of organization. Kansas for improvement of organization. Input on nursing home conditions and your opinion on the care and treatment of you will be kept confidential. Please call us. 871-2971. Mast St. 24, Lawrence, KS 60044. OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer, year,ear Europe, S. Amer. America, Ala. all fields. Monthly, sightseeing. Free info: Write: JC Box 25-1 KG Corona Dept. CA 92852. $1500 to $3000 monthly working off-shore or on-site; $2500 for permanent necessity. work one quartet, post-meeting a quarterly meeting list, list of companies hiring sample applicants, list of companies hiring Q&A meetings, Owen International. Dept 22, P.G. Box 444, New York, NY 10017. Student assistants needed in records department for 15-20 hours per week during school year and full time during school breaks and summer break. Students must marker Center, 1008 Eagle Dr. 12-5 Part-time help to do light shipping, filing, and typing. Flexible schedule approximate- ment to week. Apply in pursuit of Dunne's Speed车 1 mile north of harbor. 24-40 junction. NURSES: Psychiatric nurse provides support and training to opportunity for personal growth, offer opportunities fringe nursing, including $1247 or $1888 monthly salary; provide mentoring to students with assignment assigned, weekly duty only once a month, full time or Part times hours; 4. Excellent continuity educational experience; holiday and sick leave. BCS life and career based training accredited. We welcome your application. Call Nursing. Owatonna State Hospital, Owatonna, MN 56033. Nursing. Owatonna State Hospital, Owatonna, MN 56033. Minority applicants encouraged. 441. Minority applicants encouraged. RESEARCH ASSISTANTS Neurobiology Laboratory, Human Development Department University of Kansas. Degree qualification: B.A. (or B.S.) or M.B.A. (or Ph.D.) in medical sciences preferred. Must have training in biological and biochemical procedures. Experiential cell fractionation and HPLC techniques Contact Professor Elias Michaels or Dr. Robert McCleary. University of Kansas. 84-128 University of Kansas. CRUISERS, CLUB MEDITERRANEAN SAII- LIES, DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, structure, OUFFICE Personnel Counselors, EUROPEAN SERVICE, SERD $89.0 - $1 $banding for APPLL WORLD 145, 60128, Sacramento, CA, 93800 WORLD 145, 60128, Sacramento, CA, 93800 Applications now being accepted for the Master's degree in Eudora. Starting date and salary open. Tom Jerome, Application will resume Tom Jerome. 61. We are an equal opportunity employer. 651. We are an equal opportunity employer. 12-8 Wanted: Responsible college student or graduate to run errands, login for nursing, and work at a school for 8 hours M-F. Apply in person at AA 313 Bristol Terrace lounge opportunity. Employer qualified men and women of all races on campus. Dee. D. Regular work hours to begin in December. 5. Regular work hours to begin in January. Need part-time babybaby in my home for Wednesday, aftermonths. Died transportation Thursday, aftermonths. LOOKING FOR A CHANCE TO TRAVEL? If you're getting out of college and won't be coming a Tour Manager? In order to qualify you must have an appealing profile. Your tour manager you would be excorting tour groups to various locations in North America plus the rest of the world wide. If interested send resume to tour, Inc. P.O Box 807, Lawrence, KS 66044 Now hiring 2 male singers for next semest- ing TELEGRAMS 841-619-8080 for interview. ING TELEGRAMS 841-619-8080 LOST HELP! My gray and white female kitten is female, not fetal. Female female, 12-8 female, female, 849-685 PLEASE. 12-8 LOST—Brown Roffe Skip Jacket. Lost at the Entertainer Festival, Nov. 21. Reward offered. Call Mike Greig at 843-3366. 12-8 LOST man's check wool sport cap size 77/8. Label Lodge & Sons, London. R-ward. 843-8211. 12-5 At KU Union narrow band bracelet. Great sentimental value. Reward. Please call 842-2455. 12-8 NOTICE ART FROM POLAND Beautiful Christmas ART FROM GERMANY Paper cut-outs. Famous poster on final sale. One for five, two for nine three for seven. South Park Garden Center. 1141 Mass. 12-5 you like bread. We like bread. We'll trade ours for yours. THE CROSSING. 12-5 Sophomore Engineers Have The Navy pay your tuition. 864-3161 You probably see them in Apon and Aspen, but they're not as common with zip-off sleeves. HEAT WAVE cold weather gear from California with the colors and designs. 749-1814, 831-1824, 642-9805, 12-8 PERSONAL SKI VAI1 Alum has new condos. for rent. Liam Woolley, 303-478-4910, liam.woolley.com. Michael Cactopo, 303-478-4910. FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC--abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treatment, Birth Complications. Consult with your appl. call 9 am to 5 pm. (812) 635-2100. 4401 W. 109th St., Overland Park, Kansas. fax Send a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas gift! Order deadline Dec. 8. ASTA singing Telegrams 841-6169. 12-8 SINGING MESSAGES for all occasions. De- signing Telegrams. ASTA Sending Telegrams 841-6169. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- RIGHT 843-4821. tt No problem too small, no time too late. We are here to help. Headquarters=841-2345. We can pick or drop by day. We never close. Partial fundy by Student Activity fees. 12-8 This Christmas give yourself and your family the gift of quality. No other gift gives so much lasting pleasure and joy. You will be taught how you that you will be proud to own and proud to give. Excellent quality at reasonable prices is guaranteed to please you. "Why accept any offer from us?" You must accept all caskets and to respond an 749-1611. 1B-8 Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got * ACTA Giving Ticket*. 812-369-5111. ift *ASTA* Singing Telegraphs. 841-619. TAKE HOME A BIT OF KANASSA. You can find photo books on Kansas at the Spencer 12-9 *um Book Shop*. We Buy used furniture. Phone 841-4244. 12-8 TRAVEL CENTER Domestic & International Reservations *airline*          *escorted tours* *hotel/resort*          *ski packages* *car rental*          *group rates* *International Student Speciality* 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, KS 1601 W. 23rd St. Lawrence, KS 9:30 5:30 M-F. 9:20 2:00 Sat EXAM BLUES? Prepare for a Merry Christmas at the Speech Museum. Books on the subject are available. MISS PIGGY IS HERE! (for your favorite i-poster) at Museum Shop complements the museum Museum Shop complements 70 nutritious marmelas M-C餐. Send 5.00 for M-C餐, $16.95; marmelas M-C餐, Bir Carin, Okau, 74332. 12-8 Instant color passport, I.D. and resume photographs. Custom-made portraits B/W, color. Swells Studio 749-161. 12-8 CHRISTMAS TREE FARM, Beautiful PINE beautiful pines are built to be open. When we our selected trees have been cut, Drive Ease on Highway 10, four miles north of the entrance off ramp, 11 miles south, 542-257-117 4 households of very good looking men. standing ladies are really nice and they are really nice people and we do mean what we say so all single ladies call anytime 841-5093 12-5 Frustration relieved, grades not guaranteed, for use at the following faculties or趴 style at THE CROSSING. 12-5 D a friend a favor—send a professional tuck-in by rv. nails. Call 841-5811. 12-8 Hot sounds and cold beer will be brought out to the Entertainer, Monday night. Dec. 18th. The Entertainer, Monday night. Dec. 18th. Celebrate the end of play with some music. In the morning, Dee joins the Entertainer, Monday Night, Dec 12 - 18 at 9:30AM. This is Ground Control to Majorette. Hello (13 little words) 12-8 BJ.-The two day buck-kack was two weeks later. I was not able to handle, but Margaret managed and was meeting the man at Metcalf in 40 degree weather. Remind me of her, and I love it and year (even though Fred had a better life). OPUS is back Sat. Dec. 6 Lawrence Arts Center 8:00 p.m. 12-5 DRINK my children but you need not die. Don’t let your kids fall into the Cockoo cocktail stuff so kill ya you it’s worth repeating, or you remember that you WALMER follower helps me with next week. You MOLLER follows help me with next week. You MOLLER follows help me with next week. You MOLLER follows help me with next week. Buy your homemade Christmas candy--cookies, candies, old fashioned hard candy, peanut brittle cakes, goodies, and toots dogs. too. Holiday treats, cookies, and sun. Sun. Dec. 7th, 65 cents. Hgt. Exceleral. Meghan Lambda Chi will celebrate, cause a brunch in back in town, and Saturday night is drink and drown. We've finally gained pledge #2. Now Nance has a sister, who is running a club and our new plague. Nina's new name. Into our actions last Monday night. As to the reasons we gave it a rhyme, Nina's name has not been rhymed, b at PBR, and be on time! 12-5 SKIER WINTER PARK/MARY JANE with Four days skiing included Lift tickets Four days skiing included Accident cinderia or insurance of Other $250 cinderia or insurance of Other $250 and divisions available Available 12-8 Backgammon. Billards. Chess, Table Games. Backgammon. Tennis. Video Games and more. Play in a semester. Sign-up to play in competition or just for fun in 12-8 SUA office 864-3477 What was Blonde's occupation before she married Dagwood? Find out the answer to this and more in the RU College Guiz More info in the SUA office. 12-5 3477 SERVICES OFFERED TYPING 1 do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf. Typing prices discounted. Excellent work done: thesis, dissertations, term papers, etc. Betty. 842-6697 and 5 weeks后. **tf** Experience applied to ipbm DISSERTATION disseminating IPCM-based IBM ICB performing selective, Barb, after 5 p.m. 842-310-81. Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, books. Send resume to 843-8544. Wright, Irwin signed corrections. Typtip, Editor, IBM Piece/File, Quality Editor, editing/bagging, edit/layout. Call Joan. *865* 734-2019. www.typtip.com IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast reliable, accurate, IBM plen/elite. 842-2507 evenings to 11:00 and weekends. **tf** Reports, dissertations, resume, legal forms, graphics, editing, self-correct Selectic. Call Ellen or Jeannam. 841-2172. 12-8 Experienced K.U. typist. IBM Correcting Selective. Quality work. References available. Sandy, evening and weekends. 748- 9818. If or 3 or roommates to address 3 bdm's. Be sure to have 798-754-2691 ask for Driver Mike, 191- 304-342-7277 ask for Drivers Mike, 191- 304-342-7277 769-5076. Ask for DAVE.Mike). 12-88 Accurate, experienced typist, IBM correcting Sleectric, Call Dona 842-2744. tt for PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myr, www.professionaltyping.com COR 812-2001 FOR YOUR MINDING DEVICE ENCORE COPY CORPS 214 & 630 - Pleasant Place 540 901 CITY OF NEW YORK Prompt service by experienced typist on elite electric typewriter. Proofreading, Mrs. Hays 843-1737. 12-8 Excellent Typtist will call your papers. Call 842-8091. 12-8 Reasonable rates. Quick service. IBM elements, 10 or 12 pitch. 843-8611 or 841-7668 12-7 DISSERTATION SUFFERERS—for fewer mowers, lower blood pressure, and less oxygen. The solution is a serping typing term. March-April in a park or library. January-cancer is cooler. **PHY:** 842-476-78 Roommate needed for 2 bdrm. apt. Prefer non-smoking grad. female $132.50 + ½ g utilities. 841-6368 Non-smoking female to share newly decorated, fully furnished 2 bdmr. 2 bath. Catehouse apt. $130 + ½ utilities. Call 841-9790 Penale to beautiful new lg. house with 3 others for spring semester. Office $115 + 1¼ units. 5 min. from campus. Call 841-6543. 12-5 Female or male housemates Nice large newer home, fireplace, 2 front rooms $90/mo. + 1/5 utilities. Call anytime 841-5038 12-5 Buy-Sell-Trade. Gold, Silver, and Coin- ings. Bank of America, Great Plains Numismatic Services, 16th街, Great Plains Numismatic Services, 16th街 Mala roomate to share 280 apt. Pur- venture to bus route, $20 burlings, 841-0449 12-8 Female Rooms Matureed Needed for spring semester 10 minute walk to campus. $125. us$15. 10 minute walk to campus. $125. us$15. Female roommate to share furnished apt. Close to campus. $105 + 1'_2$ utilities. 841- 4836. Keep trying. 12-8 *enorme roommate needs for a 2 bumm: 8 ft from campus | $125.00 plus 1% utilities, care from campus 1 or 2 roommates needed for Jayhawk Towers 2nd semester. $125/mo. Call 842-3524. 12-8 Roommate for completely furnished 2 bdm. mobile home. $90 + $1 gas, elec. Call John 749-349 evenings. 12-8 Housmates wanted, $25 mo. + 14 ind. Grad student preferred, 50 + Ind. 12-8 **Mature Formalsic (Prefersably)**: to shore campus. Must be by water or in a campus map Roommate wanted, female Dec. grad for Overland Park area, non-smoker. Call 841-3718. 12-8 Need female roommate to share two babies. $1720 plus 3 utilities. On a bus route. 11712 pls 2 utilities. On a bus route. Need one fun-loving but studious female; berm-palm for the spring semester. Call 801-769-3245 or visit www.berm-palm.com. Female housemate for spring semester: 3 female students from campus. Utilities: C49 199-15. $2-5 Female roommate needed. Large 2 lb/m². 150 sq ft, 3 btu. 6 kW, 15.5 kJ/h. 1½ electric. Call Joan 841-4353 Roommate to share 2 bdm. apt. in Jayhawk Towers. $162.50. Utilities included. 841-2792. 12-8 Legislative Aides, January 12-April 10, no way, good experience, possible college cred- ed. Letter to Senator Ron Hein, 6031 SW Terrace, Topeka, KS 74584, 912-358-1588, 125-782–1598. Wanted-Subjects to diet for experiment. Write to P.O. Box 1201, Lawrence, for more info. 19 Good asking company for Christmas holidays in Colorado. Call Jurgens 864-824-1250. Maiz or female roommate to share 2 bdmr. apt. Fully furnished except your bdmr. $150.749-3533. 12-8 Female roommate to share furnished 2 bdm. Jayhawker Towers apt. with 3 others spring semester. 749.50 includes utilities except phone. 749.1547. 12-8 Person to share house: Excellent location close to campus. Graduate student preferred, own room. $160 + no utilities. Call after 5:00. 841-8075. 12-8 Roommate wanted, female or male to share room. Phone: 841-1936 or 842-209- Electricity Call: 841-1936 or 842-209- Male roommate to share 2 bdmr, apt 1/3 1/3 utilities Call 844-753- attr a 4, attr a 3 I am making my annual Christmas migration to Wyoming, via i-70 to 1-25. If you need a rids call Hank at 842.7937. Departure and return times答应. Roommate wanted to share 3 bdm. 2 story apt. in house with friend $105/mo $110/mo Start Jan 17 Roommate, neat, non-moker; to share tw Seats 749-1019 plus ½ units; 12-8 Scott 749-1019 Will buy MHIST 136/336 textbook, M by Daniel T. Pollotis. Please call P Roommate wanted immediately. $200 plus Michaels Michael Bates at 842-5663 and leave message house. Close to campus. $100 + 1/3 utilities. Call Alena B41-1340. 12-8 Page 14 University. Daily Kansan, December 5, 1980 Olympics, Brett top '80 stories By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Choosing the biggest sports event of 1880 should have been simple. Every four years the Olympic Games take place and they are automatically given the honor of being called the biggest sports event of the year. But politics entered the scene when the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan and President Jimmy Carter decided that the United States could not compete with a nation that was making imperialistic moves. Rather than the 1980 Moscow Olympics becoming one of the greatest sports spectacles of the year, they became the object of one of the most surprising political moves in decades. And instead of the Games being one of the biggest sport stories because of the athletic prowess displayed, they were noted because of the politics that ruined them. A CLOSE SECOND for story of the year was the Olympic Games that were held in Lake Placid, N.Y. Not in recent history has there been such an outpouring of patriotism than that which followed the victory of the United States Olympic hockey team over the Soviet Union. It was matched by the enthusiasm shown when the U.S. team won the gold medal by beating Finland. The crowd chanted "U.S.A., U.S.A." and millions watched television that Sunday morning as the U.S. team won the gold. Al Michaels, a sportscaster, shouted on the air, "Do you believe in miracles? Yes!" and was then silent as the crowd told the story and players celebrated on the ice. That same week Eric Heiden won five speed skating gold medals and the 100-meter sprint. BUT MANY CRIED for Randy Gardner and his figure skating partner, Tai Babilonia, the favorites in the couples event. The duo was forced to compete in the competition when Gardner pulled a muscle and was unable to skate. These were major stories on the national level, but no story was bigger in the Midwest than the Kansas City game, their third baseman, George Brett. The baseball season began with threats of a player's strike and the absence of Darrell Porter, the Royals' All-Star catcher, who was receiving treatment for alcoholism and drug addiction. The season ended with Brett batting .300 and the Royals as the losers in the World Series. In between were a run at the magic .400 average by Brett, Porter's return and a dramatic three-game sweep of the hated New York Yankees in the American League Plavoffs. BRETT'S RUN AT .400 caught the public eye, but nothing he did got as much attention as a problem that emerged during the Series. The masses giggled, but it was serious. In the game game with the others, you wielded against the others. "My problem is all behind me now!" Brett拍 before a national television Two stories rocked KU fans. The happy story was the Jayhawk football team. The addition of Kerwin Bell, one of the most highly recruited running backs of the year, turned the Jayhawks into a bowl candidate. Bell gained 1,114 yards, a KU and Big Eight record for a freshman. A 4-2 record nearly got KU a Peach Bowl bid, but a final-game loss to Missouri got KU the pit. Another game in which KU lost, School in Huntington Beach, Calif., was Frank Seurer, the starting quarterback in the Missouri game. THE BAD NEWS in KU sports was the discovery that some KU basketball players had used an assistant coach's credit card to make personal telephone calls. A team of sophomore guard Ricky Ross to his girlFriend. When the news hit the streets, so did Ross. He quit the team, citing personal reasons. that same day, sophomore center Kelly Knight injured a knee in practice and Kansas was left with only nine players. Seven, of whom had game experience. That was the beginning of a new season. At the end of the 1979-80 season, the controversy was at least as prevalent. KU had finished with a 15-14 record and rumor had it that KU Head Coach Ted Owens was either going to be fired or take a job at the University of Oklahoma. A vote of confidence from the KU athletic department followed and Owens was back at the KU helm for the next season. OTHER BIG STORIES in 1980 sports were: Jack Nicklaus winning two major golf titles extended his record number of majors to 19. He won the U.S. Open at Oak Hills and the PGA Championship at Oak Hill. Bill Rogers winning his third Boston Marathon. The winner of the women's portion of the meet was debatable, however, Rosie Ruiz crossed the finish line first, but none of the other competitors had seen her in any part of the race. She was stripped of her title and has not been heard from since. Also there were the sad stories of 1980. Some were: The retirement of such players as Jo White, KU All-American and Boston Celtics All-Pro basketball player; Sadaharu Oh, Japan's record-setting home run hitter; Gordie Hewan, the dean of professional hockey players at 51; Roger Staubach, the quarterback for 11 years with the Dallas Cowboys. Muhammad Ali fighting and losing to Larry Holmes. He attributed his loss to the excessive use of drugs to lose weight, and he recommended that he would train to fight again. LAST WEEK, Joe Cipriano, the head coach of New York City, died after a long battle with cancer. Sports were given a lifetime fix in 1980. On Sept. 1, the Entertainment and Sports Programming Network (ESPN) first broadcast 24 consecutive hours of sports, the only all-sports network ever. 1980 was a year in sports saved by the performances of the U.S. Olympic hockey team and the Kansas City Royals, a year nearly ruined by the mixture of politics and the Olympics. There was the potential to be the best sports year ever, had the Moscow Olympics finally proving that sports could unite the world. But sadly instead, 1980 was an average year and proved that sports could be used as a wedge to widen the gap between East and West. UPI honors KU's Gardner KU nose guard Stan Gardner was named to the second team All-America squad yesterday, by United Press International. A similar selection released by the Associated Press earlier this week awarded Gardner honorable mention. Freshman Kerwin Bell received honorable mention on the same team, while All-Big Eight flanker David Verser was the second team receiver on the AP team. Neither Verser or Bell received mention on the UPI team. Gardner came to Kansas two years ago from the College of the Canyons in Valencia, Calif., where he earned all-conference honors twice and was a junior college All-American his sophomore year. Cycling Gifts tools lights backpacks racks RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence KS 10041 SAN DIEGO STATE is expected to announce its new coach Monday, the earliest day that federal affirmative action guidelines will allow. The finalists were to be interviewed today, today, tomorrow and Sunday. The San Diego State job recently opened when Claude Gilbert, the sixth winning active coach in the country, was fired after a 4-8 season. Hadi said Nov. 19, 20 days after the firing, that he was not interested. "No way," he said then. "I'm not at all interested." For admissions or registration information contact the W.S.U. Administration of Justice program at K.U. A. A., B.S., M.A.J. Degree programs in A.J. offered by Wichita State University at K.U. For schedule of Administration of Justice classes consult the K.U. supplement to the Timetable. After Gilbert was fired, the athletic department called for an open search. Applicants were given the option of having their name registered in the job applicants had their names released and Hadl was not one of them. Telephone 913-384-0055 or room 4C old Green Hall 864-4758. Hadi spent 11 seasons as the quarterback for the NFL's San Diego Chargers. He had been an All-America running back at KU in 1964 and the KU quarterback in 1961. He joined the KU coaching staff in 1978. Degree Programs in Administration of Justice at K.U. ALSO ON THE LIST of finalists are Doug Scovill, offensive coordinator at Brigham Young; Fred Whitlingham, defensive coordinator at Brigham Young; and Jed Hughes, defensive coordinator at UCLA. The identity of the fifth candidate is not known, Hadi, reportedly, had not become interested in the job until the screening committee asked to see him. "I think you'll find that if he has a possibility of moving up, there isn't a head coach that would hold a coach back," Wilson said. "I would think you have the most popular candidate. He's well-known and well-liked in that area." Hadi, who said two weeks ago that he was not interested in the position, met with the screening committee for two hours yesterday in San Diego. After that meeting, he met with the athletic director, Gene Burdett. Neither KU Athletic Director Bob Marcum nor head Coach Don Fambrighere were available for comment last night, but Sid Wilson, sports information director, said that they knew of Hadi's interview. "The San Diego State people called him and asked if he'd like to come in for an interview," Wilson said. "It's through the knowledge of Coach Fambrough and Bob Marcum. There's no subterfuge involved. Really, he's out there recruiting." Hadi has been in San Diego since Tuesday on a recruiting trip with Don McLeary, KU receiver coach. Hadl confirmed last night that he had met with the screening committee and was used to comment on anything else. McLeary, were recruiting junior college players who could enroll at KU in January. He said both were scheduled to return Tuesday. John Hadi, KU offensive coordinator, is one of five finalists for the head coaching position at San Diego State. Alvamar Racquet & Swim Club Open 8 AM - 8 PM Golf Club 8 AM - 5 PM West of Kasold on Clinton Parkway SANTA STOPPED EARLY AT Alvamar 20% OFF Entire Inventory At Racquet Club and Golf Club (This Friday through Sunday) ★ Warm-ups—Juhlor & Adult ★ Sweaters ★ IZODS—Men's, Women's, & Boys ★ NIKE/Tennis & Running Shoes ★ Tennis & Golf Apparel Alvamar Racquet & Swim Club Open 8 AM - 8 PM Golf Club 8 AM - 5 PM West of Kasold on Clinton Parkway WILSON SAID that Hadl and Hadl 1 of 5 finalists for San Diego job By GENEMYERS Sports Editor Salmon Mackerel Mullet BANKSY RAILWAY Across From Raney's At Hillcrest WHAT'S THE DISCOUNT DOCK? Prairie Schooner SEAFOOD Market 841.6510 Substantial Seafood Savings Trawl 10.25% off 1h. boxes of Shrimp, Crabmait, Prawns, Scallops, and Fish Come visit the new Schooner. We added a "Discount Dock" to save you money and provide faster service. Live Lobsters coming soon. GRAND OPENING SPECIALS ALL WEEK! uid Mackerel Sole Pollock King Crab Abalone ROSS Sparrow Music Presents CRU RE Bv Albums & Tapes John Michael Talbot Phil Keaggy Keith Green Jamie Owens Collins Available at your Christian Gift Center. EFERENCE bookstore Malls Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas 842-1553 SUA FILMS Presents YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY. ALEXANDER SALKING PRESENTS MARLON BRANDO, GENE HACKMAN & RICHARD DONNER FILM 3:30, 7:00, 10:00 Friday and Saturday, Dec. 5-6 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium — No Refreshments Allowed BER BRINTHIS SPRINTS BEFER Bennett Retail Liquor DISCOUNTS 801 STREET CENTER BILLINIONS LAWRENCE KAWEK 842 807 U STORE IT FORT KNOX MINI WAREHOUSE (behind K-Mart) 1717 W. 31st St. 841-4244 155 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10013 SPECIAL OFFER 30% SAVINGS PLUS Free color CLUB Poster with every order *a 3 value* I'd like to order a whole box of CLUB papers to be sure I always have the best. Please send me boxes Single width (50 packs) @ $12.50 packs boxes Double width (Cabaret) (25 packs) Please send me boxes Double width (Cabaret) (25 packs) @ $8.00 (32p per pack) New York residents please sales tax Highway Imports Inc. MADE IN ITALY CLUB TOTAL ... $ I am 18 years of age or more. Ship to: NAME ADDRESS City State Zip Advertise it in the Kansan. Bucky's Take a Turkey Break --- Double Cheeseburgers Two for Only $1.69 Good Thru Sun. 12/7. Bucky's Bucky's HAMBURGERS come as you are . . . hungry 2120 WEST NINTH RANGER KANSAN The University Daily University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Monday, December 8, 1980 Vol. 91, No. 72 USPS 650-640 Prescription forgery, theft plague Med Center By BILL VOGRIN and BILL MENEZES Staff Reporters KANSAS CITY, Kan.-A syringe full of Demarol, a dose of relief for a patient in pain, is squeezed into a sterile cup and saved for later, maybe a lunch-break high. An intern plans a big weekend party and writes a prescription for a patient who paints the fence. He gets a pocket knife and then packets A pharmacist restocking a drug cart takes a few of the sleeping pills and pain killers for himself, knowing that the cart will not be inventoried and the medicine will not be missed. These stories, told by administrative officials and sources at the University of Kansas Medical School, were published in *Medical Journal*. and abuse of prescription-writing privileges that plague the Med Center, they say. THE MED CENTER pharmacy and several nursing wards are the primary problem areas, according to the sources, and administrative personnel. In addition, the "honor system" as drug-control weaknesses. Drug control is a nationwide problem, and studies show a dramatic increase in pharmacy theft and other related problems, according to the Pharmaceutical Association in Washington, D.C. "In 1797 there were four pharmacists killed in holdups," Simons said. "And a recent study showed that there has been a 500 percent rise in drug use against retail pharmacies in the last 10 years." In Kansas, Harold Godwin, director of the Med center pharmacy, admits that forgery of drugs is a common problem. is a problem, but he downplays the amount of theft in other areas at the Med Center. Employees of the Med Center in nursing, pharmacy and orderly positions say internal drug theft and drug abuse exist at the center. Med Center officials admit only that prescription drugs are used to treat students are on an honor system and easily can abuse their privileges, the officials said. "Forgery is our biggest vulnerability," Godwin said two weeks ago. "When you talk about weak points, that is it. People get hurt." So he'll tell them out for 100 or so pills. It is a problem." DESPITE COLOR coding on prescription pads, special numbers for narcotics and even special security measures to lock up the pads. This system is in general the biggest drux-control problem. *We're tky to contour character印数 aid, and we thun *We're tky to contour character印数 aid, and we thun going on here. It is a problem all over the state," Godwin said. Goldwin said pads were often stolen from doctors and interns who leave them in the pocket of their lab coats. Any person can pick up a pad, but not everyone is prepared, with the correct style, obtain a prescription. "We keep the pads locked up, and the pads for narcotics are color coded, but still it happens." Godwin is correct in classifying the problem as statewide, according to Doug Johnson, executive director of the Kansas Pharmacy Association in Topeka. JOHNSON SAID a survey of all state pharmacies of the five largest states furnished a forexcription a month. "We took the survey to see if the problem was as bad as we suspected, and it was," Johnson said last week. "Prescription forgery is a big problem all across the state." According to Godwin, extensive precautions are taken at the Med Center to prevent forgery, but it is difficult to stop. Godwin also said there were extensive precautions taken to stop theft due to drugs, but employees at the Med Center said theft and abuse were also difficult to stop. Godwin said that interns could legally write prescriptions and that it was almost impossible to determine whether those were legitimate prescriptions. "Intern can write scripts, and a med student can probably, write one if he really wants to." He said if a student acted as if he knew what he was doing, he probably could fill a prescription. "We've got to trust some people," Godwin said. "But we try to limit it to professional people who have licenses to lose if they do something illegal." See DRUGS page 10 Combined KU choirs accrue to "Hack the Herald Angels Sing" at the annual Christmas Vespers concert yesterday at Hoch Auditorium. The groups performed two concerts. Bookstore sells Javhawk logo, collects profits By TRACEE HAMILTON Sports Writer The smiling Jayhawk is no longer a free bird. The smiling Jayhawk is no longer a free bird. The University of Kansas, tired of supporting its feathered friend, asked the bird to go out and get a job. And the Jayhawk did. But who collects the paychecks? The University, which owns the copyright on the Jayhawk, has appointed the Kansas Union Bookstore as the agent for administering bird-rights. But while the Jayhawk is selling itself, no one is quite sure how much money it can earn, or where that money will go. "We have not agreed on a split," Warner Ferguson, associate director of the Kansas University Police Department, said. THE BOOKSTORE receives a fee for negotiating sales and doing the paperwork. A company can contract to print the Jayhawk on anything from beer mugs to bath mats. The bookstore's sales are for between 5 and 10 percent of the gross sales, depending on the item being sold. Jayhawk items are sold in the Union bookstore and retail stores across the country, although they are not as widespread as other more famous brands. Jayhawk is said to have traveled as far as Japan. "We just started this last summer," Ferguson WHILE ONLY A few companies responded to the bookstore's initial request for its cut of the profits. Ferguson said he did not think the company manufactured from using the wicked wonder. said. "Not much has been collected yet. I certainly don't expect any substantial amount of money, but we have no previous experience to go by." But Steve Word, who is in charge of processing requests for the crimson-and-blue mascot, estimated the bookstore's share of the business companies using the Jayhawk may be as high as $200.00. "This is very new at KU," Word said. "We're still issuing agreements to vendors. For the first year I have no idea of how much we'll make. But it can be lucrative." "The bookstore wants to be sure you maintain a certain quality and meet safety safety requirements. That's why we percentage of our sales, but that certainly won't prevent us from manufacturing for them. Don DelaPina of the Princess Toy Co., Cannon Falls, Minn., said that although his company did little business with the Kansas Union, the Kansans had gross sales of its product was reasonable. "It's really a minimal amount." The Princess Toy Co. turns out plush and specialized versions of the Jayhawk, about 10 inches tall. But Jim Rising, who works in the sales department of the VelvaSheen Co. in Cincinnati, said the request was reasonable "with some reservations." The University of California at Los Angeles bookstore is proof that companies will accept this kind of program—and that it can work. UCLA implemented a similar program five years ago. The Associated Students of UCLA, a student board, sets policy and grants licenses. VELVASHEEN manufactures T-shirts and sportwear with the Jayhawk insignia printed on "All we do is tack KU's percentage on the price," he said. "The consumer pays for it." THE UCLA BOOKSTORE, the largest store in the country specializing in muscled merchandise, historic books, antiques and collectibles. Rissing called the program an inconvenience. "They are simply raising the cost to the student body," he said. "I guess they can justify that." "The program has been quite successful," Tim Bailey of the UCLA bookstore said. "We simply license the use of our name. The royalty income last year was $385,000." But, Bailley cautioned, the UCLA store made only $20,000 to $30,000 during the first year under Wynn's ownership. "Our income goes to the university," Bailey said. "The chancellor decides where it should go." Wherever the money ends up, it will be more than the amount previously earned from the Jayhawk—none. Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said it was the first time anyone had been required to pay to use the emblem. THE ADMINISTRATION became aware that companies were using the bird in air ways that were not always complimentary to the University, and this prompted the move to copyright. "To my knowledge, no action has been taken against anyone who used the emblem." Von Ende said. "Those who have used it since we instituted the copyright have been notified." Jayhawks have appeared on T-shirts in drunken stumps or smoking joints, among other non-competitive poses. This image is used in Dickie Thomas's book to Vickie Thomas, University general counsel. Van Ende did not remember the exact date, he thought the, Jayhawk was copyrighted. For now, no one seems to know where the money will go at KU. "Some companies contacted us and asked whether they could use it," he said. "We gave permission." TED BAYS Von Ende said the University did not plan to ask companies that had established the Jayhawk as part of their trademark to discontinue its use. The university also provides services and Hotel Jayhawk in Topeka as examples. Weather It will be cloudy and cold today with a high in the mid-30s, according to the KU Weather Service. Light rain or freezing drizzle will continue throughout today, possibly changing to snow tonight. Tonight's low will be around 20. It will be warmer tomorrow with a high in the 40s. The warm trend will continue with Friday's high in the 50s. City to vote on paraphernalia sales The Lawrence City Commission will vote tomorrow night on an ordinance that limits the sale and display of drug paraphernalia to minor, Mayor Ed Carter said yesterday. The vote comes in the wake of the Kansas Supreme Court ruling that a similar Overtand Park ordinance Saturday. The commission had planned to vote on a paraphernalia ordinance last spring, but decided to wait until the Overland Park law was reviewed by the Kansas Supreme Court. Both the Overland Park ordinance and the He said the Lawrence ordinance would not limit the sale of cigarette papers and pipes not Carter said the Lawrence ordinance was intended to limit the advertising and exposure of television programs. proposed Lawrence ordinance outlaw the sale and display of marjuaniana pipes, cocaine spores and simulated drugs to minors. The ordinances require that all drug-related items within 500 feet of a school. See POT page 12 Staff Reporter By CINDI CURRIE Staff Reporter Bates, Lansing junior, estimated she would have had 5 years of year because of the bad advising she received. Faculty advisers not always doing job, students say For two years Debra Bates trusted her academic advisers and took the classes they recommended. This semester she discovered she had been required for admission in her professional school. Bates is among students who, during their in and out of advisers, office before enrollment. She characterized the attitude of her faculty advisers as傲骨 and uncaring and a kind, caring character. SO INSTEAD OF tolerating what she considered a "runaround" from secretaries, administrators and advisers in the school, Bates dropped out of the program. "We went over my schedule," Bates said. "No one said I needed the two courses in order to get I gave me some worthless courses to take. I needed to look for need. I could have taken something i really needed. Lewis said she thought arrangements could have been made for her if someone had spent the time to advise her instead of telling her to leave. She had told them, "Since then, Lewis has changed her career goals." STUDENTS HAVE A Right to good advising, tests said, especially when the freshmen and baskets are on. That right comes to a student as a consumer of education, according to J. Wesley Miller, a teacher at North Carolina State University. Deb Lewis, Winfield junior, said she had to stay at KU for an extra semester because the schools of Business and Education couldn't tell courses to take to become a business instructor. Writing for the Chronicle of Higher Education, Miller said students should not be advised by teachers who take on advising responsibilities to them. He said he would advise students to snare students for underenrolled courses. Acting Chancellor Del Shankel said he thought the University would accept responsibility for misadvising a student if that misadvising could be proven. "If we could verify that a student was misadvised and later could not fill the requirements," Shankel said, "we generally could say we accept responsibility. "We don't think our students are incapable of reading. Students have to bear some responsibility." "Faculty members have a responsibility to give good, confident advice and the University has to accept some responsibility for faculty members and advising." ZAMIR BAVEL, professor of computer science at many students frustrated with the advancing system. "It's difficult to see how discharged they are," Bavel said. "They have other things to do than sit around. Students aren't complaining, but I think perhaps they should have been." "Advising at the University is not always at the convenience of the students. They have that Bavel and two other computer science faculty members have recently formed a committee to address the issues. The committee recognized a need for organized, complete student advising and decided to develop an advising system for their department. Bavel said. STUDENTS INTERESTED in computer science are asked to make appointments with faculty members before the end of this semester and are asked to wait for enrollment for an adjuvant, he said. "Appointments will last twenty minutes each," Bavel said, "of each of us can take a good look at the student's record, what they are doing, and what course they what courses they can take. All the small detail." "For once, we are hoping the advising process will not be a horrendous experience for the girl." Steve Goldman, director for freshman- See ADVISENE pure $ page 2 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 News Briefs From United Press International Portugal's Eanes wins second term LISBON, Portugal—Voting with "their heads, not their hearts," Portuguese voters gave leftist-backed President Antonio Ramalo Eanes a second term yesterday. The present center-right government, mourning the recent death of its leader, indicated it would resign today. backed by a coalition of socialists, communists and independent centrists, Eanes' election checked a rightward lurch that had handed the ruling Democratic Alliance coalition two parliamentary election triumphs during the past year. There had been speculation before the election that many sympathy voters would be cast for the Democratic Alliance candidate after its leader, Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The Justice Ministry released official projections给Eanes, 45, a final tally of 57.3 percent, followed by the present government's candidate, Gen. Hidalgo. Arch-conservative Soares Carnero, the only candidate who played no part in the 1974 revolution that restored democracy to Portugal after 48 years of authoritarian rule, told reporters that he hoped Eanes would "respect the democratic parties and made no concessions to the communists." The Democratic Alliance campaign had been filled with accusations that Eanes had "secret accord" with the Soviet-line party. Eanes, in fact, had a "conflict of interest." The communists withdrew their own candidate and endorsed Eanes late in the campaign in hopes of blocking victory for Sauras Carneiro. Eanes is said to have been the first communist to participate. Election officials estimated that close to 85 percent of the country's 7 million voters had cast ballots in the peaceful elections. SWAT teams prevent Klan march NASHVILLE, Tenn.-Police SWAT teams armed with automatic rifles and backed up by 15 motorcycle patrols blocked about 75 robed and hooded KU police vehicles. With Christmas carols in the air, majestetics prancing, bands playing and colorful floats gliding along, only half a block away, police riflemen thwarted repeated attempts by groups of Klan members to march on the sidewalks along the parade route. At least one Klan member was arrested in an angry confrontation in a church parking lot, but was released later. Police finally allowed three Klan leaders, two in their ceremonial garb, to walk along the sidewalk. Spectators gaped at the sight of the three, Imperial Wizard Bill Wilkinson in a gray pinstripe suit, and Tennessee Kailiff Tommy Stanley in Stanley King in kings and robes, accompanied by a throne of reporters. Police refused to allow Wilkinson's bodyguards to accompany him. The Klan members had marched in a group to the parade route after a rally at the state capital and were met by Police Chief Joe Casey and armed Casey agreed to allow the Klan members to walk along the sidewalks of the parade route one or two at a time, but not as a group. our teams and extended and broke into three smaller groups. One group of five SWAT team members led to the parade route and was confronted by five SWAT team members. Israeli troops halt television crews JERUSALEM—Israeli troops seized video and film footage yesterday from two foreign television crews covering the second day of student protests in the occupied West Bank. The students were protesting the expulsion of two Palestinian mavors. The Israeli moves against the foreign journalists apparently were aimed at limiting reporters' access to breaking events in the volatile region. They came after a Vinews television crew had taped Israeli troops breaking up a rock-throwing protest by shooting at the legs of young Palestinian demonstrators, wounding six of them, Nov. 18. The footage was shown on Israeli television. Acting CBS bureau chief in Tel Aviv, Bob Simon, said a CBS television crew had been arrested in Nabus and had one video confiscated. The West Bank bank governor prevented a planned meeting in Hebron to protest Friday's expulsions of the city's mayor, Fahd Kawasme, and Mohammed Milhem of neighboring Haloul. Soldiers stationed themselves at the entrance to the city to stop any unauthorized people from entering. West Bank military sources said soldiers had used tear gas to disperse a group of rock-throwing students in Hebron after they had stoned several people. A high school principal in Nabus broke up a similar protest by ordering the students back to class, and soldiers broke up a minor rock-throwing attack. Senate will trv again on housing bill Through an agreement worked out by Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the Senate will vote tomorrow on whether to take up a major fair housing bill that dashed hopes for a scheduled final adjournment last Friday. If the Senate decides not to take up the bill, it is possible that the lame duck session of Congress could end this week. However, if a majority votes to consider the measure, the Senate will move immediately to vote on a measure that would limit debate on the bill to less than 10 hours. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press" that we would be a meeting tomorrow of both Democrats and Republicans in Washington this week. Byrd, blaming "far right" Republicans for delaying action on the House-passed fair housing bill, has vowed a fight to the finish to get it through this year because of his fear that such legislation would have no chance of passage when a Republican majority takes control of the Senate in January. U.S. warns Soviets about invasion The official said the Soviets still could choose several different courses of action, but that the Soviet buildup was so unprecedented and massive that an attack would be impossible. WASHINGTON—A White House warning issued yesterday about possible Soviet preparations for an invasion of Poland was described by one senior administration official as "one last pointing of the finger." The statement said that the Soviet Union had now completed preparations for a possible invasion. It was issued after President Carter met with top officials on Tuesday. "What we are doing is one last pointing of the finger before it (an invasion) happen," the official said. In an apparent spinoff of the Polish crisis, Soviet police were reported to be thrown down on dissidents in Estonia, the Center for Estonian Prisoners' Crisis (CEP) and a group called The Movement. Sources in Washington said the new element in the Soviet and Warsaw Pact military buildup around Poland was the addition of certain armored vehicles and units, the backbone of any modern military invasion, on the eastern Polish borders. The military buildup has been going on since August. FISHAKO CITY OF COMMUNICATIONS is located in the OSTERIA CITY OF COMMUNICATIONS. Estonia is about 250 miles northeast of Poland, inside the Soviet Union. Also, the use of military communications, a good indicator of military activity in general, has been at an unprecedented level, sources said. Delegation investigating murder of nuns By United Press International SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador—A top-level State Department team investigating the recent murders of four American missionaries met yesterday with El Salvador's three top military leaders. The murders were said to have been committed by Salvadoran soldiers. In the Salvadoran government, the Christian Democratic Party threatened to quit the ruling civilian-military junta. The government already has been joked by a cutoff of $25 million in U.S. military and economic The three-man U.S. delegation, sent by President Carter, was scheduled also to meet with San Salvador's acting archbishop, Arturo Rivera y Damas, whose office has gathered information reportedly implicating government security forces in last Tuesday's slayings. CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC junta member Joe Napoleon Duarte said his party would quit the five-man junta unless the military investigated and punished any soldiers responsible for killing the missionaries, and six prominent leftists who were slain on Nov. 27. Duarte said the armed forces were now suffering from "institutionalized indiscipline," and conceded that the junta had not been able to purge "ultra-rightist elements" that had made their way into the government. aid because of the slayings of the three Catholic nuns and a lay worker. Two of the five junta members are Christian, Barbara Duarte and Marie Meechil. The nation's three most powerful military officers went to the residence of U.S. Ambassador Robert White and the three State Department officials. The American women, all shot in the back and head, were exhued from a grave southeast of San Salvador, the capital, on Thursday. They were last seen alive leaving San Salvador's airport late Tuesday and their burned car was found Wednesday. CONSERVATIVE JUNTA member Col. Abdul Gittererue, National Guard Commander Col. Carlos Eugenio Vides Casanova and Defense Ministry Chief Col. Jose Guilermo Garcia, had no complaint as they drove into White's residence. They met with William C. Bowdler, deputy secretary of state for inter-American relations; William Rogers, who held a similar post in the Ford administration, and an unidentified member of Ronald Reagan's transition team. Duarte told reporters that some members of the junta had visited the U.S. delegation Saturday night for a "largely social meeting" in which Rogers expressed to him the United States' concern about the killings. Duarte said the slayings of the four American missionaries last Tuesday, and the six leaders of the opposition Democratic Revolutionary Front the week before, had been part of a rightist plot to trigger a military coup. IN ANOTHER TEST for the junta, armed forces sources said 300 of El Salvador's 700-man officer corps voted to oust liberal Col. Adolfo Majano last Saturday in a secret meeting that was planned by his brother Jaime Abdul Guilierrez and the chiefs of the Defense Ministry and the National Guard. Majano said he had been unofficially informed of the still con- clined nature of the number of members. Last September, Majano saw most of his backers in the armed forces moved to powerless desk jobs after a shake-up in their desk's supporters into key command posts. 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY MILK "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO New! Steely Dan Specials Mfg. List $9.98 Kief's Sale $6.75 These Great Steely Dan LP's. Mfg. List $5.98 Kief's Sale $3.99 AVAILABLE ON MCA RECORDS AND TAPES THE DOWNTOWN RECORD STORE BETTER DAYS 724 Mass. STERLY DAN PETER LLOYD STERLY DAN FOR DEE LAND Starly Dan STERLY DAN COUNTRY TO MORNING AVAILABLE ON MCA RECORDS AND TAPES Starly Dan Band Aid STEELY DAN courtesy to usually WAR OF THE STAR WARS steely dan Gaucho ... IF MONEY IS IMPORTANT TO YOU ... We wrote "the" book on BOOK BUY BACK featuring: 1. Highest "on" campus & "off" campus book prices. 2. Instant cash . . . no nuisance vouchers to sign. 3. Year-round professional buy back expertise. 4. Fastest book buy back lines. 5. 10% blue chip purchase discount tokens If it has value,we'll buy anytime) whatover you can carry in! Plus shop our gift selection aisles for added money discount savings. the Jayhawk Bookstore KU 1420 Crescent Rd. 8-5 Mon-Fri 843-3826 10-4 Sat. < University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1960 Page : Advising From page 1 sophomore advising in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said students who want good advising have to contact advisers to receive counseling. Students have not had to work as hard since the college set up its freshman- GOLDMAN'S PROGRAM involves 56 teachers who volunteered to advise 3,000 freshman and sophomore students this year. He said he hoped to increase the number to 200 by 1984 so each adviser would have only 10 to 15 students to visit. In his program, faculty members advise students for two years while they are undergraduates in the College of General Arts and Sciences, Goldman said. "We don't want to advise a pre- anything malar." Goldman said. He said advisers were willing to observe a broad specum of students but not teachers. "We are very concerned." HOWEVER, GOLDMAN said, advisers should know the requirements for admission into the major schools. 'It is their duty to know the requirements of the School of Journalism,' he said, "so as a junior a student." He entered the School of Journalism. "There's no way to make the time lost by poor advising up. You need strong advising—someone who spells out what is needed and necessary." According to Ralph Christoffer森, vice chancellor for academic affairs, advising students is considered part of the university's responsibility of service to the University. "Faculty have three basic responsibilities at the University." Christofferssen said, "teaching, research and service. It's easy to put advising aside. "Faculty have been given the responsibility because they have to make up curriculum and they should know better than anyone else what is available and what can fulfill a student's requirements." But students don't always perceive faculty members as having the most complete knowledge of graduation and curriculum surveys, according to a 1979 KU survey. IN THAT SURVEY conducted by the School of Engineering, only 32 percent of the students polled thought their teachers had taught and graduation requirements quite well. Of the 474 students in seven engineering departments in freshman through senior class levels surveyed, 43 percent thought their advisers knew major and graduation requirements fairly well, 10 percent not too well, 3 percent not at all and 11 percent were not sure. Nationwide, schools have come to recognize the importance of respon- Carol Wilson, editor of On Campus, a college news publication, said that advising was an issue on many of the campuses she contacted. Wilson said that the University of New York had significant changes in their advising system. A COMMITTEE investigating the quality of education at the University of Florida included academic advising as well as professional education. The investigation indicated that the advising at the university was unsatisfactory and must be changed. At KU, Acting Chancellor Del Shankel recommended earlier this year that advising be part of faculty per- sonal activities. In the office of academic affairs each year. He said the evaluation should reflect the overall merit of the performance of the faculty member and would be used in education and salary increase evaluations. Goldman said his advising program was the result of the administration's perception of a need for better advising at KU. He said that response from students about the program had been positive. "Sixty percent of the freshmen are regularly seeing their advisers," Goldman said. "They are satisfied with what they have requested new advisers, and they asked for a transfer rather than to drop out of the program." ROBERT COBB, executive vice chancellor, said he thought the best advising was a two-way street between a faculty mentor and a student. With that relationship, students receive advice on academic programs and are exposed to the University community, he said. Bates said that when one of her advisors took the time to sit down and talk with her she felt better about the advising system. Lewis said she understood the problems faculty faced when they were swamped with students, but advisers are important, especially in the freshman and sophomore years, "when you need to talk to them." On Campus TODAY :: An exhibition of work by John Collier, HALLMARK PROFESSOR OF ILLUSTRATION, in the Art and Design Building will be open to the public all day. *Vocal music students will be* *instruments at 1:30 p.m. in the Strong* *Ballard hallu.* The KU COLLEGIUM MUSICIUM will present an end-of-the-s semester concert at 3:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. TONIGHT Carl Cook of Philips Petroleum Co. will speak on "MEAUREMENTS OF SEISMIC WAVE FIELD" at 4:30 p.m. in 332 Malton. Troyals for the IN-BETWEEN ACT PLAYERS will begin at 5:20 p.m. in 109 Murphy Hall. The players will perform set changes at the Rock Chalk Revue. INSPIRATIFAL GOSPEL VOICES will rehearse at p48 in p44 Murphy. The KU GERMAN CLUB will go caroling. Those interested should meet at 6:30 p.m. on the fourth floor in the Kansas Union. SUA Indoor Recreation will sponsor 1 hour of t.p.m. in the lobby of Robbins Center. AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will give 7.30 p.m. in the Oread Room in the University. THE BLACK CHRISTIAN THE FLOWER WILL meet at 8 p.m. in Lewis Hall. TOMORROW FOREIGN WORK Tryouts for the IN-BETWEEN ACT PLAYERS will begin at 10 a.m. in room 109 in Murhov Hall. The FACULTY SENATE RESEARCH COMMITTEE will sponsor a General Research Fund Application Workshop, dealing with the preparation and review of research papers for p.m. in the Spencer Library auditorium. The CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will meet at 6:30 p.m. in 222, 233 and 209 Haworth. The TAU SIGMA DANCE EN-SILENCE at 7 p.m. in 2012 Robinson Center --- The MARANTHA CHRISTIAN MUSEUM in m., in the Jayhawk room in the Union THE KU SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY ASSOCIATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Oread Room in the Union A STUDENT RECITAL of works by KU composition students will be performed at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The Kansas Union Food Service Invites you to join us for our Christmas Buffet Tuesday, December 16, 1980 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Menu Carved Baron of Beef Oven Browned Potatoes Green Bean Casserole Holiday Vegetable Mixture Assorted Festive Salads Freshly Baked Rolls and Breads Cranberry Upside-Down Cake Nuts and Mints Beverage Other selections will be available Music and Refreshments compliments of Kansas Union Fellowship by: You KANSAS UNION CAFETERIA, LEVEL 3 PRAIRIE ROOM, LEVEL 2 SATELLITE UNION PARTY ROOM, LEVEL 1 --- School's Out Sr. Class Party MARK RUBER MONDAY, DEC. 8! Come out to Gammons for the first Sr. class party! Get in free with your Sr. class card! (If you don't have a class card, you can buy one at the door for $13.00.) Sr. Class Card Holders Receive: - a Sr. T-shirt (if you don't already have one) - a free drink - 2 $25 food and drink prizes - lots of albums - a chance to win —$50 cash prize *You don't have to be a senior to enjoy the excitement of Gammons Monday night and every night this week! 23rd and Ousdahl South GAMMONS SNOWY Celebrate the end of classes with Virgin Recording Artists SHOOTING STAR December 9, 1980 The party begins at 7.00 pm Kansas Union Balletroom our Special Event University of Kansas $3.50 general admission $3.00 with KUID Tickets available at SUA University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Opinion The year to come Just as former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes' departure was the biggest KU story of 1800, the selection of his successor should be the most important campus story in 1881. The next chancellor will influence all of the University—students, alumni, faculty and classified employees. To a significant degree, the future and direction of the University will rest in the hands of this important figure. There are other important issues that will surface often in the upcoming year. And most of them are familiar to the University community. FACULTY SALARIES. Faculty salaries at KU simply have not been able to compete with those at comparable institutions of higher learning. A number of faculty members have sought employment elsewhere and eventually KU academic programs will reflect these voids. KU's dealings with the Legislature will be extremely important. If KU is to prevent the salary deficiencies from getting more out of hand, it will have to have success with the Legislature. That hasn't always been easy. TITLE IX. The results of a Title IX investigation of KU's athletic department could lead to some sweeping changes in the men's and women's athletic programs. FREE SPEECH. The Kansas Board of Regents has given the University the final say on the banner policy, a policy that has caused controversy and disturbance. The University should decide the fate of the policy next year. The University's commitment to free speech has been questioned and 1981 events should be revealing more about KU's commitment to free speech. STUDENT SENATE. The new Student Senate will attempt to conquer old problems of apathy and communication. The Senate's fight to gain a new identity could affect much of the student body. The year will be a pivotal one for the Senate and perhaps 1981 will be the decisive year for the Senate to resolve its problems. Kansan emerges from year older, wiser, officially free At last, the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel dawns. It is welcome and warming. The Kansas finally is emerging from this difficult winter. There are more, more than a bit jaded, the patient is breathing. A new editor is droopy-eyed from hours upon hours of staff interviewing. The newsroom is abuzz with speculation about those he will choose, about those who will be trusted with the management of one of the best university dailies in the country. These are important decisions to these young journalists. They have a big investment of time CAROL BEIER WOLF Editor and sleeplessness at stake. The speculation, such hopeful activity, is heartening. Recent events have not been easy or dull. The redesign of the Kansan had its inevitable labor pains at birth. The campus desk sweated through the first few weeks of publication with only a dozen reporters, about 50 percent of the usual staff size. The Associated Press effectively pranced out of our budget's reach by increasing our weekly rate by about 400 percent. The Student Senate did not think the Kansan worthy of additional money to beef up wire coverage. A group of ardent, irate feminists demonstrated against a column and cartoon on the editorial page, and the Kansan endured a barrage of slings and arrows from outraged student body leaders who felt wounded by comment on page 4. Then came the List. No single story has ever pushed so far toward the limits of the Kansan editor's freedom to publish. It all began quietly enough. The Kansan acquired a list of 165 people who were being considered for the chancellorship. Consistent with our editorial stance in favor of opening the search process, I decided to print the list as part of a story on its makeup. During the research for that story, staff reporters called several of the candidates. It didn't take long for candidates disturbed by our planned publication to contact administrators. The administrators, in turn, made the effort to enroll in school, the Kansan's general manager and me. They were not pleased. In fact, they were enraged. The Kansan was accused of sensationalism, irresponsibility, theft, immorality. But the plans were still go, I was, at that point, unmoved. Our lede editorsors had repeatedly told us how to know who was being considered for the chancellor's chair. There had been no change in that opinion. But then critics' questions moved from the realm of doubting the sanity of the student editor into the realm of doubting the traditions under which the Kansan and the Kansan Board had operated for several years. "What does the Kanasan Board do, if it can't stop something like this?" "Once this is printed, who will be ultimately responsible?" The change in focus was painful. The dean, also chairman of the Kansas Board, which is made up of the student editor and business manager, the heads of the news-editorial and advertising sequences and a representative of the Student Senate, called a meeting. that meeting was interpreted changed the course of the game. I had been reminded several times during my many chastisements that the chairman of the board had pulled an editorial once in life. The edit carried the headline, "I will bake," the next night, the Kansas Union was blown. After a fifteen night of agonizing, I decided against giving the board another precedent to be given to me. This time, I was the editor in 1900. I opened my comments at the board meeting by saying that I was willing to That misconception of the Kansan as a University public relations tool is only one of its perceived schizoid personalities. According to its constitution, it also serves as a student newspaper, which implies that it is student-run, not hovered over by a hypercautious general manager or publisher. And the constitution provides that the Kansan should be a laboratory for the school of communication. That role suggests that the newspaper has a responsibility to protect the school's interests, perhaps at the expense of covering some embarrassing news. concede the printing of the names on the list but that we would continue with our plans to print an analysis of its makeup. From the beginning, I was convinced that a large part of the list's news value was tied to its small percentage of women who used it and that while there was no vote to prevent publication. They had stopped short of jumping off the cliff they had so quickly run to. These conflicting roles and growing doubts of the board members led to larger questions, which went way beyond the list story. Should the Kansan be a part of the school? Or should it be an administrative institution, thus eliminating midnight calls to Dean Brinkman from angry sources or readers? The analysis went to press a week later. Meanwhile the Kansas City Times, the Wichita Eagle-Beacon and KJHK did their best to sensationalize the Kansan's situation. Also in the interim, we printed an airtight story based on public records about NCAA extra benefit infractions and the basketball team, only to be criticized again by hundreds of students who thought it treasonous for a student paper to report wrongdoing in the athletic department. Should the Kansan add another layer of news decision-making power? Does the buck rightfully stop at the student editor's desk? Or should it stop at an "adult" publisher's door? If that alternative is unsavory, can the board step out of its traditionally accepted hiring-and-firing capacity to take an active role as a publisher with prepublication news judgment power? Or would that kind of prior censorship be required before the board is removed? After all, the board is an arm of the University, which equals the state." Congress shall make no law . . . The newspaper's constitution, as it stands, offers no clear delineation of how the board and the staff should distinguish ultimate responsibilities for content in tight situations. So after more than 90 minutes of discussion last Monday, the board voted to eliminate that document what has always been assumed. The student editor has the final say on the news content of the Kansan. The same goes for the student business manager in regard to advertising. The board has no role in advising the individual member's right to advise the editor, regardless of whether the advice is solicited. For the time being at least, the Kansan will continue to operate as it has, with all news decisions made by the editor or his staff members. What the board can do is review, even to the extent of removing an editor whose judgment they did not agree with. The makeup of the board also will remain the same. The dean or his delegate will continue to serve as chairman with the same other members in tow. Through it all, the Kansas staff has learned difficult, cynicism-producing lessons about power and politics and how to handle a sensitive story. The school and the critics have gotten a clearer picture of this strange and wonderful animal tapping away round the clock in Flint 111 and 112, including the inherent contradictions in its very existence. What's next? I don't know. I can only hope that good training from the journalism faculty, hard work and dedication will continue to produce something comfortable support—even in the crunch. I am thankful for that much hope. Without that support, without that trust, the Kanas would have been lost. Moral Majority triumphs in election By DAVE KENDALL Guest Columnist Politics became the concern of a vocal segment of Christians this year. They called themselves the Moral Majority and the Christian Voice, Dr. Jerry Falwell summarized the sentiment of this movement with a personal observation: "I'm convinced this country is morally sick, and will not correct itself unless we get involved." THE DANCE OF THE FESTIVAL Some estimate there may be as many as 80 million Americans who have become supporters of this evangelical church. In April, a group of conservative Christians capital for a "Washington for Jesus" rally. The message was clear to the politicians. Those who failed to support the conservative positions of the fundamentalists were up in arms by a powerful force. Some were forced out of office. Ronald Reagan remarked while campaigning that separation of church and state had gone too far. He said, "I don't believe that the essence of religion means freedom from religion." The separation of church and state was tested in a case reviewed by the Supreme Court this year. The posting of the Ten Commandments in public schoolrooms was ordered by the Kentucky legislature earlier in 2015, and since then it considered the issue, it was declared inconsistent with the constitutional guarantee of religious freedom. While some pushed for a return to the basic teachings of the Bible, others called for heresy. The authority of the man reigning over the Roman Catholic Church was brought into question this year. But it was another man, not a woman, who questioned his authority. This opened another conflict within religious institutions. Hans Kung, a West German professor of The male-dominated imagery of the scriptures was challenged in a symposium at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Discussions focused on the concept of "God the Mother." It was pointed out that this notion is an ancient heritage of many cultures and that some have equally emphasized the male and feminine qualities of the Divine. This discussion of symbolism paralleled a similar discussion at a conference in the Midwest. Women of various faiths asserted their right to become priests and rabbis and to hold high offices in religious organizations. This led to calls for a male domination in Christianity and Judaism. STEVE DICK/Kansan theology, challenged the doctrinal infallibility of the Pope. The Vatican promptly declared Kung unfit to teach Catholic theology. This was a common mistake and a reluctant and allow Kung to continue teaching. This year has witnessed conflict between the old and the new, the traditional and the modern. theology at Union Theological Seminary, put this conflict into perspective: "At its root, contemporary unrest in Christian thought has to do with the value to be placed on what is learned through experience against what is learned from Bible, established doctrine and other ecclesiastical vehicles of divine revelation." Iran, hostages top news story of year By STEVE BASKA and DAVID GOSOROSKI Guest Columnists The impasse between the United States and Iran over the fate of the 52 American hostages, was the top news story of 1980. The status of the hostages, who began their second year in captivity on November 4, remained indefinite as a diplomatic search for their release continued. Iran also spawned other important stories. The war between Iraq and Iran over the use of the Shatt-Al-Arab estuary threatened to spread into other Middle Eastern countries and interrupt oil exports from that region. Six Americans who escaped the seizure of the American embassy in Tehran and hid in the Canadian embassy for three months, returned to the United States with the help of the Canadian embassy staff, which provided forged visas. The crisis remained in limbo throughout the year as the result of repeated delays by the Iranian Parliament in considering the hostage situation. The intrigues of the Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei and President Carter to order a rescue attempt on April 25 that resulted in the deaths of eight servicemen in the collision of a helicopter and airplane. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned in opposition to the attempt and was replaced by former Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine. November general election. Voters elected conservative Republican Ronald Reagan as president and returned a Republican majority to the Senate for the first time in 25 years. Reagan won 44 states in one of the smallest turnouts in U.S. election history-52.5 percent. The second biggest story of the year was the The third biggest story was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Russia's neutral southern neighbor. The invasion took place in the final days of 1979 and was intended to protect the tottering Marxist regime of Hafjullah Amin against native rebels. Amin was later executed and replaced by Babrak Karnal, a Soviet proxy. Against Russia as a result of the occupation, and O. Olympic teams led a boycott of the Summer games in Moscow. Unable to defeat the rebels or leave the country unguarded, Afghanistan became a no-win situation for the Soviets. 4. The continual downtown of the economy, which combined double-digit inflation with recession and high unemployment. Inflation topped 18 percent and unemployment in the heavily industrial states reached 25 percent, compared to the national average of 8.5 percent. Interest rates of 20 percent depressed the housing and construction industries. Other top news stories of the year were: 5. The Polish labor strikes led by Lech Walesa. Strikers demanded wage reforms and ousted Communist Party Secretary Edward Gierek. The strikes resulted in the legalization of independent trade unions for the first time in any Communist bloc nation. 6. The eruptions of the volcano, Mt. St. Helens, it erupted for the first time in 123 years on March 27 and became the active volcanon on the U.S. continent in 57 years. The continuing series of eruptions of eight people and caused $1.5 million from the damage by spewing ash into surrounding states. 7. The heat wave, which lasted from June until September. Temperatures were consistently over 100 degrees and resulted in 1,200 deaths and enormous losses of chicken and cattle. Texas and Missouri were the hardest hit. Damage to crops amounted to billions of dollars. S. The ABSCAM scandal (short for Arab scam). Six U.S. representatives and one Senator were indicted for accepting bribes from FBI and a representative for Arab sheikhs seeking congressional favors. 9. The arrival in Florida of 125,000 Cuban refugees who sought freedom from the Castro regime. The United States initially agreed to accept 3,500. Eventually, boatloads of illegal aliens landed all along the Florida coast. They were immediately examined and relocated across the country. 10. Terrorist seizures of the Dominican Republic embassy in Bogota, Colombia and the Iranian embassy in London. The Dominican embassy was held for over 60 days last spring, and a daring raid by London police captured the world's attention. Terrorism bombings included a Jewish synagogue in Paris, the Oktoberfest in Munich and a train station in Bologna, Italy. Entertainment the word for 1980 movies By ROBB EDMONDS Sport Columns Guest Columnist If there is something to be said for the movies of 1800, it is that they fulfill the singlemost essential requirement of movies—they entertain. With that in mind, George Lucas's "The Empire Strikes Back" can make a serious claim to be the best movie of the year. For 138 minutes, the empire" forces every viewer to the edge of his seat. In "Empire," the saga begin in "Star Wars" of the courageous rebels fighting the villainous Lord Darth Vardar continues. Princess Leia remains the Rebels' inspirational leader, Emperse's empire she becomes preoccupied with seeking her own inspiration, namely in the form of Hans Solo. That leaves the spunky Luke Skywalker to fight the forces of evil. "Oil Miner's Daughter" was the biographical sketch of Loretta Lynn. She emerged from the coal-mining mountains of Butcher Holer and sang her way to the top of the country-western world. Sissy Space, in the starring role, shed her "Carie" image in a magnificent performance as Lymn. She also proved herself quite talented; she did all of the singing. In June, John Travolta officially traded in his disco shoes for cowboy boots as he two-stopped his way across America's screens in "Urban Cowboy." "Ordinary People," Robert Redford's first attempt at directing, touched many with its dramatic treatment of a high school boy finding himself after attempting suicide. A crusty Jewish psychiatrist was the boy's salvation as neither of his parents could help him. Mary Tylor Moore played the boy's anesthetized mother and Donald Sutherland played the boy's father. "My Brilliant Career" was the story of a girl growing up in Australia in the 1890s who refuses to accept her role as a female and instead pursues an independent career, which gives an exhilarating performance as the girl. Among the other movies, "The Big Red One," "Rough Cut," "The Great Santini" and "Melvin and Howard" stand out among the best. From Germany came an excellent film, "The Tin Drum," the story of a young boy who, as his way of resisting the rise of Nazism and social collapse, refuses to grow up. "The Long Riders," the story of the James and Dalton gangs, received favorable reviews, but the film's violence almost made it obscene. Like any other year, 1980 was not without its meat hooks in the groin and bodies hanging in the hall closet. Among the more pitiful were "Motel Hell," "Prom Night," "He Knows You're Not Going In the House" and "Terror Train." Among the drunners, "Dressed to Kill" was the best. And like any year, this year has its disappointments. "Stardust Memories"、“The Shining” “The Fienland Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu” and “Little Darlings” all had the cast and storyline to be favors, but all similarly fell into the murk of mediocrity, at best. Like any year, 1890 was blessed with its surprises, among which "My Bodyguard," "The Black Stallion" and, in the "Animal House" vein, "Caddyshack," were the best. It was "Caddyshack," along with Miller Lite beer commercials, that helped catapult Rodney Dangerfield into what seemed like every comedian's routine. Critics had a field day in 1980 with what admittedly was an unusual amount of all right films. But to the casual moviegoer, who was seeking only to exchange his $3 for a few hours of simple entertainment, 1980 was a glowing year. University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 5 Actors strike, J.R., cable made season (un)forgettable BY LORI JABARA Guest Columnist We know who did it. Kristin did it. That scheming little tempress touch her sister's husband, J. R. Ewing. We waited eight months for it and now we know. But contrary to what many may think, the shooting of a woman not the late woman was not the only television event of 1980. Two things added a twist to television in the first year of the new decade. First, the actor's strike that began in the summer delayed the network's fall season premieres. We saw older movies on prime time television and a lot of reruns. Second, the growing sensation of alternative viewing mechanisms, not only cable television, but Home Box Office, Cinemax and the increasingly popular video recorders. With these came TV movie advertisements to the tune of "First time on network television" and "Another world premiere movie on free television." The most popular poppurlr of programs, specials, movies and news reports were still offered to the viewing public. In returning series the nation mourned the death of Edith Bunker, welcomed a new Angel, Tanya Roberts, and assisted the M"A'S*H" unit in an operation that turned into *M*A'S*H'* without a laugh track and with a clock ticks off the minutes in the corner of the screen. New shows began to appear that utilized the talents of "real people" (perhaps a result of the actor's strike), namely "That's My Line," "Speak Up America," and "That'S Incredible." A new daytime drama, "Texas," which presumably hopes to capitalize on the growing Lone Star State fascination, also premiered. Television movies that premiered included "Scripus," from the book by the same author; "The Unfold Story"; and the controversial "Playing for Time," with anti-Zionist sympathizer Vamessa Redgrave cast as a Jewish prisoner in a German concentration camp. Motion pictures that premiered on television included "All the President's Business," II., "Midnight Express," "John," "Benji," "Friendly Lady," and "Saturday Night Fever." The saga, or mini-series, which has enjoyed increasing popularity in recent years, came in the form of "The Martian Chronicles," "The Chisholms," "The Seekers" (the third of John Jakes' Kent Family novels), and "Shogun." Public television offered some fine programs including "The Voyage of Charles Darwin," "The Flambards," "Lily," "Pride and Prejudice," "Sarah," on the life of actress Sarah Bernhardt and profiles of William Faulkner and Arthur Miller. Under the category of specials came "the first lady of television" Lucille Ball, "Goldie and Liza," "Baryshnikov on Broadway," and several from Bob Hope. We salute Kentucky's Baryshnikov and Maryland's 25th, 29 years of rock 'n' roll and stars to country music from the Old Gramp Ole Burry. And the award shows. In addition to the Oscars, the Emmys, the Tony's and the Grammys, there were Entertainer of the Year and the Choice Awards, Juke Box Awards and more. In preparation for the 1980 presidential election, the Republican and Democratic forum debates were broadcast, as were major primary results, nominating conventions and the election results on Nov. 4. The "instant commentary" of network newsmen took a beating that night, however, with the announcement that Ronald Reagan had been elected president even before the nolls had closed on the West Coast. And as we say goodbye to this year, 1890, we also say goodbye to the man whose very name means news to so many Americans, Walter Cronite. Cronite, who is retiring, will be replaced as the CBS Evening News anchorman by DAN Rather in February 1891. Bloodshed, hostages, war dominate international scene By IAN SIMPSON Guest Columnist 1980 was a year of embassy seizures, of bloodshed on all continents, of millions of people made homeless by disruptions both political and natural. It was a year when the Western Gulf caused the fracture of Western unity, and the resignation of a secretary of state. It was a year when assassins killed in metropolitan streets, when dozens perished in neo-fascist bombings in Western Europe. It was a year when a strange flower called peace bloomed in Zimbabwe, and when oil prices reached their lowest levels. And it was a year when the world wondered at Polish workers who demanded freedom from a Communist government—and got it. More than anything, 1980 was the year of the Persian Gulf. The strategic oil-rich sands of the region and its explosive rivalries were the focus of world attention. Eight Americans died in the desert southeast of Tehran during an abortive attempt to rescue the hostages. No American allies knew of the effort beforehand. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned on April 27 in protest of the raid. At year's end, the release of the American hostages, held in Iran since Nov. 4, 1979, appeared deadlocked. The political chaos of post-revolutionary Iran, the intrinsicness of the Ayatollah Rubailullah Khomeini and the Islamic State all made resolution of the crisis seem remote. The death of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in Cairo on July 27 gave no relief to the hostage crisis. In late October the Algerian government began to act as an intermediary between the United States and Iran to resolve the 13-month-old crisis quietly. On Sept. 29 a long-simmering dispute between Iran and Iraq over control of the Shatt al Arab waterway and in islands in the Strait of Hormuz flared into war. The Iraqi struck with superior forces against Iran's oil refineries at the head of the Persian Gulf, but Iranian resistance stiffened. By mid-November the war settled into stalemate. The peace talks between Israel and Egypt over Palestinian autonomy became deadlocked, although negotiations resumed in October. In response to the Afghan invasion, the United States placed an embargo on grain sales to Russia, and in March President Obama issued a note on the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. The Russians became tangled in a guerrilla war in the mountains of Afghanistan while propping up the government of Afghan President Babrak Karmal. The 80,000 soldiers rebeled against villages and hundreds of thousands of refugees fled into neighboring Pakistan. On April 12 the U.S. Olympic Committee voted not to send U.S. athletes to the Moscow Summer Games. Most Western nations followed suit. Great Britain suffered in 1980 under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that her monetarist policies, designed to curb inflation and shake the nation from its economic malaise. Nearly 8 million Britons were unemployed, interest rates and bankruptcies mounted into the thousands. Fascist bombings in a train station in Bologna, Italy, on Aug. 2, outside a Paris synagogue on Oct. 3 and in a crowd at the most杀伤 101 persons and wounded hundreds. An Oct. 10 earthquake leveled the Algerian city of Al Asnam, and another tremor racked southern Italy in late November. Both quakes killed thousands. The Turkish military overthrew the government of Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel on Sept. 12 to stem rising political inflation by arrest the nation's 150 percent inflation rate. In Canada, a referendum that would have led to Quebec's separation from the rest of the nation was voted on May 20. Late in the year, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau wrestled with fractious provinces that objected to his plans for a new constitution. Warsaw workers struck in July to protest meat prices, and the strikes spread quickly. On Aug. 31 strike leader Lech Walesa and a government representative signed an agreement in the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk that allowed for free trade unions, freedom of publication, liberation of political prisoners and the right to strike. On Sept. 9, First Party Secretary Edward Gierke resigned and was replaced by Stanislaw Kania. Kania, mindful of the Soviet's interest in the Polish unrest, attained a military post in Poland, demanding. The Soviets began massing troops in the Polish frontier on Dec. 2. In Latin America more than 100,000 Cuban refugees flee to the United States throughout the year. On Feb. 27 the Bogota, Colombia, embassy of the Dominican Republic, along with a group of ambassadors, were seized by gunmen of the Colombian M-19 revolutionary carrillas held the ambassadors for two months and killed the Colombians acceded to their demands. The Nobel Prize committee awarded the treaty to Ibrahim Esquivel, and registrar human rights activist. This year in El Salvador 50 persons died each day from the political warfare. On March 24 El Salvador's Archbishop Oscar Armu Romero, one of Latin America's most respected clerics, died at an assassin's hand while celebrating Mass. Former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza died in a machine gun and rocket attack in Asunción, Paraguay, in mid-2015. The victims claimed responsibility for the attack. China continued to implement the "Four Modernizations" designed to make it a world power. The show trial of the Gang of Four, an anti-communist revolutionary, began in Beijing in November. The war continued inside Cambodia between dictator Pol Pot's guerrillas and the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese struck across the border by ambushes and they thought were guerrilla staging areas. On April 27, the British formally gave up control of a colony, and Rhodesia became Zimbabwe. Marxist guerrilla Robert Mugabe presided, and espoused moderation. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi tightened her on hold in India, although the death of her son and political protege Sanjay in a flying accident robbed her of a successor. Vice-Premier Deng ShaP ping named Zhao Zhiyang to replace Prolong Huq GuoFeng. Liberian Master Sgt. Michael K. Doe overthrew the government of William Tob尔录 on April 12. Ten days later 13 officials of the Department of Defense were on the Atlantic shore and machine-sunned. International relief organizations said that 2.5 million people were refugees in the Horn of Africa from the secessionist wars raging in Ethiopia and Sudan. Most of them starved hundreds of thousands of nomads in Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Somalia and Djibouti compounded the area's agony. Hippie power bows to prep look By JOE BARTOS Guest Columnist Turn on, tune in, drop out. Hippy power. Brother. Sister. Make love, not war. We are stardust. Let's make a revolution. Ten years ago the University of Kansas was a very different place. Our campus, like many others, was alive with rebellion. It pulsed with protests, protest marches, protest talks and talk of a new order. It was a magic time to be young—a crazy carnival complete with happy melodies, psychedelic clowns, exotic freaks and rides that would make adventures explored this world with reckless abandon. How different from our campus today. As the new decade rolls on, careers and private affairs are on the minds of most students. The mood is serious, and religious morality and conservative politics have returned to our University. Well-known professors students pursue tranquil lives and a secure future. Joe Sweeney The 60's are only a colorful, hazy memory. Most current undergraduates were in elementary school during the protests and violence that rocked KU and other campuses across the country. We were too young to know about Hight-Ashbury and the Flower Children, about Strawberry Hill and The Matthias and Civil Rights protests flurried before all of us were born even. We've mortgaged our youth for a piece of a cozy future. With it we've mortgaged our integrity and minds. Somehow we've even managed to enjoy our vacuity, interpreting our emptyness and shallowness as maturity and realism. We accept the explanations of "authorities" to have something to cover the holes in our heads and hearts. Once, students challenged teachers and authorities and proved them wrong. Today, we are only too willing to be spoon-fed information and regurgitate it on command. Once, students were not willing to learn how to explore the world around them. Today, we are only too willing to trade in that freedom for a job and an early place on the ladder to success and security. Once, students were willing to put themselves under pressure to believe in. Today, the risks of offending influential people has made idealism impractical. It seems sad because we've lost more than radical ideals and hopes—our generation has lost its youth. We've lost the desire to question, the desire to be free, the desire to make life an adventure. We take few risks and accept society's oppressions without a struggle. The dreams and aspirations of the sixties have largely expired, withby apathy and a return to 1970. What remains faces charges of extremism and silliness. In place of the old goals is a new philosophy of pragmatism and self-promotion. This seems very sad. Roe Bartos 2013 But perhaps the greatest tragedy is not the loss of our youth but the loss of a golden chance to ask important questions and find answers. Never again will we have the opportunity to investigate so much of life and find out so much about ourselves. Our University is a microcosm of the world around us—a microcosm in which we are free to roam and explore. If, in our narrow pursuit of knowledge, we do not succeed, we are involved, then we have only ourselves to blame. No doubt students in the sixties had a lot of problems and made a lot of mistakes. And perhaps they were often extreme or foolish and some of them were very lost. But part of being lost involves learning and getting lost. It's a part of learning and getting lost. Scanning the blank, somber faces in the hallways and classrooms of our grey, manicured campus, the words of a veteran of the '60s comes to mind. "Yesh, when you get right down to it, some things happened too. But God it was exciting to be on top." PROTECT FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS AT KU Administration shuffle top KU news story Guest Columnists By KERRY SCOTT and DAVID WEED Craft Cobruses It was the year of the administration shuffle. Archie R, Dykes, KU's chancellor for seven years, resigned in May to work for a Topeka insurance company. His antithesis, KU student activist Ron Kuby, left for law school in New York. Del Shakel, who had resigned as executive vice chancellor in late 1979, postponed his plans to return to teaching to serve as acting chancellor during the search for Dykes' replacement. Robert Cobb, who had been dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was chosen as Shankel's replacement, and Ralph Christofersen, who had been vice chancellor for academic affairs, was chosen by Colorado State University as its new president. The director of the office of affirmative action, Bonnie Ritter, resigned after an extended leave of absence. She charged that the University had little commitment to affirmative action principles and was then chosen without what many believed to be an adequate affirmative action search. Dykes' final troubles with freedom of speech protesters came at Commencement, just before he resigned. Two protesters, were arrested, some for wearing signs and others for holding up banners that said, "Support First Amendment rights at KU," and "Help We're Being Arrested." Graduates who wore balloons and other paraphernalia on their graduation caps criticized the protesters for disrupting the solemnity of Commencement. Charges against the protesters were later dropped, and the Board of Regents began discussing possible revisions of the University's banner policy, which prohibits banners at non-political University events. The administration also was criticized by some professors who did not think professors Norman Forer and Clarence Dillingham should have been put on "leave without pay" status when they traveled to Iran last Christmas to discuss the hostile crisis. Forer made a second trip to Iran early this year, and when he returned he criticized the government for its handling, and the media for its coverage, of the hostage situation. Rev. Jack Bremer of the KU Ecumenical Christian Ministries then went to Iran with two other ministers to perform Easter services for the hostages. While Forer and Brenner were traveling from KU, presidential candidates John Anderson and Donald Badgely traveled to KU. Badgely, who said he had been sent by God to run in the Kansas primary, attracted few listeners, but Anderson's audience filled Hoch Auditorium. The Senate also was upset when members found out that the Kanran had obtained a list of Brinkman nominees. Student government at KU had its problems when the Student Senate could not get a quorum at a Senate meeting to vote on whether to reduce the Senate's size from 120 to 68 members. The Senate tried to reduce its size because of trouble with the voting. The bill finally passed University Senate. The federal government announced in August, in response to two complaints that KU's women's women's center had been using contraceptives. State government got involved in two KU disputes. The attorney general's office ruled that the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation was closely affiliated with the University and therefore had to open its financial records. Later, the university changed its name to Kansas University Endowment Association was separate from the University and did not have to open its financial records. derstaffed, that the KU athletic department would be investigated for possible violations of Title IX guidelines, which require comparable funding for men's and women's sports. Besides trying to obtain access to Endowment Association financial records, the KU Committee on South Africa continued to protest Endowment Association investments in American companies doing business in South Africa. New buildings, additions and renovations also continued. A new broadcast journalism building was planned and additions to Robinson Gymnasium and Malott Hall were completed. The Malott completion was slowed by a small fire in the new wing. Renovation of Flint Hall was planned, a renovation of Marvin Hill scattered architecture students among campus buildings, and renovation of Watson Library caused a rise in student attendance. A production of "I Survived the renovation of Watson Library" T-shirts by library personnel. August through May and the summer of Kansas August through May and the summer of Kansas June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Junes and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Subscriptions by small are $18 for six months or $24 a year. Subscriptions by large are $39 for six months or $54 a year. Side the county. Student subscriptions are $8 a semester. The University Daily KANSAN Portmater: Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kannan, Kansas. Editor Business Manager Coral World Managing Editor Cynthia Hughes Editorial Editor David Lewis General Manager and News Advisor Chuck Musser Chuck Musser Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Opinion The year to come Just as former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes' departure was the biggest KU story of 1980, the selection of his successor should be the most important campus story in 1981. The next chancellor will influence all of the University-students, alumni, faculty and classified employees. To a significant degree, the future and direction of the University will rest in the hands of this important figure. FACULTY SALARIES. Faculty salaries at KU simply have not been able to compete with those at comparable institutions of higher learning. A number of faculty members have sought employment elsewhere and eventually KU academic programs will reflect these voids. There are other important issues that will surface often in the upcoming year. And most of them are familiar to the University community. KU's dealings with the Legislature will be extremely important. If KU is to prevent the salary deficiencies from TITLE IK. The results of a Title IX investigation of KU's athletic department could lead to some sweeping changes in the men's and women's athletic programs. getting more out of hand, it will have to have success with the Legislature. That hasn't always been easy. STUDENT SENATE. The new Student Senate will attempt to conquer old problems of apathy and communication. The Senate's fight to gain a new identity could affect much of the student body. FREE SPEECH. The Kansas Board of Regents has given the University the final say on the banner policy, a policy that has caused controversy and disturbance. The University should decide the fate of the policy next year. The University's commitment to free speech has been questioned and 1981 events should be revealing more about KU's commitment to free speech. The year will be a pivotal one for the Senate and perhaps 1981 will be the decisive year for the Senate to resolve its problems. Kansan emerges from year older, wiser, officially free At last, the proverbial light at the end of the tunnel dawns. It is welcome and warming. The Kansan finally is emerging from this difficult situation, and is growing, more than a bit injured, the patient is breathing. A new editor is droopy-yed from hours upon hours of staff interviewing. The newsroom is abuzz with speculation about those he will choose, about those who will be trusted with the management of one of the best university dailies in the country. These are important decisions to these young journalists. They have a big investment of time CAROL BEIER WOLF Editor Mary B. and sleeplessness at stake. The speculation, such hopeful activity, is heartening. Recent events have not been easy or dull. The redesign of the Kansan had its inevitable labor pains at birth. The campus desk sweated through the first few weeks of publication with only a dozen reporters, about 50 percent of the usual staff size. The Associated Press effectively pranced out of our budget's reach by increasing our weekly rate by about 400 percent. The Student Senate did not think the Kansan worthy of additional money to beef up wire coverage. Then came the List. No single story has ever pushed so far toward the limits of the Kansan editor's freedom to publish. A group of ardent, irate feminists demonstrated against a column and cartoon on the editorial page, and the Kansan endured a barrage of slings and arrows from outraged student body leaders who felt wounded by comment on page 4. It all began quietly enough. The Kansan acquired a list of 165 people who were being considered for the chancellorship. Consistent with our editorial stance in favor of opening the search process, I decided to print the list as part of a story on its makeup. During the research for that story, staff reporters called several of the candidates. It didn't take long for candidates disturbed by our planned publication to contact administrators. The administrators, in turn, made a request to the school, the Kansan's general manager and me. They were not pleased. In fact, they were enraged. The Kansan was accused of sensationalism, irresponsibility, theft, immorality. But the plans were still go. I was, at that point, unmoved. Our lde editorials had repeatedly referred to the fact that the minister desired to know who was being considered for the chancellor's chair. There had been no change in that opinion. The change in focus was painful. The dean, also chairman of the Kansan Board, which is made up of the student editor and business manager, the heads of the news-editorial and advertising sequences and a representative of the Student Senate, called a meeting. But then critics' questions moved from the realm of doubting the sanity of the student editor into the realm of doubting the traditions under which the Kansan and the Kansan Board had operated for several years. "What does the Kanasan Board do, if it can't stop something like this?" "Once this is printed, who will be ultimately responsible?" that meeting was interpreted changed the course of the game. I had been reminded several times during my many chastisements the chairman of the board had pulled an editorial once in 1970. The edit carried the headline, "The next night, the Kansas Union was ablaze." After a fifteen night of agonizing, I decided against giving the board another precedent to be cited with a vengeance in my different student body. I was told by the board meeting by saying that I was willing to concede the printing of the names on the list but that we would continue with our plans to print an analysis of its makeup. From the beginning, I was convinced that a large part of the list's news value was tied to its small percentage of women in their workforce. They had no vote to prevent publication. They had stopped jumping off the cliff they had so quickly run to. Should the Kansan add another layer of news decision-making power? Does the buck rightfully stop at the student editor's desk? Or should it stop at an "adult" publisher's door? That misconception of the Kansan as a University public relations tool is only one of its perceived schizoid personalities. According to its constitution, it also serves as a student newspaper, which implies that it is student-run, not hovered over by a hypercritical general manager or publisher. And the constitution provides that the Kansan should be a laboratory of communication and information. That role suggests that the newspaper has a responsibility to protect the school's interests, perhaps at the expense of covering some embarrassing news. The analysis went to press a week later. Meanwhile the Kansas City Times, the Wichita Eagle-Reacon and KJKH did their best to sensationalize the Kansan's situation. Also in the interim, we printed an airight story based on public records about NCAA extra benefit infractions and the basketball team, only to be criticized again by hundreds of students who thought it treasonous for a student paper to report wrongdoing in the athletic department. If that alternative is unsavory, can the board step out of its traditionally accepted hiring-and-firing capacity to take an active role as a publisher with prepublication news judgment power? Or would that kind of prior censorship be permitted if the board were After all, the board is an arm of the University, which equals the state." Congress shall make no law . . ." These conflicting roles and growing doubts of the board members led to larger questions, which went way beyond the list story. Should the Kansan be a part of the school? Or should it be a school leader? The evidence thus eliminating midnight calls to Dean Brinkman from angry sources or readers? Through it all, the Kansan staff has learned difficult, cynicism-producing lessons about power and politics and how to handle a sensitive story. The school and the critics have gotten a clearer picture of this strange and wonderful animal tapping away round the clock in Flint 111 and 112, including the inherent contradictions in its very existence. The student editor has the final say on the news content of the Kansan. The same goes for the student business manager in regard to advertising. The board has no role in advising or recommending an individual member's right to advise the editor, regardless of whether the advice is solicited. The newspaper's constitution, as it stands, offers no clear delineation of how the board and the staff should distinguish ultimate responsibilities for content in light situations. So after you complete your job, the board must move to make specific in that document what has always been assumed. For the time being at least, the Kansan will continue to operate as it has, with all news decisions made by the editor or his staff members. What the board can do will be limited to postpublication review, even to the extent of requiring the editor whose judgment they did not agree with. The makeup of the board also will remain the same. The dean or his delegate will continue to serve as chairman with the same other members in tow. What's next? I don't know. I can only hope that good training from the journalism faculty, hard work and dedication will continue to produce content that's both informative and comfortable supporting—even in the crunch. *am thankful for that much hope. Without that support, without that trust, the Kansan would never have survived.* Moral Majority triumphs in election By DAVE KENDALL Guest Columnist Politics became the concern of a vocal segment of Christians this year. They called themselves the Moral Majority and the Christian Voice, Dr. Jerry Failwell summarized the sentiment of this movement with a personal observation: "I'm convinced this country is morally sick, and will not correct itself unless we get involved." THE HOLIDAY PARTY Some estimate there may be as many as 80 million Americans who have become supporters of this evangelical thrust. In April, the United Methodist Church made $165 million in capital for a "Washington for Jesus" rally. The message was clear to the politicians. Those who failed to support the conservative positions of the fundamentalists were up in arms for a valuable force. Some were forced out of office. Ronald Reagan remarked while campaigning that separation of church and state had gone too far. He said, "I don't believe that religion means freedom from religion." The separation of church and state was tested in a case reviewed by the Supreme Court this year. The posting of the Ten Commandments in public schoolrooms was ordered by the Kentucky legislature earlier in the year. But when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the statute was declared consistent with the constitutional guarantee of religious freedom. While some pushed for a return to the basic teachings of the Bible, others called for a shift. The authority of the man reigning on the Roman Catholic Church was brought into question this year. But it was another man, not a woman, who questioned his authority. This opened another conflict within religious institutions. The male-dominated imagery of the scriptures was challenged in a symposium at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Discussions focused on the concept of "God the Mother." It was pointed out that this notion is an ancient heritage of many cultures and that some have equally emphasized the feminine and feminine qualities of the Divine. This discussion of symbolism paralleled a similar discussion at a conference in the Midwest. Women of various faiths asserted their right to become priests and rabbis and to hold high offices in religious organizations. This was followed by the male domination in Christianity and Judaism. Hans Kung, a West German professor of STEVE DICK/Kansan theology, challenged the doctrinal infallibility of the Pope. The Vatican promptly declared Kung unit to teach Catholic theology. This led the Vatican to permit reluctant and allow Kung to continue teaching. This year has witnessed conflict between the old and the new, the traditional and the putative. theology at Union Theological Seminary, but this conflict into perspective: "At its root, contemporary unrest in Christian thought has to do with the value to be placed on what is learned through experience against what is learned from Bible, established doctrine and other ecclesiastical vehicles of divine revelation." Iran, hostages top news story of year By STEVE BASKA and DAVID GOSOROSKI Guest Columnists The impasse between the United States and Iran over the fate of the 52 American hostages, was the top news story of 1980. The status of the hostages, who began their second year in captivity on November 4, remained indefinite as a diplomatic search for their release continued. Iran also spawned other important stories. The war between Iraq and Iran over the use of the Shatt-Al Arab estuary threatened to spread into other Middle Eastern countries and interrupt oil exports from that region. Six Americans who escaped the seizure of the American embassy in Tehran and hid in the Canadian embassy for three months, returned to the United States with the help of the Canadian embassy staff, which provided forged visas. November general election. Voters elected conservative Republican Ronald Reagan as president and returned a Republican majority to the Senate for the first time in 25 years. Reagan won 44 states of the smallest turnouts in U.S. election history—52.5 percent. The crisis remained in limbo throughout the year as the result of repeated delays by the Iranian Parliament in considering the hostage situation. The intransigence of the Ayatollah Khominei's Islamic government prompted President Carter to order a rescue attempt on April 25 that resulted in the deaths of eight servicemen in the collision of a helicopter and airplane. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned in opposition to the attempt and was replaced by former Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine. The second biggest story of the year was the The third biggest story was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Russia's neutral southern neighbor. The invasion took place in the final days of 1979 and was intended to protect the tottering Marxist regime of Hafjullah Amin against native rebels. Amin was later executed and replaced by Babrak Karmal, a Soviet proxy. The result was the occupation against Russia as a result of the occupation, and U.S. Olympic teams led a boycott of the Summer games in Moscow. Unable to defeat the rebels or leave the country unguarded, Afghanistan became a no-win situation for the Soviets. 4. The continual downturn of the economy, which combined double-digit inflation with recession and high unemployment. Inflation topped 18 percent and unemployment in the heavily industrial states reached 25 percent, compared to the national average of 8.5 percent. Interest rates of 20 percent depressed the housing and construction industries. Other top news stories of the year were; 5. The Polish labor strikes led by Lech Walesa. Strikers demanded wage reforms and ousted Communist Party Secretary Edward Gierek. The strikes resulted in the legalization of independent trade unions for the first time in any Communist bloc nation. 6. The eruptions of the volcano, Mt. St. Helens. It erupted for the first time in 123 years on March 27 and became the active active volcano on the U.S. continent in 57 years. The continuing series of eruptions killed eight people and caused $1.5 billion in damage by sweeping ash into surrounding states. 7. The heat wave, which lasted from June until September, Temperatures were consistently over 100 degrees and resulted in 1,200 deaths and enormous losses of chicken and cattle. Texas and Missouri were the hardest hit. Damage to crops amounted to billions of dollars. 9. The arrival in Florida of 125,000 Cuban refugees who sought freedom from the Castro regime. The United States initially agreed to accept 3,500. Eventually, boatloads of illegal immigrants from Florida coast. They were housed, fed, medically examined and relocated across the country. Six the BABC scandal (short for Arab scam). Six U.S. representatives and one Senator were indicted for accepting bribes from FBI to support the war against Arab sheiks seeking congressional favors. 10. Terrorist seizures of the Dominican Republic embassy in Bogota, Colombia and the Iranian embassy in London. The Dominican embassy was held for over 60 days last spring, and a daring raid by London police captured the world's attention. Terrorism bombings included a Jewish synagogue in Paris, the Oktoberfest in Munich and a train station in Bogota, Italy. Entertainment the word for 1980 movies By ROBB EDMONDS Guest Columnist If there is something to be said for the movies of 1800, it is that they fulfil the singlestom essential requirement of movies—they entertain. With that in mind, Intel Lucas's "The Empire Strikes Back" can make a serious claim to be the best movie of the year. For 18 minutes, the empire' forces every viewer to the edge of his face. In "Empire," the saga begins in "Star Wars" of the courageous rebels fighting the villainous Lord Darth Vader continues. Princess Leia remains the Rebels' inspirational leader, although in "Empire" she becomes preoccupied with her own inspiration, namely in the form of Hans Solo. That leaves the spunky Luke Skywalker to fight the forces of evil. "Oak Mineer's Daughter" was the biographical sketch of Loretta Lynn. She emerged from the coal-mining mountains of Butcher Holler and sang her way to the top of the country-western world. Sissy Space, in the starring role, sheed her "Carie" image in a magnificent performance as Lynn. She also proved herself quite talented: she did all of the singing. In June, John Travolta officially traded in his disco shoes for cowboy boots as he two-stepped his way across America's screens in "Urban Cowboy." "Ordinary People," Robert Redford's first attempt at directing, touched many with its dramatic treatment of a high school boy finding himself after attempting suicide. A crusty Jewish psychiatrist was the boy's salvation as neither of his parents could help him. Mary Tyler Moore played the boy's anesthetized mother and Donald Sutherland played the boy's father. "My Brilliant Career" was the story of a girl growing up in Australia in the 1890's who refuses to accept her role as a female and instead becomes an expert in cooking. It gives an exhilarating performance as the girl Among the other movies, "The Big Red One," "Rough Cut," "The Great Santini" and "Melvin and Howard" stand out among the best. From Germany came an excellent film, "The Tin Drum," the story of a young boy who, as his way of resisting the rise of Nazism and social collapse, refuses to grow up. "The Long Riders," the story of the James and Dalton gangs, received favorable reviews, but the film's violence almost made it obscene. Like any other year, 1880 was not without its meat hooks in the groin and bodies hanging in the hall closet. Among the more pitiful were "Motel Hell," "Prom Night," "He Knows You're Alone." Don't Go In the House" and "Terror Alone." During the thrillers, "Dressed to Kill" was the best. And like any year, this year has its disappointments. "Stardust Memories" "The Shining" "The Friendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu" and "Little Darlings" all had the cast and storyline to be favorites, but all similarly fell into the murk of mediocrity, at best. Like any year, 1980 was blessed with its surprises, among which "My Bodyguard," "The Black Stallion" and, in the "Animal House vein," "Caddyshack," were the best. It was "Caddyshack," along with Miller Lite beer commercials, that helped catapult Rodney Dangerfield into what seemed like every comedian's routine. Critics had a field day in 1980 with what admittedly was an unusual amount of all right films. But to the casual moviegoer, who was seeking only to exchange his $3 for a few hours of simple entertainment, 1980 was a glowing year. University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 5 Actors strike, J.R., cable made season (un)forgettable By LORI JABARA Guest Columnist We know now who did it. Kristin did it. That schering all the temperstress trap her sister's husband, J. R. Ewing. We waited eight months for it and now we know. But contrary to what many may think, the shooting of a gas oil magnite was not the only television show. Two things added a twist to television in the first year of the new decade. First, the actor's strike that began in the summer delayed the network's fall season premieres. We saw older movies on prime time television and a lot of reruns. Second, the growing sensation of alternative viewing mechanisms, not only cable television, but Home Box Office, Cinemax and the increasingly popular video recorders. With these came TV movie advertisements to the tune of "First time on network television" and "Another world premiere movie on free streaming." In 2015 a new potpourri of programs, specials, movies and news reports were still offered to the viewing public. In return series the nation mourned the death of Edith Bunker, welcomed a new Angel, Tanya Roberts, and assisted the M*A"S*H unit in an operation that turned into a bombing mission. The screen laughed a laugh track and with a clock ticking off the minutes in the corner of the screen. new shows began to appear that utilized the talents of "real people" (perhaps a result of the actor's strike), namely "That's My Line," "Speak Up America" and "That's Incredible." A new daytime drama, "Texas," which presumably hopes to capitalize on the growing Lone Star State fascination, also premiered. Television movies that premiered included "Scruples," from the book by the same author, and "The Untold Story"; and the controversial "Playing for Time," with anti-Zionist sympathizer Vanessa Redgrave cast as a Jewish prisoner in a German concentration camp. Motion pictures that premiered on television included "All the President's Men," II., "Midnight Express," II., "Beauty," "Fanny Lady" and "Saturday Night Fever." The saga, or mini-series, which has enjoyed increasing popularity in recent years, came in the form of "The Martian Chronicles," "The Chisholms," "The Seekers" (the third of John Jakes' Kent Family novels), and "Shogun." Public television offered some fine programs including "The Voyage of Charles Darwin," "The Flambards," "Lilly," "Pride and Prejudice," "Sarah," on the life of actress Sarah Bernhardt and profiles of William Faulkner and Arthur Miller. Under the category of specials came "the first lady of television" Lucille Ball, "Goldie and Liza," "Baryshikov on Broadway," and several from Bob Hope. We saluted King David on Broadway, 25th, 28th, 25th, 28th, 25 years of rock 'n' roll and 50 years to country music from the Grand Ole Ory. And the award shows. In addition to the Oscars, the Emmys, the Tonys and the Grammys, there were Entertainer of the Year, a Choice Awards, Juke Box Awards and more. In preparation for the 1980 presidential election, the Republican and Democratic forum debates were broadcast, as were news reports about the vents and the election results on Nov. 4. The "instant commentary" of network newsmen took a beating that night, however, with the announcement that Ronald Reagan had lost the Senate before the polls had collapsed on the West Coast. And as we say goodbye to this year, 1890, we also say goodbye to the man whose very name means news to so many Americans, Walter Cronkite. Cronkite, who is retiring, will be replaced as the CBS Evening News anchorman by Dan Rather in February 1881. Bloodshed, hostages, war dominate international scene By IAN SIMPSON Guest Columnist 1980 was a year of embassy seizures, of bloodshed on all continents, of millions of people made homeless by disruptions both political and natural. It was a year when crises in the Persian Gulf caused the fracture of the Islamic State and the resignation of a secretary of state. It was a year when assassins killed in metropolitan streets, when dozens perished in neo-fascist bombings in Western Europe. It was a year when a strange flower called peace bloomed in Zimbabwe, and when oil prices dropped. And it was a year when the world wondered at Polish workers who demanded freedom from a Communist government—and get it. More than anything, 1800 was the year of the Persian Gulf. The strategic oil-rich sands of the region and its explosive rivalries were the focus of world attention. Eight Americans died in the desert southeast of Tehran during an abortive attempt to rescue the hostages. No American allies knew of the effort beforehand. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance resigned on April 27 in protest of the raid. At year's end, the release of the American hostages, held in Iran since Nov. 4, 1979, appeared deadlocked. The political chaos of post-revolutionary Iran, the intriguation of the Ayatollah Rutubullah Khomeini and the Iranian nuclear made resolution of the crisis seem remote. The death of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in Cairo on July 27 gave no relief to the hostage crisis. In late October the Algerian government began to act as an intermediary between the United States and Iran to resolve the 13-month-old crisis quietly. On Sept. 29 a long-simmering dispute between Iran and Iraq over control of the Shatt al Arab waterway and in islands in the Strait of Hormuz flared into war. The Iraqi struck with superior forces against Iran's oil refineries at the head of the Persian Gulf, but Iranian resistance stiffened. By mid-November the war settled into stalemate. The peace talks between Israel and Egypt over Palestinian autonomy became deadlocked, although negotiations resumed in October. The Russians became tangled in a guerrilla war in the mountains of Afghanistan while propping up the government of Afghan President Babrak Karmal. P 80,000 humans and thousands rebel villages, and hundreds of thousands of refugees fed into neighboring Pakistan. In response to the Afghan invasion, the United States placed an embargo on grain sales to Russia, and in March President Obama wrote on the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty. On April 12 the U.S. Olympic Committee voted not to send U.S. athletes to the Moscow Summer Games. Most Western nations followed suit. Great Britain suffered in 1980 under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's monetarist policies, designed to curb inflation and shake the nation from its economic malaise. Nearly 8 million Britons were unemployed, interest rates and bankruptcies mounted into the thousands. Fascist bombings in a train station in Bologna, Italy, on Aug. 2, outside a Paris synagogue on Oct. 3 and in a crowd at one of the most killed 101 persons and wounded hundreds. An Oct. 10 earthquake lauded the Algerian city of Al Aamam, and another tremor racked southern Italy in late November. Both quakes killed thousands. In Canada, a referendum that would have led to Quebec's separation from the rest of the nation was voted down on May 20. Late in the year, Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau wrestled with fractious provinces that objected to his plans for a new constitution. The Turkish military overthrew the government of Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel on Sept. 12 to stem rising political inflation and to arrest the nation's 150 percent inflation rate. Warsaw workers struck in July to protest meat prices, and the strikes spread quickly. On Aug. 31 strike leader Lech Walesa and a government representative signed an agreement in the Leninship shipyard in Gdkansi that allowed for free trade unions, freedom of publication, liberation of political prisoners and the right to strike. On Sept. 9, First Party Secretary Edward Gierke resigned and was replaced by Stansilaw Kania. Kania, mindful of the Soviet's interest in the Polish unrest, attention to the national unions' demands. The Soviets began massing troops in the Polish frontier on Dec. 2. In Latin America more than 100,000 Cuban refugees fled to the United States throughout the war. On Feb. 27 the Bogota, Colombia, embassy of the Dominican Republic, along with a group of ambassadors, were seized by gunmen of the Colombian M-19 revolutionary militias held the ambassadors for two months until the Colombians acceded to their demands This year in El Salvador 50 persons died each day from the political warfare. On March 24 El Salvador's Archbishop Oscar Armuno Romero, one of Latin America's most respected clerics, died at an assassin's hand while celebrating Mass. The war continued inside Cambodia between dictator Pol Pot's guerrillas and the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese struck across Cambodia during the war, and they thought were guerrilla staging areas. The Nobel Prize committee awarded the Alfredo Perez Esquivel, an Argentine human rights activist. Former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza died in a machine gun and rocket attack in Asuncion, Paraguay, in mid-1980s, with leftists claimed responsibility for the attack. China continued to implement the "Four Modernizations" designed to make it a world power. The show trial of the Gang of Four, an international revolution, began in Peking in November. On April 27, the British formally gave up control of a colony, and Rhodesia became Zimbabwe. Marrists guerrilla Robert Mugabe presided, and espoused moderation. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi tightened her on hold in India, although the death of her son and political protege Sanjay in a flying accident robbed her of a successor. Vice-Premier Deng ShaP ping named Zhao Ziyang to replace Premier Hu Guo Feng. Liberian Master Sgt. Michael K. Doe overthrew the government of William Tolbert on April 12. Ten days later 13 officials of the United States were on the Atlantic shore and machine-gunned. Hippie power bows to prep look International relief organizations said that 2.5 million people were refugees in the Horn of Africa from the secessionist wars raging in the Ogaden and in Eritrea. The drought that hit Ethiopia in 1980, Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Somalia and Djibouti compounded the area's agony. By JOE BARTOS Guest Columnist Turn on, tune in, drop out. Hippy power. Brother. Sister. Make love, not war. We are stardust. Let's make a revolution. Ten years ago the University of Kansas was a very different place. Our campus, like so many others, was alive with rebellion. It pulsed with matches, protest marches and talk of a new order. It was a magic time to be young—a crazy carnival complete with happy melodies, candyclaw clowns, exotic freaks and rides that rocked with eclectic guests explored this world with rocked abandon. How different from our campus today. As the new decade rolls on, careers and private affairs are on the minds of most students. The mood is serious, and religious morality and conservative politics have returned to our University. Well-known professors students pursue tranquil lives and a secure future. The 60's are only a colorful, hazy memory. Most current undergraduates were in elementary school during the protests and violence that rocked KU and other campuses across the country. We were too young to know about Hight-Ashbury and the Flower Children, about the Black Panthers, The Beatsniks and Civil Rights protest flurished before some of us were even born. We've mortgaged our youth for a piece of a cozy future. With it we've mortgaged our integrity and minds. Somehow we've even managed to enjoy our vacuity, interpreting our emptyness and shallowness as maturity and realism. We accept the explanations of "authorities" to have something to cover the holes in our heads and hearts. The dreams and aspirations of the sixties have largely expired, withered by apathy and a return to normality. Once, students challenged teachers and authorities and proved them wrong. Today, we are only too willing to be spoon-fed information and regurgitate it on command. Once, students were only willing to explore the world around them. Today, we are only too willing to trade in that freedom for a job and an early place on the ladder to success and security. Once, students were willing to put themselves on the ladder for something they would not have done if afluential people has made idealism impractical. It seems sad because we've lost more than radical ideals and hopes—our generation has lost its youth. We've lost the desire to question, the desire to be free, the desire to make life an adventure. We take few risks and accept society's opressions without a struggle. What remains faces charges of extremism and silliness. In place of the old goals is a new philosophy of pragmatism and self-promotion. This seems very sad. Roe Bartos 1983 But perhaps the greatest tragedy is not the loss of our youth but the loss of a golden chance to ask important questions and find answers. Never again will we have the opportunity to investigate so much of life and find out so much about ourselves. Our University is a microcosm of the world around us—a microcosm in which we are free to roam and explore. If, in our narrow pursuit of knowledge, we cannot understand or involve them, we have only ourselves to blame. M. M. BURTON No doubt students in the sixties had a lot of problems and made a lot of mistakes. And perhaps they were often extreme or foolish and some of them were very lost. But part of being the boss is also getting lost. It's part of learning and growing. Scanning the blank, somber faces in the hallways and classrooms of our grey, manicured campus, the words of a veteran of the '60s comes to mind. "Yeah, when you get right down to it, some things happened too. But God it was exciting to be him." PROTECT FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS AT KU DAVE KRAUS/Kansas Staff Administration shuffle top KU news story Guest Columnists By KERRY SCOTT and DAVID WEED It was the year of the administration shuffle. Archie R. Dykes, KU's chancellor for seven years, resigned in May to work for a Topeka insurance company. His antithesis, KU student activist Ron Kuby, left for law school in New York. Del Shankel, who had resigned as executive vice chancellor in late 1979, postponed his plans to return to teaching to serve as acting chancellor during the search for Dykes' replacement. Robert Cobb, who had been dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, was chosen as Shankel's replacement, and Ralph Christofersen, who had been vice chancellor for academic affairs, was chosen by Colorado State University as its new president. The director of the office of affirmative action, Bonnie Ritter, resigned after an extended leave of absence. She charged that the University had little commitment to affirmative action principles and was then chosen without what many believed to be an adequate affirmative action search. Dykes' final troubles with freedom of speech protesters came at Commencement, just before he resigned. Two protesters, were arrested, some for wearing signs and others for holding up banners that said, "Support First Amendment Freedom at KU." and "Help We're Being Banned." Graduates who wore balloons and other paraphernalia on their graduation caps criticized the protesters for disrupting the solemnity of Commencement. Charges against the protesters were later dropped, and the Board of Regents began discussing possible revisions of the University's banner policy, which prohibits banners at non-political University events. The administration also was criticized by some professors who did not think professors Norman Forel and Clarence Dillingham should have been put on "leave without pay" status when they traveled to Iran last Christmas to discuss the hostage crisis. Forer made a second trip to Iran early this year, and when he returned he criticized the government for its handling, and the media for its coverage, of the hostage situation. Rev. Jack Bremer of the KU Ecumenical Christian Ministries then went to Iran with two other ministers to perform Easter services for the hostages. While Forer and Bremer were traveling from KU, presidential candidates John Anderson and Donald Badgely traveled to KU. Badgely, who said he had been sent by God to run in the Kansas primary, attracted few listeners, but Anderson's audience filled Hoch Auditorium. Student government at KU had its problems when the Student Senate could not get a quorum at a Senate meeting to vote on whether to reduce the Senate's size from 120 to 68 members. The Senate would increase its size because of trouble getting quarums. The bill finally passed University Senate. The Senate also was upset when members found out that the Kansas had obtained a list of the 50 states to be used in the election. The fccederal government announced in August, in response to two complaints that KU's women's auditorium was unseated. State government got involved in two KU disputes. The attorney general's office ruled that the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation was closely affiliated with the University and therefore had to open its financial records. Later, the university signed a separate agreement with the University Endowment Association was separate from the University and did not have to open its financial records. derstadified, that the KU athletic department would be investigated for possible violations of Title IX guidelines, which require comparable funding for men's and women's sports. Besides trying to obtain access to Endowment Association financial records, the KU Committee on South Africa continued to protest Endowment Association investments in American companies doing business in South Africa. New buildings, additions and renovations also continued. A new broadcast journalism building was planned and additions to Robinson Gymnastium and Malott Hall were completed. The Malott completion was slowed by a small fire in the new wing. Renovation of Flint Hall was planned, a renovation of Marvin Hill scattered architecture students among campus buildings, and renovation of Watson Library caused a disruption in the production of "I survived the renovation of Watson Library" T-shirts by library personnel. The University Daily KANSAN during August through May and Monday and Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Subscribes by mail are $14 for six months or $74 a year. Subscriptions by credit card are $25 each side the county. Student subscriptions are $2 a semester. Postmaster; Send changes of address to the University Daily Kannan, Flint Hall, The University of Kannan. Editor Business Manager Coreal Wells Manager Cydi Hughes Managing Editor David Lewis Editorial Editor David Lewis General Manager and News Advisor David Lewis General Manager and News Advisor Chuck Chowin Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 ANNOUNCING CASH FOR BOOKS DECEMBER 8th-19th KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main store, Level 2, Kansas Union • Satellite Shop, Satellite Union ANNOUNCING CASH FOR BOOKS DECEMBER 8th-19th KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main store, Level 2, Kansas Union • Satellite Shop, Satellite Union Racquetball seen as rewarding, fun sport By ROSE SIMMONS Staff Reporter Recquethall, which started out as a chic leisure activity for the rich, has become the latest fat of fitness buffs from all economic groups. In the past five years, five million people have taken up raccquetball. Players cite fitness, agility, endurance and fun as the reasons for the sport's growth. When asked which skills do what drives Mickey Sparks to the raccquetball courts 360 hours a year. Sparks is the top racquetball player in Lawrence. He obtained that distinction by consistently beating out advanced-rated amateur tournaments. Out of eight tournaments this year, Sparks said he only lost one. Sparks is a sports enthusiast. In addition to playing racquetball eight to 10 hours a week, he runs two miles a day and competes in 10-meter races. SPARKS WENT TO college at hospital where he boxed and played handball. He said he played handball for eight years before switching to racquetball. "I didn't have any problems switching to racquetball," he said. "Anyone can play decent racquetball from day one, especially if they have athletic ability." Another thing that might have facilitated Sparks' ease in switching to racquetball is the similarity between the two games. A handball played with a racquet. In the 1960s, Sobek tried to standardize the game and created the United States Hacquettball Association, which became the game and gave the new sport its name. Both racquetball and handball are played in enclosed hardwood courts. Instead of using the hand to bounce the ball off the wall, a racquet is used. The idea to use a small, lightweight raquet instead of the hand is attributed to a Greenwich, Conn., squash and tennis instructor. THIRTY YEARS ago, the instructor, Joe Sobek had an idea for improving the long, heavy wooden raucets of squash and tennis. He had a wooden paddle fitted with nylon tennis strings. The tennis-paddle was used racquetball increased tremendously. Recruitball clubs, once modeled after the NFL, have also modified membership fees to be able to compete for players. The tennis-paddle was used on the West Coast in handball games. The USRA held its first tournament in 1969. Since then, the popularity of SPAULDING RACQUET BALL Clubs, Inc., 2500 W. Sixth St., has special roles for students, families and employee groups. Spalding's student rate is $30, compared to $55 for a year's regular membership fee. Membership, though, only covers use of the facilities, including the saunas and nursery. It does not cover court time. For some players, racquetball is expensive. Sparks spends about $774 a year in court fees alone. racquetball increased tremendously. Yet, Spark said buying raquetballs was his greatest expense. "I buy a $3 can of balls a week," he said. Sparks" 80 mph serve has a lot do with the frequent need to purchase balls. He said he warps at least one ball a game. TRAVEL CENTER WINTER PARK (plus air) 3 nights - condominium - 2 day lift $115.00 STEAMBOAT (plus air) $90.00 4 nights lodging - 3 day lift CANCUN - MEXICO 3 NIGHTS until Dec. 11 $199.00 after Dec. 14 $317.00 7 NIGHTS $484.00 Set, departures until Dec. 13. After Jan. 11, Sunday departure. CORPUS CHRISTI (plus air) $23.50 Best Western on the Beach. In-room steam baths - whirlpool - sea food restaurant. SOUTH PADRE ISLAND (plus air) Tiki (condo) overlooking the Gulf. Polynesian restaurant & lounge. $171.00 6 nights + 6 day car rental FORT LAUDERDALE (plus air) Beach Club, Cabana Rooms 3 nights $48.00 7 nights $120.50 3 nights $39.00 7 nights $29.00 BAHAMAS - NASSAU (plus air) 3 nights $77.00 7 nights $173.00 Includes transfers, discounts for attractions, tours, shopping and restaurants, plus souvenir. INTERNATIONAL (round trip air) London via TWA $495 Frankfurt via Braniff $615 Miami to Caracas via Vlasa $284 L.A. to Tokyo via Northwest Orient $735 Miami to Rio de Janeiro via Valg $801 New York to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia via Pan Am $1220 SUPER SAVER ROUNDTRIP AIR St. Louis $78.00 Atlanta $189.00 Boston $289.00 Dallas $126.00 Miami $222.00 San Juan $299.00 Chicago $138.00 San Diego $249.00 Phoenix $338.00 New Orleans $154.00 New York $261.00 Los Angeles $339.00 Las Vegas $180.00 Washington, DC $278.00 Seattle $346.00 Denver $188.00 Acapulco $282.00 San Francisco $368.00 * All rates per person, double occupancy & subject to change. Reservation restrictions may apply. SKI FLOWER DAY SUN & SUN COASTAL JUSTICE THE COST COMPARED to the satisfaction of winning is cheap to Sparks. Racquetball has the same kind challenge found in playing chess, he said. EASTERN CAPITAL The right frame of mind for Sparks is absolute concentration. Sparks plays so intensely that all other noise on the court seems to be silenced. Sparks said concentration was the most important factor in his success. "Racquetball is a thinking game," said the coach who has to get in the right frame of mind. "I play hard for every point." he said. "The players are so tired that he misses starts mashing the ball." LinnaeCuster, Jonna Elmer, BeckyMcGott, Beatriz and Brian J. Rayd 841-7117 Sparks' best shot is the "kill." He uses this shot whenever his opponent hits the ball to the front wall so hard it flies off the back wall. When that happens, Sparks nearly always "kills" the ball by returning it to the front wall so low that his opponent cannot return it. When Sparks serves, he plays aggressively for each point. If his opponent is on his right, he returns the ball to the left. Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd Street, Lawrence 9:26-5:48 M 5:14-3:09 Fri - Save this phone number. "In this game, you sharpen your peripheral vision," he said. "I can tell where my opponent is positioned, even if he's behind me." If Sparks' opponent is serving he is more cautious. "I'm more selective with shots," he said. "I try to make the guy return my shots, so I can make him play my game." BEFORE A TOURNAMENT, Sparks put in two extra hours a week practice time. He also doubles the number of his pre-game exercises. For a regular exercise, he does 30 push-ups and 10 sit-ups. To ready himself for a match psychologically, Sparks said, he plunges himself into his work. Sparks is a salesman for Stonian Wholesale Electric Company Inc., 2958 Four Wheel Drive. He be regularly works 50 hours a week, but that his drive costs $14,000 before a match; the extra work prepare him for the game, he said. Despite the heavy schedule and pre-match anxieties, Sparks looks young for his 31 years. He is the epitome of the sport's spirit, a quick acquaintance to basketball literature, lean and muscular. "My wife tells me that I spend too much time involved in sports," he said. much time involved in sports," he said. But his wife, Hilea, said she was proud of Sparks when he won. However, Sparks said, his wife did not like his busy schedule. when they were barked, said she was proud of Sparks when he won. "I play better when people are watching and yelling for me," he said. TROPHIES AND PLAQUES from Sparks' victories line the mantle of their fireplace. "It would make me nervous to have'h him watch," she said. "But he said she didn't." if crowds make Sparks feel good, he does not make it. The only hint of the excitement and tension he feels his moment tugging on the collar of his shirt. "I won't feel like beating the bail against the wall," he said. Hilea Sparks said that this habit caused him to buy t-shirts often. RACQUETBALL TOURNAMENTS usually draw only spouses and friends as spectators, Sparks said. Racquetball probably will never become the kind of sport that tennis is, he said. The game is too fast and is difficult to photograph, he said. Even though racquetball is enjoyable and rewarding to Sparks, he said he probably would quit playing in three to four years. "I saw a film of a racquetball game," he said. "All you could see were black streaks shooting back and forth across the screen. You couldn't tell that the players were using a ball until they served." Sparks said that after he quilt football, he would probably run more. fi Have a Christmas ball at francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts 843-4191 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 warm gifts . . . treat yourself or tuck away'till Christmas socks Wigwam socks go to great temperature to warm feet for students, hunters, skiers or chair rockers. Give cushiony comfort in 100% wool blend blends of wool/molycnitrile. 1.9 to 7.50 Wigwam SKISKINS underskiwear SkisKin turtleneck stay fashionly fit in shape-keeping 50 poly 50 cotton knit with Sponge reinforced collars/curves. Straight cut. Solid colors. Gold men. 13.95. Ladies. 12.95. SkIskInn undersklär separates... kicky union suits in poly/acrylic and poly/wool. Solids and prints for yourself, male or female friends, younger brothers and sisters. 8.95 to 10.50 hotfingers gloves and mittens WELLS LAMONT Hottiggers gloves and mittens ... built tough, but feature high fashion colors and designs. Leathers and look-alikes warmly insure with leather, fibrillar or fibrile. $8.95 to $39.95 Saranac glove liners Sarancas liners, a lightweight inner glove that knits with skin of lureux to retain heat. Sugar ribbed cuffs. Hot ideal for yourself, or to stay in a stocking. Men's and ladies' sizes. 3.95 "Sporty things for sporty people . . . for Christmas" University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 7 Party mixes culture, traditions By KATHY BRUSSELL Staff Reporter Holiday customs and traditions vary around the globe, but the spirit of the holiday season knows no cultural bounds. With this idea in mind, KU's International Club, with help from the Association of University Residence Halls, has planned an end-of-the-year party for all foreign and American students. The "Holiday Celebration Party" will begin at 7:30 p.m. this Saturday in the party room of the Satellite Union. With the aim of getting more students involved in International Club functions, Mr. McKenzie met with the party, according to Krupadamn Billa, president of the International Club. Admission will be $2 a person, even though the party will cost $4 a person, Billa said. "The party is open to everyone, but it's mainly focused on foreign students because they don't have a chance to go home over break," Bills siad. Few foreign students have host families in the United States, he said. Because of the cost of overseas travel, many foreign students do vacations or travel around the country. "The idea of the holiday party is also that it's the end of the year," Billa said. "It will give students a chance to get away from studying for one evening." The party will feature Mexican music, Eastern European and African dances and other activities, he said. He lunch and snacks will be provided. AURH CONTRIBUTED $200 to the AUHR CONTINUED Jay Smith. AURH presented memorial. Because a large percentage of children who were exposed to home violence had AUHR thought the holiday was be a worthwhile activity to support, Smith said. The office of minority affairs, which last organized an international party in 1977, is paying a portion of the room rental fee for this year's party. Bills said the International Club hoped to attract more students to its activity than have attended activities in the past. "The problem with our club is that foreign students are so great in number, they started having their own clubs and doing most of the activities," Billa said. “It's not like a small school where the international club can organize all the foreign students. We have over 1,600 foreign students at KU.” Tickets will be available until Wednesday at the office of minority affairs, 324 Strong, and at the Kansas University Clinical Club office, 115B, or the SUA office. Italian nativity figures displayed By JANE NEUFELD Staff Reporter An exhibition of 18th-century Italian nativity figures, or presepio, will be displayed around the base of a sculpture depicting the central court of Spencer Art Museum. The museum also will display a group of presepio figures in their original architectural setting in the Renaissance Gallery of the museum. The original setting shows figures in the arched doorways and on ledges of a brick-and-marble model. It is one of the buildings in their intended settings in the world. "The Presepio Tree" opened Saturday and will be on display through Sunday. The preposio figures are a Christmas tradition at the museum, as said Douglas Hines. "They've been on display now for campaigning," he said. "I came as a bequest from Mrs. (William bridges) Thayer. Ever since then, they've been displayed at the museum, first at Spooner Hall and now here." HE SAID THAYER first saw presepio figures in 1911 while touring Italy. "She was absolutely delighted by the appearance of these figurines," he said. "In the end, she owned several hundred of them." Thayer donated her collection of individual figures and the presepio in its original setting to the University in 1917. The foot-tall figures usually are made of bisque, carved wood and metal, Hyland and, often also dressed in lace, are mounted with embroidery, lace or jewels. The figures are grouped around the base of the museum's Christmas tree, which is decorated with red velvet bowls and Christmas ornaments to her breath. Pointeissat circle the tree. "The presepio figures took the place of the Christmas tree in the Italian home," Linda Bailey, membership coordinator, said. one said each figure was crafted with careful attention to its expression and costume. Figures could be religious or secular, she said. "I imagine there was a rivalry between the artists as to who could produce the most variety of figures," Bailey said. "You can tell the artist by the expression, like this snaggletooth." One artist used that expression a lot." TRADITIONAL NATIVITY figures occupy the front of the museum's display. Mary sits on a throne in a white silk sifon and blue cloak, holding the infant Jesus while Joseph, the shepherds, the Magi, a donkey and a goose look on. In addition to the nativity scene, the display shows a band of peasant musicians playing a guitar, mandolin and oboe, a peasant man and woman accompanied by a collie and a man and women from the nobility, dressed in lace and gold braid and holding a greyhound on a gold chain. Monday Gladness WHY BE MAD WHEN YOU CAN BE GLAD? 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) DRIVERS WANTED We Pile It On! It was a very young Randy Melner that got his start with Pozo. A good start. He learned the basics of rock from the masters and from an earlier association with the Bronx Canyon Road. With Pozo, the stage was set for Randy Melner for bigger and better things. PARKER'S BOOTS BEGINNING OF THE WEEK Christmas '80 in clothes from Mister Guy all the traditional "good looks" that you have come to expect from Mister Guy for ladies and gentlemen . . . Mister Guy believes in style not fashion . . . fashion changes with every whim, style is permanent and enduring . . . We believe that clothing from Mister Guy is permanent and enduring and is an investment for women and men that is never out of vogue ... Christmas hours: M-T W-Th F 9:30 8:30 Sat 9:30 6:00 Sun. 1:00 5:00 MISTER GUY 920 MASS. 842-2700 MISTER GUY Page 8 University Dally Kansan, December 8, 1980 Buildings close for holidays keep regular hours for finals Winter vacation building hours have not all been decided according to Thomas Anderson, director of Facilities Operations, but regular buildings will be used through the final examination period. Dec. 10-19. Anderson said that vacation building hours may not be known for another week, but that most buildings would be closed to state holidays Dec. 25-38 and Jan. 1-2. Residence halls are scheduled to close at 9 p.m. Dec. 19 and open at 11 a.m. Jan. 11. However, students who will not be going home for the holidays and who signed up before Dec. 5 will be able to McCollum Hall during the holidays. All KU libraries will be open during regular hours through Dec. 18. On Dec. 19, they are scheduled to be open from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. THE LIBRARIES will be closed the weekend of Dec. 20-21, and will open again from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 22-24. All libraries will be closed Dec. 25. Watson Library and the science library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 26. All other branch libraries will be closed. All libraries will be closed Dec. 27-28 and New Year's Day and will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 29-31. All except Watson will be closed Jan. 2. Watson will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. that day. From Jan. 3 until classes resume for students who will be library reserves will be offered from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. The Helen Foresman Spencer Museum is scheduled to remain open during vacation from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and from 1 to 4 p.m. Sundays, except for Christmas. WATKINS HOSPITAL will maintain regular hours during finals. From Dec. 20 until school resumes, the hospital will operate on an emergency basis only, with doctors on call at all times. The hospital will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Jan. 12-13 for spring semester physicals. Robinson Center will be open during regular hours through finals and is tentatively scheduled to remain open during regular hours for the winter break. The gymnasms room and the lifetime sports area will be closed during vacation, however, and pool and weight room hours may need to be adjusted if supervisors and lifeguards cannot be obtained. The Kansas Union will be closed Dec. 20-21, Dec. 26-28 and Jan. 1-4. The Satellite Union will be closed Dec. 20 through Jan 7 and again Jan. 11. Anderson suggested that students call the Information Center or the office of student affairs after this week to check vacation building schedules. The University phone service will be off Dec. 25-28, he said. Bus services will continue as usual through finals. The buses will stop running after 5 p.m. Dec. 19 and will begin at 6 a.m. The service when registration begins Jan. 12. SUA committees offer more activities SUA will try to offer a variety of diversions for students next semester, from traveling to outdoor and indoor recreation. A lot of events will be a continuation from this semester, but the SUA committees are looking for some experimental activities that have never been done before, said Steve Hitchcock, SUA president. Indoor Recreation will sponsor an all-campus tournament in football, bridge and bowling during the last week of February. Special Events and Forums events for next semester have not been planned because of contract negotiations with the performers. Special Events sponsors all concerts and Forums sponsors speeches. WINNERS AT THESE tournaments will advance to the Region 11 competition in Lincoln, Neb. with all expenses paid. Region 11 of the Associated Schools is composed of schools in Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri. Regional level winners will win a free trip to the national competition. The location will be announced at a later date. The SUA Theatre Series will be Feb. 20 to March 1 "Of Mice and Men," "Moonchildren" monday madness Fast, Free Delivery $5.50! 841-8002 610 Florida Call us 841-7900 1445 W.23rd St. Our drivers carry less than $10.00. Limited delivery 1980 Domino's Pizza Inc. Mondays only. 1 large muffin or 16 pie tins plus 2 pizza tins + 2 cups of Pepsi smoothies. Express. 1/2/9/80 Fast Free Delivery 1445 W 23rd St. 841-7900 610 Florida 841-8002 DOMINO S PIZZA 010919/6301-2 --- Cut & Save THE NEW KANSAS SOLAR INCENTIVES Senate Bill 728 authorizes the following changes: ec.1 Adds passive systems to the current list of incentive eligible solar technologies of active, wind, photovoltaic and solar mechanical applications. Increases the residential income tax credit from 25% to 30% of the eligible installed system cost and also increases the credit limit from $1,000 to $1,500. If any credit remains after the first filing, then the balance of credit can be carried forward for the next two succeeding tax years. However, if a taxpayer's tax liability is less than $500, then the difference between (a) one third of the total credit and (b) the tax liability due in that year is refunded and the unused credit is carried forward. In the second year, the difference between (a) one half of the remaining credit and (b) the tax liability is also refunded. In the third year, the difference between (a) the remaining credit and (b) the tax liability is, again, refunded. This section also provides that only the passive system costs which exceed conventional construction costs are eligible for the credit (this provision is repeated in other sections of the bill). Sec. 3 & 4 Increases the commercial solar income tax credit from 25% to 30%, raises the limit from $3,000 to $4,500, and retains the non-carry forward provision. Sec. 5 Amends the property tax refund incentive to expire on December 31, 1980, and retains active and wind systems as eligible systems. Sec. 11 Provides that solar systems (excluding passive) are exempt from all property taxes for the tax years beginning after December 31, 1979 through December 31, 1985. P. L. 96-223, residential tax credit for renewable energy resource tax payments goes to 40% of the first $10,000 spent. The increase applies to expenditures made between 1/1/80 and 1/1/86 (includes the costs to install solar panels). For businesses, the credit increases to 15% and extends through 12/31/85. Purchasers of eligible equipment must choose between the tax credit, subsidized energy loans or non-taxable grants. It also adds electricity from renewables. $ NEW FEDERAL SOLAR INCENTIVES $ For more information write: KU Solar Energy Club P.O. Box 979 Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Paid for by Student Activity Fee --and "You're a Good Man Charlie Committee for production. Gospel Singing Vaugns Featured in the Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Monday, Dec. 8, 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the SALT Block Everyone Welcome! WAXMAN Candles Inc Hours: 9:00 till 8:00 M thru Thur. 9:00 till 5:30 Fri. & Sat. 12:00 till 4:00 Sunday 1405 Massachusetts NEW Wendy's CHICKEN SANDWICH TASTE Bite into a plump, boneless breast of chicken, crisp on the outside and lightly spiced— tender'n juicy inside, served hot with your choice of toppings on a warm bun. Bite into a plump, boneless breast of chicken, crisp on the outside and lightly spiced-- tender'n juicy inside, served hot with your choice of toppings on a warm bun. 'Try this new, great taste at Cheese & Tomato Extra OLD FASHIONED HAMBURGERS The series provides a learning environment and a chance for students to get on-the-job experience, said Jamie Rich, Theatre series producer. It also gives people who are interested in theatre an opportunity to perform, he said. 523 West 23rd "You're a Good Man Charlie Brown" included for Medea, 20-22 in Smith Hall Auditorium. EVENING PERFORMANCES of the three plays are scheduled for 8, and matte painting is required. "O Fice and Men" and "Moonchildren" will be presented from Feb. 25 to March 1 at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. There will be trips to Vall, Padre Island, Breckenridge, the Grand Canyon and Daytona Springs. There will be a trip to Compass Mexico was canceled because of a lack of interest, according to Judy Werder, travel chairman. President, vice president, secretary, treasurer and chairman positions for all administration levels. The trips to Padre Island, Winter Park, Daytona Beach and the Grand Canyon will be included. Elections for the new SUA board will be during the last week in February. A date has not been selected. The SUA Films committee plans to have a full semester of the latest films available. "The Shining." "Kramer vs. The Kramers." "Are some of the films that will be shown." Bob DeFlores, film historian, will show rare jazz and comedy films Feb. 24 and 25 in the Union. Movie calendars can be picked up during the first week in January at the SUA office in the Kansas Union, said Mike Gebert, films chairman. passenger side window of the car, police said. Police said the car was broken into between 1:00 and 1:30 Saturday morning. A sharp instrument was used to cut off the rubber seal around the Lawrence police are investigating the theft of various items, including 55 cassette tapes valued at $440, from a auction in the 3000 block of Poker Lakes. Police said that a wire was then probably used to unlock the car door. On the Record Taken from the car, in addition to the tapes, were an under-dash cassette deck valued at $75, a 400 BB pistol and a hubcap valued at $31.50. Colorado Ski Packages $15.50 C A Lot of Skiing for A Little Money Ski Per Person — Lift & Lodging Daily Rate Based on Quad Occupancy Other Plans Available Hidden Valley Stay Lake Estes Motor Inn Rocky Mountain National Park Downhill & Cross Country Box 1466 Estes Park, Colorado 80517 Th Dec the the stuc thei For Information & Reservations Call (303) 586-3386 Stay C GAMMONS GAMMONS GAMMONS Best Western Tonight— Watch Monday Night Football on our Giant TV Screen! No Cover! popcorn, peanuts, hot dogs 20rd and Ousdahl Southern Hills Center New England Patriots vs Miami Dolphins Advertise it in the Kansan. Attention The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Applications are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall and the Student Senate Office, 1958 Kansas Union. The Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award was established in 1973 and is presented annually to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The Chancellor selects the recipient from nominations presented by the Student Awards Committee. The Award will be presented at the Higher Education Week banquet scheduled for Sunday, February 15, 1981. The applications for the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, by Friday, December 12, 1980. University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 9 Class teaches career planning By VANESSA HERRON Staff Reporter KU students who are beginning to suspect that they are majoring in indecision can find help in a career-planning course next semester, said James O'Nell, an assistant professor of business and crested the course three years ago. The course, Career Planning and Decision Making, which is offered by the University Counseling Center and the department of counseling, teaches students to make decisions that affect their careers and their lives. he said. In the course, students learn to use KU's Career Resource Center, 116 Bailey, and to examine their feelings before making career decisions. "The class is a place for students to process their feelings about career planning and about themselves," he said. FOUR TIMES A semester, each week, with a group leader to discuss your notebook During the semester, each student maintains a weekly logbook or diary. In the book you write about what they did and where they went in those situations where they tried to make decisions. O'Neil trains counseling graduate students to lead one-hour discussions in To earn the two credits that the research four careers that interest them. "They try to find what kind of work they would like to do, where to get training, what the job's outlook for the '80s is," O'Nell said. "And they have to ask themselves, 'Would I fit into this career?'" Peggy Craig, Leavenworth graduate student and discussion leader, said the following. "I think a lot of people just grab a major in their junior and sophomore years because they think time is running out," she said. THE COURSE IS designed for freshmen and sophomores, O'Neil said, but students from 17- to 28-year-olds, are enrolled in the class this semester. When she was a KU undergraduate, Craig said, she made hapazhurd career and taught at the university. "My career was planned by chance," she said. Some students who are now enrolled in planning courses working against the course burden was helped. "I personally feel its a fantastic course," said Mary Ward, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., freshman. "It's important that students realize that they all feel the same way. No one knows exactly what they want to do." Kerry Cahill, Overind Park borrowed the course. course had helped him do his possessions. "It doesn't give you a major, but it shows you how to decide," she said. THE CAREER planning course was first offered in spring 1980, O'Neill said. At the time, only one E2-student section was available, and it would be to be placed on a waiting list, he said. This semester, O'Neil teaches one section of the course and Ann Orzek, Springfield Mo., graduate student, teaches two. 'O'Nell said there still were KU students, and planing—planning schools, but couldn't find it "I'm pleased with the cooperation we have had from the counseling department and the office of academic affairs," O'Neil, said. Three sections of the course will be offered in spring 1981. According to the American College Testing Service, career counseling was one of the top five services that high seminaries said they would need in college. The job market has become more competitive, O'Nell said, so students must learn to choose their careers carefully. "Careers no longer just happen," he said. "They have to be planned." 3UA Special Events Presents a ROCK & ROLL PARTY Tomorrow Night Featuring Shooting Star Tuesday 9:00 pm & special gu SUA Special Evento refreshments available! & special guests BLACK FROST Tuesday Dec.9 7:00 pm Kansas Union BALLROOM tickets $3.50/$3.00 with KUID - on sale at SUA and Kiefs New vice chancellor sought The 15-member search committee looking for a replacement for Ralph Christoffersen, vice chancellor for the university, has completed the first step in its search. From the list of applicants the committee will submit three to five names to Cobb for the final decision, according to John Brushwood, committee chairman and Roberts professor of Latin American literature. Also included in the description is the need for a commitment to excellence in teaching, research and service, an earned doctorate or the equivalent, administrative experience in budgeting and other university functions and A formal job description, which will be sent to faculty members and a shortened version to be placed in advertisements was completed Friday, according to Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor. The deadline for nominations and applications for the position is Jan. 23. "The committee expects to offer the ice chancellor a selected list," Brushwhee Christoffersen will leave the University of Kansas March 1 to become president of Colorado State University in Fort Collins. The description states the responsibilities of the vice chancellor to the University, the committee members to the various schools at KU. The committee will be advertising in the Chronicle of Education and the Cuneo Journal. "personal qualities that assure ef- ficiency in relationships with a variety of con- ceptualities. Brushwood said the committee wanted to find a replacement for Christoffersen as soon as possible, but the committee would make a decision. The committee consists of three students, six professors, one classified employee, one member of the library staff and four administrators. SAVE 50% Christmas stocking with candy canes and stars. or more on all gift books in our Christmas Book Selection. Choose from 100 titles! -featuring titles in: art, architecture, cookbooks, Shakespeare, antiques, poetry fantasy, chess & games, horses aviation, cars, travel, hobbies collectables, photography & nature railoads, medicine and novels. KU HAPPY NEW YEAR Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 REMINDER! Your People Book coupon expires Dec. 20. Selling something? Place a want ad STAR TREES 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. STUDENT SPECIAL! $44.95 KU J Choice of over 300 Fashion Frames Any Single Vision Rx Plastic, Photography or Oversize lens Free Tint Introduced by JMP Inc. (Custom grinding, Specialty frames & Bifocals a bit more) Present coupon on purchase VODID 12.20.86 special ops. operator 2120 B vxj) incorp. london 841 614 0500 fashion eyeland MANLAT GEOFFREY REVIEW FASTER WITH CLIFFS NOTES! Exam time or any time, Cliffs Notes can help you earn better grades in literature. Our complete stock covers most frequently assigned novels, plays and poems. Get the ones you need today. GET CLIFFS NOTES HERE: Jayhawk Book Store 1420 Crest Road 843-3826 RANDY MEISNER One More Song RANDY MEISNER HAS THE SPOTLIGHT ALL TO HIMSELF. PRODUCED BY VAL GARAY. Direction: Trudy Green Management. "Epic" is a trademark of CBS Inc. © 1980 CBS Inc. Finally, with his history to be proud of, Randy Meisner takes center stage with his solo album, "One More Song". "One More Song" is nine great songs featuring such new Randy Meisner favorites as, "Hearts On Fire" and the single, "Deep Inside My Heart" RANDY MEISNER. "ONE MORE SONG" HIS PREMIER PERFORMANCE, ON EPIC RECORDS AND TAPES. TAKE A BOW. 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO TGIO HORIZON AMB ANIMATION INTERPRESSES Fax No. 102-365-4000 815452 000 ★ Thank God It's Over! Celebrate the end of classes Tonight 9 pm-1 am at the Entertainer -8th & Vermont Featuring the BrASS KICKIN' HORIZON Band $3.50 ALL YOU CAN DRINK Bring in this ad and get 50 off Be there! Page 10 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Drugs From page 1 "We are not terribly excited about any printing of the fact we dispense about 1.3 million doses of medicine each year," Godwin said. "You have to keep things in a perspective. We can show you that security here is pretty damn tight." GODWIN SAID there was an average of about 1,560 doses of controlled drugs unaccounted for each year at the Med Center. Despite extremely tight security there are "discapencies" that require reports and investigations by the Med Center. *Waste of drugs would not be considered a discrepancy if it was reported.* "We have 48 nursing units, and we found one, our busines surgical unit averages about 70 patients a day." "I thought the discrepancy figure would be higher than it was, but it worked on to about 0.1." Employees, however, claim that theft occurs and is labelled as waste, and that pharmacists have been accused of stealing. Godwin said the Med Center did everything it could to control the flow of drugs, but he conceded "we've got to have drugs, and they have to be available, but we keep them as secure as Nurses, pharmacists and orderlies interviewed did not agree with Godwin that security measures were enforced strictly. All thought that the security measures would work, if followed, but they thought many were imprical. THE EMPLOYEES also said that security had lignited during the past year, but that theft and physical damage was occurring. "There was a nurse working in my ward who was into Demarol," said a nurse who asked not to be identified. "I had been in the hospital." patients would not get their shots, but she would say their did." In this instance, the nurse in question already was on probation for drug theft, the source said. The source said she would inject the Demarol into a sterile cup, break the syringe, and report it as waste. The source said the nurse probably would drink the pain killer later. "Nobody knows the difference except the patient, who doesn't get pain relief," the nurse T theft of drugs in large quantities is difficult because of the dispensing and inventory processes. Controlled substances are only distributed to each of the 45 wards in the Med Center by daily supplies. Inventories of the wards' double-locked doors last for about 6 hours. Therefore, theft must be by single doses. "There is a minimum of pilferage or theft of drugs," Godwin said. "They couldn't be any more careful." DENYING A PATIENT medication is the regulation, the circumvent the security regulations, the nurse's role. "How do they know if the patient receives it or not? They are the ones who suffer?" the source The alleged thief was "spaced out" one night and was sent, by her supervisor, to the emergency room for a drug screen to check if she was under the influence. "They refused to do it on her," the nurse said. "That is what pisses me off. They send her back to work—she had emotional problems. They just don't want to face the problems." Drug screens are done only with the approval of the person being screened, said Charles Hartman, a physician and chairman of the Emergency Services Program. "They could get us for a violation of their He also said he could not remember a request for a drug screen within the past year, but that a request that was not acted upon still would be kept in the emergency room logs. privacy," Hartman said, if a screen was done without consent. Hartman also is notified whenever an alcohol or drug screen is requested. Even if the request was refused, "I would know because a record is made," he said. THE SECURITY measures described by Godwin would stop many abuses of this type, if they were conscientiously followed. However, if they were not consistently followed, basis they were often impractical requirements. There are large amounts of paperwork to be filled out to requisition medicine or if drugs are lost or wasted. Every dose is signed out at the pharmacy and every drug drugs are distributed personally by a bannaracr. Discrepancies in the number of controlled drugs delivered and the number used are found during inventories. If discrepancies are found, a report must be filed. The room also contains the medication to be given to patients on that floor and a two-day course of antibiotics. ASPIRIN, ANTIBIOTICS, some sleeping pills and other non-controlled drugs are kept on a cart that is wheeled around the floor of the ward. It has compartment for each patient's drugs. "I suppose that a nurse or orderly could get something for a cold if they came to work with a throat or something," Godwin said. "But they couldn't get too much more." The medicine rooms are kept locked and only the head nurses are supposed to have a key. During the busiest time of the day the room will be left open, and the paracite boxes are locked as well. The nurse is supposedly the only person with a key. According to Med Center employees, key access is the main breakdown in the security system. Often, several sources said, the head nurse will leave the key to the medicine room at the desk, making it available to the other nurses on the floor by pressing the head nurse to perform other duties. The key is supposed to be worn around the head nurse's neck, and Godwin said failure to carry the key could be grounds for immediate dismissal. A SOURCE WHO is a head nurse said it was impractical to carry the key at all times, and it was often left in one place so all nurses could use it. "Sure we're supposed to carry it, but many times there is just one other nurse and myself, and a couple of aides, and I just can't be running back and forth to the desk," the source said. Godwin was upset when told of the nurses who claimed the key was usually available to most patients. "This issue with the keys is disturbing, if it is true." Goldin said. The only other ways to steal drugs would be in the pharmacy or pharmacist or employee, or by theft. Both have happened, according to Godwin and other sources. Two employees who work in the in-patient pharmacy, both said that theft occurred there often. Sleeping pills are popular, according to sources, and a prime target of drug thieves. ACCORDING TO one employee, there is *arcarnart* cart in the pharmacy that is *an l unlocked for long periods of time*. People in the pharmacy have to wait. The cart is rarely inventoried, they said. The cart contains drugs that are not stored at nursing units, but might be needed at any time. Godwin said the cart was replenished daily, but was not invented. "The vault is inventoried several times a year, even though the law only requires it to inviolate." All other drugs are stored in a locked vault. There are drawers and cabinets inside the vault, and the drugs are stored there for long periods of time. It is the only area of the hospital where there is more than a couple of days worth of drugs stored, Godwin said. Passession of a controlled substance such as Demarol is a felony, and the penalty is severe. Prescription forgery for non-controlled drugs is also a felony for the first offender. It is a felony for a second offender. THE TAKING of a medicine cabinet off a wall actually occurred two years ago, Godwin said. There was also an unsuccessful hodge at the inception of this cabinet this year and a successful hodge six years ago. Goldwin said that was unusual, but the large volume of drugs handled at the Med Center. "There are more drug rights here than in all the corner drugstore in Kansas City combined," she said. "I never get enough." Security improved with the move to the new hospital, and modifications such as electronic door locks and door surveillance by closed circuit video have tightened pharmacy security. "It is secure, but I still worry," Godwin said. "It makes it hard to sleep some nights." Lawrence's Newest Hair Care Center The Silver Clipper (located in the Holiday Plaza, 25th and Iowa) "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" 8 Silver Clipper $4.00 off on haircut and style with this coupon. Expires December 30,1980 Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Hours: 842-1822 Mon.-Thura. 9-7 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 9-5 p.m. REDKEN Stylists: Teresa Ledom Mary Madl Jack Webb PRODUCTS "What is the meaning of Authority? By Authority we mean an unquestionable, unconditional power. An Authority is Absolute! When we stand before it there is no possible appeal! To speak of 'relative authority' is like speaking of a 'square circle! It is a contradiction of authority from authority; it demands unqualified obedience. "HOW FORICIBLE ARE RIGHT WORDS," said job In 8.25, Consider the Right and Foricible words in the book "A Dictionary of Words." "From this it follows; that there can be only one authority and rule, and he Rules in sovereignty over the world and man and He rules in sovereignty over the MOST HIGH RULETH IN THE KINGDOM OF MEN, AND JESUS' SWORD OF LORD ALL—Daniel 4:17. His holy will is the law of human life." cannot be evaded or avoided." Dr. David Hedegard. "But the Bible also teaches that God has delegated authority to them to magistrates. When they exercise their Authority under obedience to God, they represent God Himself, and to obey them is to obey God. It would be easy to set forth authority." "the teaching of The Bible with regard to parental and majestical authority throws light on the fact that authority is given and cannot be chosen. We do not choose our parents; we do not choose the country in which we are born. When we are born into the world, our parents, our country and its rulers are given to us and The greatness of the civilization of England and America was produced by men and women who believed in the absolute Authority of The Bible. It appears we are now striving to preserve a Civilization without the Faith that we have abandoned us. "The Bible SHALL NOT BE ESTABLISHED." — Isaiah 7-9. At present we are "going to the devil and destruction" as a result of the "unbelief of 'of so-called believers.'" The Bible is God's Message to us, to man: "OBEY, AND BE BLESSED: DISOBEY, AND EXPERIENCE THE CURSE. The great power of the Lord will disobey those who have gone before. The curse and confusion upon us in the fruit of our forgetting God and His Message to us in all The Bible." God Almighty Himself has commanded us to submit and obey the laws of human governments which He has ordained that there might be law and order and not confusion here below! We are permitted to disobey only in cases where we are called upon to disobey God. Our Lord is our guide, and we shall — consider Christ Jesus and His crucifixion! We are permitted to lie the consequences if we can: "When they persecute you in one city, flee to another." What I am striving to do is to sit up men with “WATCH GOD WORK” as he reveals Himself in “every word that pumps.” P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031 25th & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA "NEW MILE STORE" KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 1 BARBRA STREISAND GUILTY featuring: What Kind Of Fool (Duel with Barry Gibb) Woman In Love ROCKPILE SECONDS OF PLEASURE including: Teacher Teacher/Wrong Agent (Lets Face H) When I Write The Book/You Aint Nobin! But Fine If Sage Wants An Devil As You Rockpile Mfg. List $8.98 Kief's $5.49 REO Speedwagon HI INFIDELITY including: Follow My Heart With A Loving You Don't Let Him Go! In Your Letter Take It On The Run Kief's $4.59 Kief's $5.49 A Mfg. List $8.98 Mfg. 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ONLY $299 PARK Promoted by Ski etc. Call Darryl at 841-8386 GRANADA GOLDIE HAWN PRIVATE ® BENJAMIN 7:30 8:35 Mat Sat 2:00 Mr. Fat 200 CHRISTY CINEMAS TELEPHONE NO. 31065 THE PRIVATE EYES 7:15 & 9:00 Mat. Sat. & Sun. 2:15 HILLCREST 1 970-242-8200 www.hillcrest.com INTRODUCTION Can I Do It... fit it in! Size of Mice & Mouse in HISTORY role GLASSES? Robin Williams Ev. 7:11 8-9 20 HILL CREEK 3 Some times you watch, others you feel. DONALD SUTHERLAND ANDREW MOREO Richard Pylele Ordinand Eve. 7:15 & 8:30, Mat. 1:24 & 1:34, Sun. HILLCREST 2 TWO RIDES AND TIME ELECTRIC ELEPHANTS, WHAT CAN YOU KNOW? PO BOX 103 Ev. 7-8 9-20 9-20 Mat. 2:15 5:15 & Sun. A UNIVERSAL BILLS CINEMA 1 WELCOMING JIMMY BLAIR GENA ROWLANDS Eve. at: 7:25 & 8 8:35 & Mad. 2:00 & Sat. & Sun. PG 4400 Eve. at 7:25 & 9:35. Mat. 2:00 Sat. & Sun. PG CINEMA 2 ZIP-A-DEE-OO-DAH! Wait Disney's Song & South THE WEEK OF MAY Eve. at 7:30, mon., Weekend at. 2:10 CINEMA 2 10AM & 12PM Evenings "An displaysion of brilliance, nerve and dance." University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 11 New research grant proposal criticized By CINDI CUBRIE Staff Reporter A new grant proposal that will allocate up to $100,000 in general research grant funds for individual research programs and is designed to strengthen those programs at the university has upset some humanities instructors. The current grant allocation allows individual professors to apply for research grants. Individual grants averaged $3,500 a year last year. The new proposal will give from $10,000 to $100,000 to a group of individuals with common research interests or group research projects over a three-year period. No more than 10 students are allocated in one year for each program. George Worth, University Faculty executive committee chairman and professor of English, said at the FacEx meeting Friday that he had received a letter from several humanities professors who thought the grants would favor large research projects in science departments. But those fears are caused by a misunderstanding of the proposal written by the Faculty Senate Research Committee, Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research and graduate studies, told FacEx. She said there was no guarantee that the large awards would be given at all, or that they would be given to departments doing group research. FACULTY WITH COMMON interests, wishing to do research also could apply for the grant, she said. Horwitz said the grant would allow specialized research that would improve the research standing of the University. "We thought we could do something for faculty research that we couldn't do otherwise," she said. Horowitz said the advantages of the program were its long-term effects. "In the long run the grant will improve our posture in respect to outside program were its long-term effects. BUT THE FACULTY members objecting to the program see it as eliminating the 10 smaller grants, each grant, to 18 individual professors doing research, Worth said. There Is A difference!!! NEW PREPARE FOR: MCAT·DAT·LSAT GMAT·GRE·OCAT VAT·SAT Schedules Now Available for MCAT Holiday Compact 8112 Newton Overland Park, KS 06209 (913) 341-1220 KAPLAN EDUCATION CENTER NEW TO 2019 AT THE LOOMING CENTER DIET CENTER By the "weight" - how are you doing? Call 841-DIET 935 Iowa M During fiscal 1979 the University spent more than $1 million on general research grants. Individual instructors received the majority of the grants. For fiscal 1982, the Kansas Legislature has appropriated more than $1 million for the general research fund, Horowitz said. Mitchell L. Allen A Showing: Prints, Paintings, Photography Dec. 20, 1980 7 P.M. to 9:00 1521 W. 22 St. Terr. 749-5378 Interest required Keep This Until Show date Ernest Angio, FacEx member and professor of geology, said the three-year program sounded similar to National Science Foundation grants, which poured money into a program and then after three years stopped the funding, leaving the program to find money on its own. He suggested that the Faculty Senate Research Committee develop an example that would show how in-depth information could be applied that they would "develop an area of excellence." Gerhard Zuther, professor of English and FacEx member, said that the people who were concerned about the grant change were not concerned because their own proposals were endangered. "Nothing that has happened this year has had more of an effect on faculty morale than this announcement," Worth said. "They've gotten a grant whenever the wait is long," she said. "The wall of the loggers. It is a matter of patience." WORTH SAID THAT the an- nouncement had so happened effected female mortals Angino said, "We're competing against ourselves." Worth said, "The tone of the meeting will depend on whether people hear it as an accomplished fact being defended or nothing that there can be some input." Horwitz said that the committee decided to sponsor a meeting Dec. 18 so faculty could ask questions about the new proposal. AT THE UNIVERSITY Senate EXECUTIVE committee meeting after FaxEcX, Worth read a letter from Acting Chancellor Del Shankel endorsing the efforts of the Blue Bribon Committee on Freedom of Expression appointed by In the letter addressed to SenEx and University Council, Shankel said, "I share with you the view expressed in the Blue Ribbon Committee's report that '...the fewer rules about free expression that exist, the better' and that '...state university has a double publication requirement that publicly promote those rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.'" Shankel also said to ensure a speaker's right to speak and the audience's right to hear, the committee had recommended the University set rules as to time, place and manner of discussion or assembly which serve only to "facilitate orderly use of the rostrum." former Chancellor Archie R. Dykes last year. TO BEGIN TO develop a set of proposed guidelines that will be sent to the Board of Regents as the University's free speech policy, Shankel said "We look forward to working with the University governance system to establish guidelines, policies and measures to enhance the freedom of expression on our campus so that all of our citizens may have the right to hear views they choose to hear in an appropriate forum or opportunity for rebuttal," Shankel wrote. he wanted SenEx and Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, to form a committee. Worth said the committee would consist of three faculty members, one graduate and one undergraduate student, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, Deanell Tacha, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and Vickie Thomas, University general counsel. SWA FILMS The committee's report will "serve as a local policy under the umbrella of the Board of Regents policy," Worth said. VIN Howard Hawks, with the help of Humphrey Johnson, leads the duet *Jubel* and Writer Bremen, turns Ernest Himmingay's novel into a classic screen adventure. The Cassiaballade-like story is set in a fictional boat-and Bacall's singing (allegedly dubbed by Andy Williams), (100 m). Monday, Dec. 8 To Have and Have Not Federica Fellini's Technicolor fantasy, inspired by Freud, is the story of a repressed woman and her dreams, the excuse for some laevish, very Nalleusite starring episodes. Guillaume Maastricht (137 min). Color. Italian textbilingual. Tuesday, Dec. 9 Juliet of the Spirits Mikhail Kalezovsky is both beautiful story of a romance during World War II and an enchanting tale. He opened the way for other iron-Curtain products (84 mins) 8:4W. Russian The Cranes are Flying Wednesday, Dec. 10 Friday, Dec. 12 Start the Revolution Without Me Unless otherwise noted; all tickets will be available at Kansas Union. Weekday tickets are $1.00, Friday, Saturday, Population and Sunday films are $1.50. Midnight tickets are $2.00. Ticket prices vary by location and union. USA Union, 4th level, information 884-7300 or smoking or refresher admissions allowed. The story of two sets of twins in pre-revolutionary Faccence accident mixed; one (Gene Widder & Donald Sutherland) rebelled against the laws of Sutherland and *Gene Widder*) revolutionaries. Their path to success on the eve of World War II was a Norman Lear and Bud York, creators of All In the Family, with Hugh Griffith, Orlan Schroeder, and John Scargill. (907) 610-3400; color: 3. 700; 9. 303 From Zondervan 1 Column Reg. $17.95 Now $14.95 2 Column Reg. $14.95 Now $11.95 NEW INTERNATIONAL BIBLES Limit 2, at your Christian Gift Center Meisner Milstead Liquor CR EFERENCE bookstore Mails Shopping Center Lawrence, Kansas 842-1553 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 A major issue at the convention will be whether to lower the number of sports NCAA Division I-A schools must sponsor. convention," Susanne Shaw, athletic board chairman, said yesterday. KU is at the minimum of eight men's sports, but the Missouri Valley Conference has proposed lowering to its six. A year-end evaluation of the football program will top the agenda at the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board meeting today. Football tops KUAC agenda According to Susan Wachter, athletic business manager, it will include a review of the head football coach's salary. Also on the agenda will be a discussion of proposed legislation for the National Collegiate Athletic Association convention in January. "They will probably go into executive session for that," Wachter said. "They usually do when they discuss things like salaries." "Del Brinkman (NCAA faculty representative) and Bob Marcum (athletic director) will discuss their position on any issues at the NCAA If the proposal passes, it would allow Division I-A schools to drop two sports and still be in Division I. A team that gave KU's position on the proposal. The athletic board also will discuss the charges of its four committees—Financial, Academic, Tickets and Facilities, Shaw said. Hamburger Coupon 5 Cheeseburgers for Only $2.25! Bocky's 2120 W. 9th Street 842-2930 Void 12-19-80. BULL RIDING XPANDACHEK THE PERFECT CHECKING ACCOUNT X Want a checking account that pays you money instead of subtracting a service fee? Give yourself the advantages of Expandachek: ☑ No monthly service charge ☑ No per-check charge ☑ No minimum balance ☑ No idle funds — your balance earns interest ☑ "No Bounce" protection optional on some accounts Now you can see why our credit union calls this the perfect way to check. Your money is always available for you to spend, and this service costs nothing to use but instead pays you dividends on your idle funds. You receive a monthly statement noting the checks that have cleared during the month (amount paid and check number), your deposits and withdrawals, and your current balance. Earned interest appears on statement at regular dividend times only. Try our way. Expandachek, the perfect checking account. It pays you to check. try our way KU Federal Credit Union 101 Carruth-O'Leary University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas 66045 This service is made possible through an agreement between your Credit Union and the State Bank of Lancaster, Lancaster, Kansas. --- Page 12. University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Those without cars have options By CINDY CAMPBELL Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Ordinary tasks, such as running to the store at the last minute for a gallon of milk and going to the Laundromat, are common problems when a car isn't available. And for the more than 50 percent of KU students who don't own cars, it often is a problem. There are alternatives to owning a car in Lawrence, and some are just about as convenient. According to some KU students, they've had to foreign automobiles because of rising car prices and fewer generous parents. the "AU on Wheels" service, the campus bus system, is a relatively inexpensive way to get around town and campus. Buses provide a link from most of the major apartment complexes in Lawrence to campus and service from the University to downtown. A ride on the bus costs 35 cents and an all-semester pass costs $30. Buses are running on most of the seven routes from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday. LAWRENCE ALSO BOASTS two cab companies, both owned and operated by Ward Thompson of Lawrence. Both Union and Yellow Cab companies charge a minimum of $1.30 with an additional $0.25 per mile. Though cab cars are more expensive For landicapped students, personal service can be arranged through the Student Assistance Center in Strong Hall. than the KU bus service, they are available 24 hours a day and can be at one's roundtable in five to 10 minutes. around Lawrence to a 25-mile radius Lawrence. Though cabs are more expensive Thompson also owns Jitney Transportation Service, which is designed to transport the handicapped. Non-handicapped people can ride on a space-available basis at a cost of $2.50 a ride. Pot From page 1 "It doesn't take any genius to know that a bong is for drugs," he said. "A roach clip is a roach clip. It takes as little common sense." Anthony Cardarella, owner of Tiger's Records in Overland Park, challenged the law there, which was passed in September 1979. Cardarella charged that the ordinance was oppressive and vague. In a unanimous decision, the Court said the ordinance was a correct use of the cities' powers. Gift shop owners in Overland Park who also sell paraphernalia have complained that the law would force them to build a separate room so minors would not be able to see paraphernalia displays. In May, Gov. John Carlin vetoed a law that would have passed by the Kansas Legislature last month. Carlin said that the bill was too vague, but said he approved of the legislators' intent in drawing up the bill. By United Press International WASHINGTON-The 96th Congress passed little of President Carter's ambitious energy-development program, but the segments it did approve may affect U.S. energy development—especially of synthetic fuels—for the rest of the century. Energy plan favors synthetic fuel The bills it approved often bore little resemblance to what Carter had requested. For instance, Congress gave Carter a $221 billion windfall profits tax, but it was short of the almost $300 billion plan he had proposed. CONGRESS REFUSED to create the trust funds Carter wanted for channeling windfall revenues to fuel-assistance programs for the The tax collected some of the estimated $442 billion in extra profits oil companies will earn this decade because of Carter's decision to phase out price controls on domestically produced oil. Instead, the revenue will go into the general fund, with its ultimate use left up to Congress. poor and for alternative energy initiatives. Although some key supporters of Ronald Reagan reigned the tax, Sen. James McClure, R-Idaho, expected to head the Senate Energy Committee if it would be difficult to repeal. Instead, he wants to ease its impact. Congress also passed a $25 billion omnibus energy bill, rather than the $88 billion version Carter had planned. The bill is for the U.S. Synthetic Fuels Corporation, to finance promising alternative technologies with a goal of producing two million barrels of synthetic oil per day by the mid-1990s. And, although Congress established a stand-by gas rationing plan that the president could invoke in an emergency, the Energy Department conceded it would take 18 months to implement. Many critics regarded it so weak as to be useless. Congress passed laws promoting solar, geothermal and synthetic fuels production through tax incentives. It also approved a program for exploring oil on land for the development allowing the leasing of land in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve. HOWEVER, CONGRESS killed the so-called "fast track" energy mobilization board considered a vital part of Carter's energy program. The board could have waived some environmental laws to speed development of high-priority energy projects. The administration estimated that Carter's $10 billion "oil backout" bill, to help utilities convert their plants from oil to coal, would have saved one million barrels per day of oil or natural gas. However, Congress first cut it in half, and then killed it. TALENT AUDITIONS TALENT AUDITIONS FOR SINGERS • DANCERS • NOVELTY ACTS Worlds of Fun in Kansas City, one of America's most exciting themed amusement parks, is conducting a series of auditions for performers to appear in musical reviews and street theatre. can earn over $4,200 performing six days per week, and weekends in the spring and fall. Many of our former cast members have used this experience as a stepping stone to performing careers in New York, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles. If you haven't seen a Worlds of fun production, ask a friend who has... you'll be surprised! It's great fun, professional experience, and talk about exposure — Auditions are conducted from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 at the Training Table Restaurant at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri on each of the following five days: January 11, 18, 24, 25, and February 1. These are the only auditions this time. Don't miss your chance to appear at Worlds of Fun Registration is open from 9:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at each audition. - the best stage experience in the Midwest. Registration is open from 9:30 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. at each audition. For more information, contact the Show Productions Department, Worlds of Fun, 4545 Worlds of Fun Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64161; (816) 459-9276. Sorry, no jobs are available for actors or strictly instrumental acts. (1) Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358. tis the season for RCA ПЕЛОДКИЙ РЕА 7. 98 + 9 to 5 and Odid Johns PICS THE GREATEST HITS WAYLON RCA Give the gift of music. RONNIE MILSAP GREATEST HITS 559 559 LP TAPE MFG. SUGG. LIST 7.08 7. 98 699 LP 699 TAPE MFG, BUGG, LIST, BA 699 TAPE RCA Q Also available on B-track & cassette STORE HOURS: 9-10 Daily 10-7 Sunday GIESON'S DISCOUNT CENTER Offer Good Through Dec. 14. 2525 Iowa Lawrence, Kansas 10 VISA master charge SKI CRESTED BUTTF FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL ROBY 864-6825 AFTER 6:00 ☐ days nights in a condo with ☐ 3 days lift tickets ☐ 3 days lift tickets ☐ Discounted additional skies days ☐ Airbnb air, bus or train ☐ Airbnb air, bus or train $169 per person Charter bus option $89 --- SUMMIT MICHELOB Light SKI WINTER PARK $179 per person Charter bus option $79 □ 5 days 5 nights in a deluxe condo with 3 bedrooms □ 3 nightly trips □ Discounted additional ski days □ All tax included □ Free air party □ Free shuttle service □ Optional air, train or charter FOR MORE INFORMATION 10 CALL ROBY 864-6835 AFTER 6:00 1919 Y 1919 HNIR BENDERS Come in here and come out with a Fantastic Haircut. --- K V BLENDERS HAIR BENDERS 1919 W.24th Tues. Wed. Fri. 7-4:30 Thurs. 10:6 Sat. 9-13 - Soft perm • Natural haircolor • New makeup ideas • Corrective conditioner • Expert knowledge on up keep 842-9641 1981-1982 Office of Student Financial Aid: 26 Strong Hall FINANCIAL AID AID BRANDY MEISNER POINTS A SHAPE IN THE BLOOTLIGHT. Enter the Eagles. The group soars right to the top right away. Randy's older, his voice stronger. But more importantly, his songwriting is starting to take form. His "Take It to The Limit" Enter the Eagles. The group scores up to the top right away, floundy a player, his voice stronger, but more importantly, his songwriting is starting to take form. His "Take it to The Limit" (I Am Loved Again) becomes classic. He grows with The Eagles but essentially grows oveys from the stage to playing his small for more than just one man. University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Page 13 Kennev-led Chiefs win By United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Quarterback Bill Kenney, making the first start of his 30-game bench-warming career, threw touchdown passes of 33 yards and Kansas City Chiefs to a 31-4 victory over the Denver Broncos yesterday. Kenney, who had never played a second in his two-year career before yesterday's game, completed nine passes in a row at one point and finished the game 12-of-18 for 142 yards. The victory was the Chiefs' first at home over Denver since 1975 and their first season sweep of the Broncos since 1972. Kenney put the Chiefs on the scoreboard at 4:39 of the second quarter on an 83-yard pass to Smith and Kansas City then put the game out of reach by scoring two more touchdowns on of only 14 seconds later in the period. The score became 14-0 when Arnold Morgado scored on a 1-yard run on the Chiefs' next possession. Nestackle Ken Kremer stripped Denver quarterback Craig Morton of the ball on the touchdown, and picked up the ball at the 3-yard line and stepped into the end zone for the tucked down in his professional career. Kansas City got the ball back three plays later at the Bronco 43 on the third Denver fumble and fourth turnover of the half. Kenney took seven plays to move in for a fourth score, an 8-yard touchdown with three seconds left before baltime. The touchdown also was Garcia's last ever and it gave Kansas at 28-10. Kenney directed the Chiefs 71 yards in the fourth-quarter field goal by Nick Lowery. Kenney had a few problems before the game, but few during. The team equipment manager had his name misspelled on his jersey. "The equipment guy came up before the game and apologized," Kenney said. "The jersey just fit the mold, and he had nobody's heard of the naked missleel." "I was beginning to wonder if my chance was ever going to come. I was looking at Cliff Stoudt's record of 56 games as backup Pittsburgh quarterback. He failed to play in 56 straight games. I was lucky to stop mine at 29. "I'd be content if I don't play any more. I'd have been content if I didn't play today. If Steve Fuller is healthy, I expect him to start. He's No. 1 in my mind, but if he's not healthy, I expect to be in there." The victory raised Kansas City's record to 7-7, matching the Chiefs' victory total for 1979. Two games, one with Pittsburgh and one with Washington, were the worst record is the most losses suffered by the Broncos since 1975 when they went 8-4. AMERICAN CONFERENCE NFL Standings | | W | 10 | T | Pct. | PA | Buffalo | 8 | 4 | 0 | 711 | 289 | PA New England | 1 | 8 | 0 | 356 | 386 | PA Baltimore | 7 | 7 | 0 | 590 | 313 | 325 Wichita | 3 | 7 | 0 | 413 | 306 | 325 Yankees | 7 | 11 | 0 | 274 | 280 | 257 | | W | L | T | Pet. | PP | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Cleveland | 10 | 9 | 4 | 714 | 307 | 250 | | Houston | 8 | 6 | 0 | 484 | 250 | 220 | | Miami Beach | 8 | 6 | 0 | 571 | 314 | 271 | | Cincinnati | 8 | 9 | 0 | 357 | 210 | 221 | | | W | 5 | T | Pct. | Pet. | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | San Diego | 9 | 5 | 0 | 643 | 147 | 284 | | Oakland | 7 | 7 | 0 | 708 | 137 | 262 | | Denver | 7 | 7 | 0 | 500 | 264 | 382 | | Kansas City | 7 | 7 | 0 | 500 | 264 | 382 | | Seattle | 4 | 10 | 0 | 186 | 203 | 324 | NATIONAL CONFERENCE | | W | 1 | 2 | T | Pct. | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Dallas | 11 | 3 | 0 | 7 | 786 | 394 | 184 | | Philadelphia | 11 | 3 | 0 | 786 | 394 | 184 | | | St. Louis | 5 | 9 | 0 | 357 | 289 | 302 | | | Washington | 4 | 10 | 0 | 286 | 218 | 302 | | | Colorado | 4 | 10 | 0 | 286 | 218 | 302 | | Santa Claus locker and sipped grape juice. In the World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies, Porter appeared in five of the six games, going hitless in his first 12 at-bats before finally finishing at.143 with two hits. Send a Singing Santa The Perfect Christmas Gift ASTA Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Singing Telegrams 841-6169 Deadline for Orders Dec. B 4.5 oz. Chocolate Kiss With the addition of Porter, the Cardinals have four catchers, including All-Star Ted Simmons, Terry Kennedy and Steve Swider. Herzog said that only shortstop Gary Ternholt would be willing to team and that the Cardinals would be willing to swap either Simmons or first baseman Keith Hernandez. Delivered With Each Order 雪上滑行 SKI! SKI ASPEN/ SNOWMASS Porter probably will replace Simmons as catcher. Simmons is an all-star but is weak defensively. He wants to be switched to first base, but the homerade is not his. He displeased with the hustle of Hernandez. SKI! Joe Burke, general manager of the Royals, said that Porter's signing would not necessarily force the Royals to trade for a catcher. He said he had confidence in the team's other partners, John Wathan and Jamie Quirk. 6 days/5 nights in a luxurious Snowmass condo with kitchen and fireplace Schloss Ammerlach 3 days ski rental Porter, 28, left the Royals' training camp in March to undergo six-weeks of treatment in an Artzona drug center for alcoholism and drug addiction. Discounted additional days Free ski party Free mountain picnic > with kitchen and replace 3 days lifts at Aspen Highlands Porter will be reinstalled with Herzog, who was one of Porter's biggest admirers while with the Royals, Porter, however, had a tough season in 1980. Porter rejoined the Royals in late April. He finished the season with a .249 batting average, 51 RBI and seven home runs. Optional air or bus transportation Charter bus option $85^{00}$ FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: $189 per person ROBY MICHELOB. Light ROBY 864-6835 After 6:00 During the celebration after the Royals' playoff triumph over the New York Yankees, Porter sat by his SUMMIT School Ending Dance, Party Weekend Advertise it in Kansan want oads JIM RICHARDSON WEDNESDAY NIGHT Texas Reggae with The Lotions Only $2.00 For Students & Members SPECIAL - $1.00 Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 Porter to sign. Cards declare SINATRA TONIGHT FREE - End of Classes Party Chicago Blues with EDDIE SHAW and the WOLF GANG THURSDAY Rock & Rockabilly Dance, Party DEBS AND THE MORELLS the Secrets* Friday & Saturday Rock Party Featuring Porter, who has spent the past four seasons with the Royals, is on a honeymoon cruise and is expected to sign when he returns. "This gives us some maneuverability on a couple of deals we've been working on." Herog, a former manager of the Kansas City Royals. By United Press International DON'T FORGET; CENTRAL | | W | L | Pet | PF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Minnesota | 8 | 6 | 0 | 97 | 353 | | Chicago | 8 | 6 | 0 | 97 | 353 | | Chicago | 6 | 8 | 0 | 439 | 274 | | Tampa Bay | 6 | 8 | 1 | 393 | 244 | | New York | 6 | 1 | 1 | 286 | 230 | Cardinal General Manager Whitie Herzog made the announcement at the opening of the winter baseball meeting. Herzog said that the signing of Porter could lead to more Cardinal trades during this week's meetings. | | W | L | T | Pct | RF | PA | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: | *Villain* | 11 | 3 | 0 | .786 | 353 | 242 | | Atlanta | 3 | 0 | 0 | .643 | 429 | 363 | | San Francisco | 6 | 0 | 0 | .429 | 242 | 382 | | New Orleans | 6 | 0 | 0 | .407 | 243 | 382 | Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 All Week 1.25 Highballs 1.50 Pitchers DALLA-Free agent catcher Darrell Porter has agreed to a five-year, $2.5 million contract with the St. Louis Cardinals club officially announced yesterday. All Week Highballs 1.50 Pitchers Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 Lawrence Opera House Thursday's Game Houston 6, Pittsburgh 0 7th Spirit Relief Reception Specials Every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, Christmas Show featuring BRYAN BOWERS THE Show New REFLECTIONS Years Eve With THE LYNCH & WORSE BAND Town House House **Yesterday's teams** Namaste City 31, Philadelphia 17 Atlanta 50, Pittsburgh 17 Milwaukee 28, Los Angeles 10 Milwaukee 10, Bay 10 Milwaukee 14, San Diego Winnipeg 60, San Diego Cincinnati 34, Baltimore 33 Charlotte 32, Detroit 32 Chicago 61, Green Bay 7 Houston 35, Miami 7 New York Giants 27, Seattle 1 San Francisco 38, New York 'Game (OT) America's Illustration Board Perfectionists for the Progressive Business Tonight's Gam New England at Miami. $9.nn. Total Interior Enhancements - Signs - Graphics - Wall Art 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-6476 841-64 --watercolor brushes $4.85 to $49.50 TABLES & CHAIRS 26 Oak Dining Tables $50-$100 Emerald City - 415 N. 2nd Just N. of the Bridge Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:00 stocking stuffers! CC3 $5.45 to $12.05 Winsor & Newton's finest pure red sable Badger's double action airbrush $65.00 Osmiroid italic writing pens and sets Cross 10 Kt. gold filled pen and pencil sets silver sets $18.00 HAPPY HOURS open 9-5:30 Mon.-Sat. تلافی தே pen&,inc. art supplies Master Charge VISA porcelain 423 vermont 8411777 HISTORY ON THE SUNSHINE 50c OPENINGS FOR SPRING Nancy Underwood, Senior Emporia, Kansas "it's co-ed, feel like I have a lot of freedom, privacy and a lot of friends." Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features Just one sandwich...it's that good! 50c 50 Just one sandwich...it's that good! Schlotzsky's SANDWICH SHOPS Schlotzsky's 23rd & Iowa 11- 9 Mon.-Thurs 11- 11 Fri., Sat. 12- 9 Sun. 11-9 Mon.-Thurs. 50c OFF on a Schlotzsky Phone in and carry out. 843-3700 Present This Coupon at Time of Purchase Expires 12/17/80 At Your Christian Gift Center Album of the Month CHRISTMAS WITH THE IMPERIALS This Month Only $6.49 Regularly $7.98 DST4020 EFERENCE bookstore CR Malls Shopping Center + Lawrence, Kansas 842-1553 SUA FILMS Presents I will do anything for my country. Except if it hurts. Start The Revolution Without Me. Staring GENE WILDER DONALD SUTHERLAND co-creator HUGH GRIFFITH JACK Mac COOMRAN-BLADE WHITELEAW 3:30, 7:00, 9:30 Friday & Saturday 12-13 $1.50 Woodruff Auditorium No Refreshments Allow 3d . University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 No.7 KU slam dunks Cyclones Bv PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Kever, if ever, had anyone in Allen Field House Saturday night seen a woman attempt to alarm dunk a ball. But they saw it Saturday night. Lynette Woodard, KU's senior forward stole the ball and went down the court alone in the Jayhawks' game against Iowa State and went up for the dunk. The ball rimmed out and Woodard had to settle for the attempt. "The first time I went down the court, I heard my teammates calling for me to dunk it," Woodard said. "The second time I went up with all I had. I just waited for you to tell my hand on the rim and thought I had it. I was shocked myself." Woodard scored 26 points in the game, a 49-48 pasting of the Cyclones, to lead the Jayhawks to their eight victory against no defeats. KU Head Coach Marian Washington said she was glad to see Woodard attempt to dunk the ball, even though she missed. "The crowd wanted it and she came really close to getting it," Washington said. "The difference that she has, or that any woman has, that she can't palm it, so she has to get it just right off the dribble. I'm pleased she tried." Washington also was pleased with the effort of her entire team Saturday night. The Cyclones obviously were overpowered by the Jayhawks, ranked seventh in the nation, and KU dominated every aspect of the game. The Jayhawks were able to run on the Cyclones, and the KU defense proved too strong, as KU skipped the ball 11 times and blocked 12 shots. The Jayhawks will take the next two weeks to prepare for the Hanover Christmas Tournament and No. 10 of the NCAA's Madison Square Garden. Dec. 19-21. "There will be four good ball clubs there," Washington said. "They will all be good games. If I had my choice I'd rather go ahead with No. 1. The kids are excited, and I know they will all be giving 150 percent." Other than Kansas and Louisiana Tech, No. 4 Rutgers and No. 5 Long Beach State will be in the tournament. Washington said Saturday night that she was planning to go with a starting lineup against the Teachers that played in the players who have played the post position. KU usually plays a double post game with two wings and a point guard. Shebra Legrant, who missed the first six games because of an injured knee. will see her first start, along with 6-foot 2 Mergon feet and 6-foot Tracy Claxton 7 feet. Woodard will start at a wing, and Mary Myers will be the point guard. Legrant scored 17 points, pulled down eight rebounds and handed out two assists in her 22 minutes of playing time. She scored nine rebounds, which puts her Big Eight Conference-leading total of rebounds at 109. Also scoring in double figures was Scott, who had 14 points, in the first half, and seven rebounds. Junior college transfer Lenora Taylor. Tenure eight eighteen. Grabsed six rebounds. The Jayhawks dominated the boards, bringing down 47 rebounds to just 24 by the Cyclones. The inside powers for KU were tough all night, giving KU the third shot offensively and defensively denying Iowa State an extra shot. "Some players have to force to go to the boards," Washington said. "But no matter who is in there, they have a natural instinct to get the ball." Offensively, KU shot 60 percent from the floor, 69 percent from the line. Iowa State was held to 33 percent from the floor and 53 from the line. Like a Good Deli Sandwich? Try the new Stuffed Pig! FREE salad & small drink with any sandwich when accompanied by this coupon. (Six salads to choose from!) THE STUFFED PIG "PURVEYORS OF FINE SAUSAGES" Washington said she had expected a toucher time from Iowa State. Good thru 12-19-80 Mon-Th. 11:30-8 Sun 12-8 "I can't say I expected such an easy win," she said. "I was expecting a tough game. I was really pleased that I could be able to get in our running game." Woodard said the Cyclones tired in the game, giving the Jayhawk's shotgun a boogie. "In the second half we start out just like we was the start of the game, and Telephone 913-384-0055 or room 4C old Green Hall 864-4758. For admissions or registration information contact the W.S.U. Administration of Justice program at K.U. Degree Programs in Administration of Justice at K.U. "Second helpings on food and the maid service are my favorites." F. W. H. A. A., B.S., M.A.J. Degree programs in A.J. offered by Wichita State University at K.U. Winston-Salem, North Carolina OPENINGS FOR SPRING For schedule of Administration of Justice classes consult the K.U., supplement to the Timetable. Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 842- Mark Kirby, Senior EMERALD CITY ANTIQUE, USED FURNITURE LARGE SELECTION JUST NORTH OF THE BRIDGE Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, scrubbed rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features when we see them getting tired, we push them a little harder," she said. She also prized the bench, and said the team was dependent on depth to keep it KU will need to be in top form to defeat the Techsters, who finished second in the nation last season to two-time AIAW champion Old Dominion. "We're going to win." Woodard said. "It's just that simple. We're going into that tournament undefeated and we expect to leave it undefeated." JAYHAWK NOTES: Mike Jerrick of P.M. Magazine was at the game with a camera crew, filming the game for an edition of the show aired on KMBC-IV on Monday. The show featuring the women's team, and it will air sometime in January. ICE COLD CHILLED CASE SPIRITS CHILLED DISCOUNTS BENETT Retail Liquor WITH STREET CENTER 840 ILLIOS IN HOME NOW IN WALL 842 601 Total souls—KU 13, ISU, 12 Technicals: None IOWASTATE (48) FG-PGA FT-FTA RED FP TP A Woodward. 4-1 5-2 2 9 10 2 Clayton. 7-11 5-3 2 9 10 2 Means. 2-4 4-4 0 0 4 1 Meana. 4-4 4-4 0 0 4 1 Myers. 4-5 4-5 0 1 1 8 Smith. 3-3 3-3 0 0 4 5 Snith. 4-1 4-1 0 0 4 5 Legrant. 4-5 4-1 0 0 4 7 Legrant. 7-10 3-4 1 0 1 8 Sweart. 2-4 2-4 3 3 4 1 Swart. 0-1 0-1 3 3 4 1 Spears. 1-1 1-1 1 0 2 3 Stevens. 1-1 1-1 1 0 2 3 Kelly. 0-0 0-0 0 0 2 3 Totals. 45-75 9-13 47 13 19 18 KU's women's basketball team is featured in an NCAA commercial promoting women's collegiate athletics. The commercial was first shown during halftime of the USC-Notre Dame football game Saturday. 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Let's spend some together . . . most evenings til 8:00 REDKEN 809 VERMONT LAWRENCE KS. 66044 913-843-8608 HEADMASTERS **KIN CARE, MAKE UP, CLASSES, MANICURE** Make gift-giving easy ... 4 great ideas from Vista! VISA* ECOUPON BUGAR VISA* ECOUPON BUGAR Values Four 50 and three $1.00 certificates, good toward any VISA purchase. Plus a coupon for a free FIESTA酒吧. Only VISTA HOLIDAY GIFT CERTIFICATES To From S5.001 (A S6.10 value) MOUNTAIN MONEY Vista VISTA VALUE WODDEN NICKELS used at anytime for a FREE Vistacentre Conel A package only $10.00! (A $35.00 value) MONSTER MONEY Vista GOOD FOR YOUR MODERN DIE TAKING WIRE CONE GOURD FOR YOU MEDICAL SUE TARTY CREME CURD VISTA BOGGANS Create a building down a snowy hill. Kids can roll it up and take it anywhere. Only $15. No purchase necessary. VISA RESTAURANTS 1 FREE MONSTER MEALS MONTER MEAI CERTIFICATES Purchase 5 Monster Meal Gift Certificates ($1.59 ea.) and well give you a money on your way to Vistaburgeri ($9.05 value for $7.95). By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Vista for the Fun! RESTAURANTS Wood will set mark; but total is uncertain Associate Sports Editor BLAZEJOWSKI, who plays for the NEW Jersey Gems of the Women's Basketball League, said she was not sure how many points she scored in her career at Montclair State in New York. But she said a 1,990 sounded right. Lynette Woodard is on track to break Carelle Blazeljevan's national scoring record, but when that will be in up the air. Because of a mixup between the two, what the scoring record is, Woodard is either 90 or 190 points away. Błazewjsk, however, said last night in a telephone interview from her home in New Jersey that she spoke. Woodard was closing on the title. 1911 Turtle Creek Blvd. --- 825 W. sth --- 1527 W. Oth. --- 250 S. 29th. "Records are made to be broken," Blazejowski said. "They are made to be set and made to be broken. I'm glad I was able to set one. Lynette is a fine candidate to break it and I'm glad for her." Original reports from the athletic department at Montclair stated that she scored 3,299. Then, at the KU women's basketball game Saturday night, reports began circulating that the record was 3,199. Reached at his home last night, the athletic director from Montclair State said he didn't know how many teammates he knew, but that it was around 3,300. Woodard scored 28 points against Iowa State Saturday to push her career total to 3,109 points. She did not bow she was so close to the record. "Oh, wow," Woodard said. "I had no idea it was that close." DENNIS MINICH, in charge of women's basketball in the KU sports information department, attempted to set the record straight last night, but was unable to come up with a specific number. "We were informed several months ago by the sports information office at Montclair State that Blazejowski's record was 3,299 and he said, "All of our information has been geared around that number." "Reports have currently come out that the record should be 3,199 career points, so we will contact the players. C. to determine the actual amount." A member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic basketball team, Woodard, also a three-time Kodak All-American, said earlier this season that KKU is working away at a trip to Eugene. Ore. for the national tournament. "We're looking for the Final Four, nothing less," she said. WOODARD, WHO is averaging 27.1 points a game this season, will either break the record at home or score, beginning on what that record really is. Minich said the record would fall. it was just a matter of time. "It's obvious that, barring injury, Lynette is going to establish a record," he said. "It's really just a matter of when." If the record is 3,299, however, Woodard would break it at home in the Big Eight Tournament, Jan. 15- 17 If the record is 3,199, it should fall in the Hanover Christmas Tournament in Madison Square Garden and be included in California-Berkley Dec. 28. Whether KU makes it to the Final Four will be seen in March, but sometime soon, Lynette Woodard will be No. 1 in the scoring logs of women's college basketball. It's just a matter of time. Eligible persons should submit a letter of application, resume and the names of 3 references by 5:00 pm, December 12, 1980, to Ms. Ann Eversola, Director, Student Organizations and Activities, 220 Strong Hall, The University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60405. The University of Kansas, Office of Student Organizations and Activities. COMPLETE JOB DESCRIPTION AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST FROM THE OFFICE OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES. GRADUATE ASSISTANT. Temporary, One-half time assistance, January 5, 1981-31, 1981. Bachelors and current KU enrollment at graduate level, experience in working with minority student organizations. SALARY: $433.33 per mo. Position Available January 5, 1981. Preference given to qualified Assistant Director Candidates. ASSISTANT DIRECTOR, Temporary. One-half time unclassified/professional staff. January 5, 1981 July 31, 1981. Masters. experience in working with minority student organizations. SALARY: $25-625 per mo. Position Available January 5, 1981. Preference given to qualified Assistant Director Candidates. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. --- COME TRY ON A PAIR! TOUGH TRAIL HIKER RED WING RED WING PAINS Gordon's SHOE CENTER Need C GOLD- 731 New 815 Mass For men & women . . . H 843-7628 Belly stag fu Free Film If your pictures are late. Our On Time Picture Pledge means your pictures will BE ON TIME according to the store service schedule. Only on roll developing of 110, 126 and 35 mm. COLOR PRINT FILM, excluding holidays. C-41 Process Kodak KodacolorII C126-12 Kodac архив карт / алфавит YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Main Store, Level 2, Kansas Union Satellite Shop, Satellite Union BEER Thurs Taver University Daily Kansan, December 8. 1980 Page 15 ANNOUNCEMENTS Need Christmas money? Buying SILVER- GOLD-COINS-CLASS RINGS. Boys Cols. 731 New Hampshire. 842-8773. 12-8 ENTERTAINMENT FACILITY AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES FOOD, LIQUOR, OR BOTH Belly dancer for your holiday parties. No stag functions. 841-5398 after 5 p.m. 12-8 NASHVILLE REPLAY your midwest connection for "renegade rock" or a hill "country music" --fall or spring, Naimhall Hall offers you the best of dormitory life and the advantage of a warm, quiet room. If, weekly maid service to clean your room and bath, family social activities or a visit to the local home or if an apartment isn't what you want, you can rent a room at HALL, 1800 Naimhall Drive, 843-8559, fax (843) 843-8559. K. U. HOLIDAY PARTY NIGHT December 19th SHOW YOUR COLLEGE I.D. GET YOUR FIRST BEER FREE BEST LIVE COUNTRY ROCK BANDS Monday - Saturday Hours 1:00 to Midnight 722-9735 for band info THE BOW TIE COACH NASHVILLE REPLAY WITHOUT THE JAYHAWKS IS LIKE GOING WITHOUT COMING **BEER DRIKERS!** 25. Draws Tuesday. Austin, 11:00 p.m. 11:00 p.m. Tavern, 900 Poin. Tavern, 900 Poin. TRAVEL CENTER As close as your phone TAKING A TRIP? Travel Is Our Business. The LOWEST FAREs available! 841-7117 Southern Hills Shopping Center 1601 W. 23rd St, Lawrence, KS 9:30 3:50 MW 9:30 2:00 MW FOR RENT Gospel Singing Youngs Featured in Jan. 2018. *Singing the Praises* is signored by the Salt Basket. Every week **AMIZONA STREET DUPLXES Available** laboratories, study room, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, central air conditioning, carpets and upholstery, central air conditioning, carpet & furniture $350 utilities. 843-739-0 or 843- 721-0 3 Bedroom Townhouses Renting now Other Furnished 1/2 bathrooms, 1/2 bathroom, 1/5 bathrooms, attached garage, all appliances, pool. You'll like our looks. Southern Townhouses, 28th and Kassid, 1947, 107 3 bedroom apt, and small efficiency apt 2 bedroom apt, with a spacious, favorablely seasoned, reasonably priced. Call 843-276-5191. 2 bdmr, furnished mobile homes. Quetier to be arrested, guarnered, $169 and ip, Jawhack Court and $400, to be convicted. Spacius, 2 bdm. apt. for 2 to 4 people. Fireplace, off street parking. Near University and downtown. No pets. Phone 841-7500. Villa Capri April. Unfurnished 1 & 2 bdm. Apts. Available. Central air, wall-to-wall carpet. quiet location; 2½ blocks south of the clubhouse on weekends or 3.50 or less on weekdays. Sponiac 1 bdm. apt. in Trailridge, Gas and water paid. Bus stop in front of apt. Use of tennis courts and pools. Call 749-198-128. For Rent January or February, townhouse, 2*bdrm. at Pine Haven Court 21st and 3rd floors. Free parking. Washer, washer, full basement with washer and dryer furnished. 1½ baths. Close to shop- room. We pay water $270/- $50. deposit per room. 1 yr. 12-8. No pets. Call 843-214-81. Brand new 3-bar; brand in super loca- ties. Brand new 4-bar; brand in super loca- ties. $225, 814-757-001 day, $845-9045 evenly paid. DON'T WAIT till the last minute to add a room for you. Many of our newborns will be ready for you in jan. march, and we can accommodate them nately, conventionally located at 9th and Eent- hombine town hall today. Call us at (811) 254-7600, babywishme today ) or 811-254-7600. 3 bdm. townhouse with burning fireplace 86. 643-733. Will take 2 students. 520- 643. 733-1133. WANT ADS 4 new PL-2K available for second semester. 3 bernstein's 4 SIMPLITLY FUNNISHED 5 SIMPLITLY FUNNISHED Conveniently located at 9th and Indiana, within Hawthorne. 4455 (8 a.m.-5 p.m.) or 811-1212. 12-8 NEW DUELER AVAILABLE MANY MAIN CROWDEN AFFECTION FAMILY, YOU CAN ENJOY AMPARTMENT LIVING, TOWNSHIP, CROWDEN TEMPORARY DUELERS OFFER, FEA- KITCHEN, ATTACHED GARAGE, TWO KITCHEN, ATTACHED GARAGE, TWO RATE, DUEE ROOM-PRECERT FOR TWO AND THREE STUDENTS. MUST SEE IN WASHINGTON. RATE FOR WASHINGTON STUDENTS FOR MORE INFOR- ments. 824-4135 or 812-438- 128 L.M. TO P.F.M.). For rent, nix apt. for me, next to campus. Mr. Huffy work out of part of rest. Call 845-4185. Apt. and rooms for rent newly remodeled house and downtown. No phone. Phone 814-5500. No phone. Sublease 2 bdm. apt. (4 beds) $80 per per room + $12 per electric 1; electric bus route. 841-9788. 12-8 Roommate to share luxury condominium. Roommates in NYC. 1401-816-3111, place, close to campus. $160 mow. $91-$106 per month. Christian Campus House has a few open views. Apply soon. Call 842-6592 between 9:00-5:00. 12-8 Female Roommate to share 2 bdmr. furnished apt. On bus route. $131.50 water paid. 842-7481. 12-8 Available Jan. 1; Luxury duplex; Meadow, bowl, dbls; garden, gourd; $400-$848 or suit; dbl, gourd, $400-$848 or suit; Spacious bdms for male in apt, with two students. Free December rent. Available on weekends or holidays. $13/mo. plus 1/3 low utilities. 5 min. to campus. 843-4584. 12-8 Studio for sublease at Meadowbrook. Fur- ware available for lease or before. 841-5735. Available at 12-800-8960. Non-smoking roommate needed for spring semester. I'm clean, quiet and easy to go along with. Call Chuck Alexander at 814-6460 or 814-6401 for more information. 12-8 Sublease nicely painted 1 bdmr. apt. Water paid $180/mo. Bus stops at front door. 749-5464 or 842-1813. 12-8 2 housemates. 3 bdrm. house, furnished. laundry. $171/mo. + ½ utilities. 1613 Ken- would. 841-4617. 12-8 House for rent. 4 blks. in rent of Carruthers AC, dispail. dishwasher. Avail. Dec. 21 for 1 or 2 responsible people, prefer 1-2 leaves with aumers optional. 2135. 12-8 For rent: Furnished. Very large bed. Dorm. for barm. Furnished. Share utilities. On **serious semi-furnished apt. in older home** **near K.U. Private entrance, hardwood floors.** $198/mo. + utilities 1-5-842-6415. Evenings. Cornets.仔犬. Cots. pets. 12-8 Overland Park park. avail. for sublease Feb. 12. 1-311-754-6020. Air. carr. $45. 1-311-754-6020. Bike. 5 p.m. 2 bdm, unfurnished in A.plex. Close to 10 bdm, unfurnished in A.plex. Available immediately. 841-4045. Neat and well-eared 3 berm house with 2 bedrooms. 1 living room. 2 baths. 24 carcass storage. 6 appliance appliances. 8 bedrooms. 6 berm. 6 berm. 6 berm. 6 berm. 6 berm. Brand new 3 bdm duplex at 305-311 Northwood Lane near 2nd St. new station, kitchen appliances, dressers, kitchen appliances, off-season rate at $325, Call Mark 643-8325 or 643-828-12-98 MUST SUBLEASE spacecraft, 3 bdm.alert, MUST SUBLEASE spacecraft, 12 cbd. 609-10, 9 p.m. Subbase for spring semester 2 bpm. urg. Increase the number of more information call 749-1246 12-8 12-8 Roommate/share 2 bdm. Trailridge apt. Includes: Appliances, carport, tennis courts, pools. Furnished except bdm. 8170/mo. utilities. Sublease Dec. 15. Call 149-228 2 bdm. apt, near campus, on bus route avail. mid-Dec. Unfurnished. $195/mo. 749-2211 Bryan or Chuck. Keep trying. 12-8 Spacius 1 bdm. Meadowbrook appt. Must sublasse! Two balconies with beautiful view of sunset. Quait. Water and Gas pump. Handy. Handy 483-468 or Glass office. 12-8 SUBLET: Trailride 2 bdmm. apt. ap. water pd. On Bus Route. 749-2518. 12-8 For sublease. two bdrm. completely furnished ant 11th fireplace. All air conditioner. Contact Jim at 749-0143. No calls after 11 12-8 STOP PAYING RENT—Why not own your property at 345-826-1071, within all walking distance to K.U. and downtown. Call 843-1811, ever Harold Fox Estate, Inc. 843-343-8543. Thore 12-8 Posible operation for housemate during 2nd week. Use **blocks** and **campus**. 749-2315 john. 12-8 Available Jan. 1st to quiet student. 3rd floor walk-up in old home on KU bus route. Beautiful view of city. 1 bdrm. w/bath. No children. pics. $160. 12-84 842-2166. Save gas-walk to class. 2 bdmr, apt. in Savannah. Save gas-walk to school. 1 bdmr, apt. in Savannah. 1 phone: 866-754-2900. 12-8 phone: 866-754-2900. Sublease or roommates 3 bdm. Trallridge Townhouse on bus route 1. Starting 12-8 Beautiful, 1 bdm. apt. Elev. Free bus Cindy, 848-4644 Available now. Cindy, 848-4644 12-8 Deluxe room. Private home for mature, adults. Entrance 2, entrance 3, west of campus. 843-782-781. 12-8 Available Now! Roommates(s) needed. + 10 rooms to campus. + 5 + 10 rooms. 748-5231. 12-8 Sublasse spacieux, unfurllised b2d apt.婴, 18-16 spacieux, unfurllised b2d apt.婴儿 $215, 841-168 or 842-160. 12-8 Senior Student needs roommate to share 2 roommates on first day. Available January 1st, 841-3233, 12-8 phone number. OREAD 2 bdmr, new appliances, complete installation. $275 plus utilities. 914-988-1930 or call (866) 335-4154. New 1 and 2 bdmr. apts.-2 and 3 bdmr. New 1 and 2 bdmr. apts.-2 and 3 bdmr. Oak-Red Oak development. Some units available for immediate occupancy and rent. Kaw Valley Management, Inc. 841-680-108, 12-8 **awn** *n*-tec. to furn. Call 841-8938. Trying. 2 baskets, apt. for rent. 12-8 3 bdm. house for rent. Available Jan 1st. 4 bdm. house for rent. Available Jan 1st. Valley Management Inc. 841-660-6800. 1 Sublease 1 bdm. apr. Live free in Dec rent already paid. 749-0486. 12-8 3 bdm. Trailridge Townhouse for sublease starting Jan. 1, 1861, $212; baths, fireplace, full kitchen, near pool and tennis court. Call 749-6455. 12-8 2 bdmr. apt. available. Ibm 1508. Close to 641-793. Available. Furnished. 841-1003 or 749-3646. Unfurished four dbm. house, 10th oak. Missouri. Hot water heat, many windows. Avail Jan. 1. 842-2988. 12-8 Roommate to share house 1$/mo. utilities. Available Dec. 15. 842-0038. 123 There will be two openings in the Kolonia Community living group for spring semester. Information and registration for the Christian Ministers Center, 1248 Creed, or call 843-769-5700. Sublease -1 bdrm. ant. Close to campus. $290 + utilities. RENT NEGOTIABLE 749- 5169. 12-8 Vacancy in a 2-bdmr. apt $85. Call #828 @229 after 10 p.m. Sublease large studio, furnished $175/mo. + utilities 799-5352 12-8 FOR SALE 1 hdbm. apt. 2 plants from campus $155 i- Jan. 74-6921. Keep trying! Availab- 12n. WATERED MATTRESSES $26.95, 3 year gurance. WHITE LIGHT, 704. Meas. 64cm x 81cm. Alternator, starter and generator specialists. Parts, service, and exchange units. BELL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 943-9069, 3800 W. 6th. Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them! As a Study Makes sense to use them! As a Study exam preparation. News Analysis of York Cities, Books Bookstore and Great Book Cities, Books Bookstore and Great Book Vintage clothing and neat ole "luname" at quince 2013. 412-795-2847. Vintage Woolen Co. 3008 Wm. 11-5 Tues.-Sat. 232-2264. MATTRESSEN, Orthopedic sets from $29. FURNITURE, furniture sets from $180. FURNITURE, one block west of 9th and 10th floor. GOOD-LOOKING FALL CLOSETS European cloets in the fall. Slack calls. Call slacks in the fall. Slack calls. 1978 TR7 excellent cond. full sun roof, low efficiency. 1978 tr8 excellent cond. high efficiency inquiries only. Baldwin 904-316-5184 904-316-5184 87 Pontiac Lemans, 4-speed, radials, runs dependable. Call evening. 841-126- 5063. Term papers come up! Need a newsitalian "Christmas present? Silver-reed electric type-motor vacuum brakes, barely similar. Similar models are 295-350, Mine; 14-160 $/O. Cmu; 864-223-893, Mine; 12-8 Yamaha Stereo amplifier, Pioneer Turntable, condition 81-451-6641. 12-8 condition 81-451-6641. 12-8 Turbulent-Techchips SB-1700, Direct Drive Servo-Motor, 3.5GHz, 8KHz, 24V First $100 takes or best offer. Second $100 takes or best offer. 1975 Suzuki GT-750. Must sell now. Good condition. $800 negotiable. Call 843-409 or to come to 1301 Lausanne #15. 12-8 For sale: Large, sturdy, slightly worn earl American couch. $50. Call 749-0451. 12-8 Motorcycle for sale. 1973 Kawasaki 175 cc. 400 miles. $3,000. 814-2676. Keep trying. MT220 Honda 75. Excellent condition, envir- monmental condition, professional handling. Asks $500. book value as new. Please call or email for details. Beta Max 6 hour video recorders. Direct install. $110 each. Now only $500, #42-283-262. Two rod chilffon format, worn only once, 10/28/93, Phone 640-5442, 12-8 10/28/93, Phone 640-5442, 12-8 SOUNDENSES STEREO. TURNTABLE. FRS RECEIVER 9 RECEIVER 2 SPEAKERS CABINET. HEADPHONES. 18 RECORDS. TWO MONTHS OLD. $350 only. 12-8 Mamiya DX-1000 35mm camera/25mm Mamiya DX-1000 45mm camera/25mm Cost $299.00 - Call Event #128-12-8 NEW SKIS 190cm Kneel formal soft, newer mounted, must sell. 128. 1548. Yamaha receiver CR4 440, deck tape DC2 condition self seperated 842-8220, 12-8 condition self seperated 842-8220, 12-8 Cedar chest $20. Smith-Corona Manual Guitar Guitar Vintage Guitar Call. 842-1950 after 300. CASSETTE DDKK - "tesm A-150 Excellent Therapy. Peak LDX memory." - Call Kevil park. LED memory. $250 Our draffing tables make the ideal Christmas Gift. (by individual) 842-7305. 12-8 SKI BOOTS Women's size 7; barely used. $45. 841-0678. 12-8 JOIN THE FAMOUS FACES OF HISTORY! Unique portraits of you as you Mona Lisa, your parents, your grandparents, your history will delight, amuse and entertain everyone. Learn about this new book in our free book-cnw now. Mail your name, address and phone number to the following: 10138 Kansas City, MO 64111. 12-88 Kentwood XA-3500 Integrated amp 40 w/ch Kentwood XA-3500 Integrated amp 100 w/ch Tuner $100; Kentwood KD-6700 direct drive Cassette Drive; Kentwood KD-6700 direct drive Cassette Drive; Kentwood KD-6700 direct drive Casestudio; Kentwood KD-6700 direct drive Casestudio; Kentwood KD-6700 direct drive Olin Mark III S I 858 Snow Snake齐全 complete package. Wear a snake coat. Also have Hamon Availi Ski Boot. Fuf shoe sizes 8-10. Complete Package 855-842. All winter boots and Ski Boots and also be sold separate. Nakamichi preamplifier and 50 watt power amplifier a pair of Yamaha NS-325 speakers 864-1161. 12-8 7 pieces of furniture. Call between 10:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. 842-1241. 12-8 Philips telescope. Yamaha bookshell speak- speaker. Samsung digital camera. Scout- Cordia portable manual. Must sell by March 31. Christmas OUTDOOR GEAR SALE Sleeping bags, backpacks, stores, tents, books, den books, shoes and sneakers more much. GRAND SPORT. 7th and 833-3238. 12-8 Marantz 4-way speakers, with 12 inch armor, with servo locking, service turbo, ttable, 864-1624-102 12-8 Rogers 5 ropes drum set with pearl hard back drum set for sale. Paul 841-8866. 12-8 for sale. Paul 841-8866. 12-8 HELP WANTED FOUND TO STUDENT NURSING HOME AIDES/ ORDERLIERS: Will you share your work with us? We will provide nursing home nursing home residents! Our consumer organization, Kansas for Improvement, or our partner, Northwestern University and input on nursing home conditions and care. Please contact us to make a recommendation. All names and correspondence will be kept confidential. Please call us: 617-523-8479, Maes St., 8479, Lawrence, Kansas 60044 9277, Maes St., 8479, Lawrence, Kansas 60044 Found- Czepeizo dancewear in Bailley Hall. 12. Call 841-1924 and identify. OVERSEAS JOBS = Summer/year round. Europe, S. E., America, Australia. All fails $500-1200 monthly. Sightseeing. Free info. JX Box 32 - KK Corona Del Mar. CRUERES, CLUB MEDITERRANEAN SAII- H, 35, 410 W. 72nd St. in Montreal. structure, Office Personnel Counselor, Institute. Send $855, 11 handling for APPLI- TION. World WORLD 135, 60199, Sacramento, CA 85060 WORLD 135, 60199, Sacramento, CA 85060 RESearch ARCH ASSISTANTS Neurobiology and Immunology 2-75% time for minimum one year. Degree qualification; B.A. (or B.S. or M.A.) in Biology, Comp Sci, or related scientific preferences. Must have training and/or experience with chemical and biochemical fractionation and HPLC techniques for cell fractionation and HPLC techniques. Contact Professor Ellis Michaels or Dr. A. J. Dennis, Washington University, 84148. University of Kansas. Applications are now being accepted for the position of Software Developer at Rutora. Starting date and salary open to applicants of any age. Ten Jeremiah R. K. Rodgers, KS 60023-1002, Ten Jeremiah R. K. Rodgers, KS 60023-1002, Ten Jeremiah R. K. Rodgers, KS 60023-1002, an equal opportunity employer. Need part-time babystay in my home for Thursday afternoon. Own transportation to Thursday afternoon. LOOKING FOR A CHANCE TO TRAVEL? You're getting out of college and won- t be able to travel. coming a Tour Manager? In order to qualify you must be a Tour manager as well as appear. As Tour Manager you would be instructing group tours to visit various locations in the future for assignments world wide. If interested send resume to the Tour Director, Inc., P.O. Box 807, Lawrence, KS 65044. LOST HELP! My gray and white female kitten is lying on the floor. She feyelly female, call 843-6657. PLEASE 12-8 LOST-Brown Riffle Skirt Jacket. Lost at the hospital. Call Mike Gillie at 843-6656. 12-8 Call Mike Gillie at 843-6656. LOST. CANON AE-1. Robinson gym. RE- LATED TO KIRKLAND. You can re- know that you know. Vikers 843-7070. NOTICE ski WS WINTER PARK SPRING BREAK FOUR DAYS— FOUR NITES $271 INCLUDES TRANS., LODGING, LIFTS, & RENTALS OR LODGING FOR $119 SIGN-UP DEADLINE DEC. 23 AT SUA OFFICE 864-3477 You've probably seen them in Ampel and Woolsey's lineup, but their skirts and sleeves. HEAT WAVE, cold weather gear from California with the great colors and designs. 749-384, 842-588, 848-618. Sophomore Engineers Support a Feminist Business by doing your shopping at **SPINSTERS BOOKS**. Books, magazines and cards; and more. Spinsters Ave., Lawrence Square; 12-8 and Thurs. 10-6 Saturday. 12-8 Have The Navy pay your tuition. 864-3161 SINGING MESSAGES for all occasions. Delivered anywhere in Lawrence. ASTA Singing Telegrams. 841-6169. tf Sending a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas card. Sending a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas card. Sending a Singing Santa. The perfect Christmas card. Sending a Singing Telegraphs 814-696-0. 12-8 FOX HILL SURGERY CLINIC-abortions up to 17 weeks. Pregnancy treating. Birth support. Attendance at clinic, call 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (913) 624-3100. 4401 W. 108 St., Overland Park, Kansas. KSI VAKI Alum has new condo for rent. Bath, sleeps Kitchens. Kiosk reasonable. Mitchell Hospital. No problem too small, no time too late. We are here to help. Headquarters-841-235-6155 Massachusetts Call or drop by as soon as possible. Partial hours. Student Activity fees. PREGNANT and need help? Call BIRTH- tt BRENGHT 843-4821. This Christmas give yourself and your children a gift. Call Swell Studio no other gift gives so much lasting pleasure! Let Swells Studio make portraits for you, create art for your child, proud to give. Excellent quality at reasonable prices. All of our work is completed by us. Call about the special gifts less than $10. Call about the Christmas gift less than $10. TAKE HOME A BIT OF KANASS. You can buy the Book Shop at Kanas. Museum Book Shop at 12-9 957-434-0000. Museum book shop We buy used furniture. Phone 841-4244 12-8 ! Looking for the perfect gift idea? We've got it! ASTA Singing Telexman. 841-699 - ibs **TURNITURE** Phane M41-024 **EXAM AIMS** at the **Ghana University** Bookshop- library at the **Ghana Museum** Book- shop, near the Ghana Bridge. MISS PIGGY IS HERE! (for your favorite book) With a smile, Museum flibble complete with spies. Instant color passport. I.D. and resume photograph made portable B/W. W-128. Silver Stile. 10 x 7 inches. 70 nutritious peanut recipes. Send 5.00 for the Peanut Book to K-M-C. Sales. Box 64, Big Cibn. Ka332. 74332. 12-8 CHRISTMAS TREE FARM. Beautiful PINE HILL FARM open this weekend and will be closed until October. The building been cut. Drive East on Highway 10, four miles to county road exit f1 off ramp, then continue straight west. A do friend a favor—send a professional tuck-in by r.v. wink. Call 841-8547. 12-8 This is Ground Control to Majorete. Hello (13 little words) 12-8 DRINK, my children but you need not die. Jimmie's Jungle Juice was too strong. That Congo's blood was too thick. I live. Repeat the past only if it's worth repeating, or you remember her My WALMER followers, help me with next party. Drinks on me. Kev The Rev 12-8 **SRI WINTER PARK/MARY JANE with** **Four days skipping include HIT tickets** **Four days skiing includes 100%** **accident insurance for ONLY THE** **dates and** **distributions are available.** **Days, TRAVEL CENTER - airline * **escorted tours** * hotel/resort * **ski packages** * car rental * **group rates** Reservations Domestic & International Reservations *International Student Specialists 1601 W. 23rd St., Lawrence, KS Southern Hills Shopping Center 841-7117 9:30-5:30 M-F, 9:30-2:00 Sat. Backgammon, Billards, Chess, Table Soccer. Table Tennis, Video Games and more be played on next semester. Sign-up to be placed on the first or just for fun. List in 12-8 SUA office 864-3477. Hey wild man—Be carving any watermelon latily? How about mowing in your red rocket? Get crazy and have an un-knocky love. Love ya! Your 12-8 Big Sig. Club for our LOW PRICES CANNED POR by the crew CONGRATULATIONS Glenda, Nancy, and Jennifer. Thank you for being a Good Good luck in the future! Beth and Jeff are very happy to have you as a friend. Call the noon Kiwanis Club for our LOW PRICES Free delivery, three case minimum. PLANNING A PARTY? Call Rory at 842.7222 (9 a.m. 7 p.m.) or Chris Forbes at 842.1000 (9 a.m. 5 p.m.) or Bok Hopkins at 842.9966 (5 p.m.-8 p.m.) Can you name the six wives of Henry Bowell with a bowl? Contact SIBA Bowell with a bowl. CQ CQ CQ DE BWZOUT WBZOUT WBZOUT WBZOUT CL Q4 365 285 080 ARK T qu44 836-355 147-54 08 K 12-8 To the mysterious writer interested in the music and art of one female, both are being hung to dry. The writer is a man with a beautiful smile. Alpha Delta Pi, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon would like to thank the students of Lawrence for their tremendous support. Knock-oh-low-aon, benefiting the K.C. Ronald McDonald House. Special thanks to Mercury Donnelley, Donalds, and the Shopping Center. 12-8 To the men of Sigma Phi Epion. We have you set up. Don't think your getting rid of us. Watch us with our Maggots. You had best watch our Maggots, the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pups, and the SPriors alive. Crews Pup SERVICES OFFERED I DO EXCELLENT SEWING. ALTERA- MED MENDING! $3.50 an hour. 12-8 841-6006 TYPING I do damned good typing. Peggy 842-4476. tf term papers, mpis. IBM correcting selective, Barb, after p. 5 mpm. 842-310. tt Typing prices discounted. Excellent work with multiple customers. Betty, 842-669-1 after 5 weeks and wholesale. If you need help, call: 842-669-1033. UF Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, misc. electric IB S electral Proofreading. spliced corrected. R8-835-94a. Mrs. Wright. ff Reports, dissertations, resumes, legal forms, graphics, editors, self-correct Selectric. Call Ellen or Jeannan, 841-2172. 12-8 OH 2-2001 FOR YOUR MIND CAREY ENCORE COPY CORPS 216 & 238 - Holiday Place A142500 Accurate, experienced typist. IBM correcting Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. tf Experienced K.I. uptip, IBM Correcting Software, Sandy, evening and weekends. 74 hrs Sandy, evening and weekends. Accruing Selectric. Call Donna 842-2744. tf For PROFESSIONAL TYPING Call Myra. 481-4800. tf 2 or 3 roommates to sublease 3 bdmr. apt; 1/3 slec. all others pd, on bus route. Very nice. 748-364. Ask for Dvane/Mike. 128 Typet. Interface I. IBM File/Exe, Quality Systems; editing/layout Call John, 84-21; Ecommerce; editing/layout Call John, 84-21; IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE. Fast re- ceiving evenings to 10 and weekends. 84-257 or call (818) 367-9021. Prompt service by experienced typist on elite electric typewriter. Proofreading, Mrs. Hays 843-1737. 12-8 Excellent Typist will type your papers. Call 842-8091. 12-8 Person or persons to share apt. Furnished. close to store, on bus route 841-8696. 12-8 DISSERTATION SUFFERERS—for fewer weeks than usual. Schedule spring dissertation typing now. March-April is a grape for January-February is cooler. Paper 848-4476. GOLD - SILVER - DIAMONDS. Class rings, Wedding Bands, Silver Coins, Sterling etc. We pay more. Free pick-up. 841-7441 or 542-3688. Bus-Silk-Train. Gold, Silver, and Colins. Check around and get the best deal in town. Great Plains Numeric Services. 16th E. ( downtown Lawrence) 842-800-7880. Non-smoking female to newly decorated, fully furnished 2 bdm. 2 bath Gatehouse apt. $130 + ½ utilities. Call 841-9790. 17.8 Roommate needed for 2 bdm. apf. Prefer non-smoking grad. female. $132.50 + ½; utilities. 841-6368. 12-8 Female roommate to share furnished apt. Close to campus. $105 + ½ utilities. 841- 4836. Keep trying. 12-8 Roommate wanted, female Dec. grad for Overland Park area, non-smoker. Call 841-3715. 12-8 1 or 2 roommates needed for Jayhawk Towers 2nd semester. $125/mo. Call 842-3534. 12-8 Male roommate to share 2 bdmr. apt. Furnished. Close to bus route. $90 + ½ units. 841-0449. 12-8 Houssmates wanted, $55/mo. + 1/4 util. Grad student preferred, 508 Indiana. 843- 1163. 12-8 Roommate for completely furnished 2 bdm. mobile home $80 + $1/2 gas, elec. Call John 749-349 evenings. 12-8 Female roommate needed for a 2 bdm. 3 story Hanover Place Househouse. 5 minutes from campus from $152.50 plus 1 utilities. Call +1 749-233-1231. 12-8 Mature Female(s) (Preferably) to share nice large 4 bdmr. home 1½ blk. from campus. Must be tolerant of 2 cat $$$ utilities. 749-827. 6-p.m. for email. 8-12 8 Need female roommate to share two baths $1750 plus ½ utilities on a bus route $1800 plus ½ utilities on a bus route Need one fun-loving but studious female roommate to share a close-to-campus 2 bdm apt. for the spring semester. Call 411-9750. 12-8 Female roommate needed. Large 2. hbm pct Close to campus, downtown. 892.50 mo. +1 electric. Call Joan 841-4353. 12-8 Female roommate to share extra nice, furnished, 2 bdmr. 2 bath duplex. $115 + \frac{1}{2} utilities. Call 841-8390. 12-8 Roommate to share 2 bdrm. apt. in Jay- hawk Towers. $162.50. Utilities Included. 841-2792. 12-8 Legislative Aides. January 12-14. Penile a good, say experience, possible college cred- ience. Terrace, 6644. Heilton, 6031 SW W. Terrace. Terrace, 6644. 911-258-8600, 727-1592-evenings. Male or female roommate to share 2 bdmr. apt. Fully furnished except your bdmr. $150.749-3533. 12-8 Roommate wanted, female or male to share nice large 2 bdmr. town house, $115 + ; electricity. Call John 843-1916 or 842-2001. I am making my annual Christmas migration to Wyoming, via i-70 or I-125. If you need a ride call Hank at 842-7933. Departure and return times negotiable. 12-9 Person to share house: Excellent location 301-687-2140 no utilities. Call after 8:30, 8:40, 8:50, 9:00, 9:10, 9:20 Neat, student- non-smoking female to 120-240 ft², utilizes $79-281 SF $124.50 ± 6.15 utilities and deposit $296.38 ± 16.06 Female roommate to share furnished 2 bdrm. Jahawkher Towers apts with 3 others spring semester. $95.50 includes utilities except phone. 749-1548-12-8 Roommate wanted to share 3 bdmr. 2 story apt. in house 1 bk from stadium. $110 mo. + 1/3 ecle 1st Jan. 749-5220. 128 Roommate; neat, non-smoker; to share two bdm. apt. $140 mo. plus ½ utilities. Call 789-140-719. Scott 749-1019. 12-8 Roommate needed (Desperately!) Share 1.7 seats. Turtles. Cell 442.08631. B A B. 12-8 Roommate needed (Desperately!) Share 1.8 costs. Towers Call 841-9853. A.S.U. 12-8 Female roommate for at least two semesters to be admitted to the program. Must have a master's degree after 3:00 or 842-1234, 12:68- Anyone but a DEAD HEAD wanted for a roommate. Call 841-7628. 12-8 1 or 2 roommates for next semester. Call 749-2238. Ask for Rick. Wanted one female roommate for spring and summer. Towers $93. 12-8 mediately. 748-2653 I need to rent an apartment or a room only for Christmas break. Call 844-6268. 12-8 Female/Male roommate needed for brand new, furnished, luxury townhouse. Lots of comfort, bedroom, min. walk to compus 280. Series. Serious. only please. 725-2433 anytime. 12-8 Housemate wanted to share large 5.8 bldm. Room $100 monthly + 1/6 utility $100 deposit. Move in now or at semester. 84+. For Darryl for Darryl) 12-18 all nights Will buy MHST 136/336 textbook. Music by Daniel T. Politoski. Please call Betty. 842-3427. 12-8 Roommate to share 3 bdm, townhouse with 485-88-88, many luxuries $150, 88-88-88 Roommate - wanted immediately. $200 plus cheap meal at Bears @ 42-851 12-8 save message Female housemates to share three bdrm Cables A181-9456 $100 +13 bdrm Call Athena 814-1546 12-8 Christian Campus House has a few openings. Apply soon. Call 842-6539 between House wanted 3 or 2 bdm, good condition. Bryan Wade MISSION, KS 66077, 12-8 Shawnee Mission, KS 66077 Soralei/Reader Services Librarian, University of Kansas School of Law Library (KU) offers accredited credit and knowledge of the legal profession given to applicants with Knowledge Preference given to applicants with knowledge of library automation, serial cataloging services duties with other librarians, involvement in salary commensurate with experience. Salary commensurate with experience. 1809 An旧 R.I.Ad School of Law University of Kansas Lawwrence. Kansas 60502 ACTION EMPLOYER. 12-8 Female roommate: Nice older home, very close to campus. Call for more information. 841-8470 Dana 12-8 Liberal roommate for 2 bdrm. Gastight Apt. $142.50 + \frac{1}{2} elec. On Bus Route 749-1250. 12-8 1 or 2 female roommates needed for furnished apt. on bus route. Rent $119 (or 70) mo. Call TerviR 841-8383. 12-8 HELP! My roommate has went south for the winter (and spring!) new mats are available. Go to your room, apt. Available Dec. 17. Closet mat. campus $125 + 1/2 utilities. Paid 12-8. Female rooms accommodate needed IMEDIMEDATELY to Towers 519.191 m. Utilities included. Towers 519.191 m. Utilities included. --- Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magley and Body Neal need a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or out of hand. They know the plight of the subliminator. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU top seven with 26 points, with the Red team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-66 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play.' "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team unin- defeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeatline Tennessee 88-80. Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 29-to-30-foot range. But Morehare State should be aired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament. "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I think we have to play for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in here without notettery and play really well." Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10-speeder, sat out much of the game and scored incarnated Oral Roberts 48-35 and shot 67 percent. TITAN COACH Ken Hayes didn't say why a treat John Loon did but he did say that his team had won, a fact the manager didn't know. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline to get us going." johnson said that the problem was the good play of the Javahawks. "We worked on it but they were shooting and they had that big fellow, I don't know how big, but he was a terror inside." Johnson said. "We're sooing to learn from all these games." Johnson should not feel left out. Nobody knows how big KU's junior college transfer center Victor Mitchell is, and after last night, probably nobody really cares. The crowd gave him a thumbs up, but the team teammate, replaced him late in the second half. He scored 18 points on 9-of-11 shooting. KU SHOT 56 percent for the game and had five players in double figures with John Crawford and Art Housey the only members of the top seven who didn't make it. Mitchell led the team with 18, Magley and Darnell Valentine had 16 each, Tony Guy had 14, and Neal came off the bench for 10. KU got off to a quick start with Magley scoring the Jayahawks' first three baskets. They were up by 10 at the half, and Owens said that he thought the team was ready for Oral Roberts and not flat, as it was against Michigan last Wednesday. "I knew all day we were really sharp," he said. "In our morning session and afternoon meeting they were really alert. It was totally opposite of Wednesday night. We were flat then." Oral Roberts tried to play a running game against the Jayhawks but it backfired with KU KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napar to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10-foot senior. If they are tired, as Gwenn expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of pro depth. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't the only KU player who played well against Oral Roberts 7-foot center Mr. Prusater. Walk-on George Thompson was excited after the game about his two rebounds and about blocking one of his shots 'shots in his two minutes of playing time. Darnell Valentine passed out eight assists Saturday night to go with his 23 in the other three games. He is averaging nearly eight a game. Mitchell's 9-of-11 increased his shooting percentage to 68 percent. He hit 71 percent last season at Amarillo, Texas, Junior College. Tany McGrath now plays at Iowa for four year as well as being the Jayhawk's leading scorer. The crowd of 14,400 was the largest to see a game in Allen Field House this season. Only one player has fouled out of a game for KU this season. The player, John Crawford, fouled out in the final second of the game against Michigan last Wednesday. Louisville, who embarrassed the Big Eight in football this season by beating Kansas 17-9, was embarrassed by the conference in basketball Saturday. The Cardinals, the defending NCAA basketball champions lost to Oklahoma State 72-71 on a desolation shot at the buzzer. Louisville, ranked third in the country before the season, is 0-3. The Cardinals will meet two more Big Eight teams, Kansas State and Missouri, before the season is over. K-State lost to Louisville by 2 points 71-48, in the second round of last year's NCAA playoffs. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-overthing pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for a visit to his former career berlin, who played on the NBA champion 1966-67 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team include Kareem Abdul-Quddiz, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his No.13 Jersey at some future date. Chamberlain has admitted for more than a decade that he was ranked by the conditions under which he left the 76ers after the 1968 season. In other long-standing foes of former KU athletes, Jo Jo White accepted an invitation to have his 10. Jarley retired some time in the future by the Boston Celtics. White, a former All-American, was upset with the way the Celtics traded him midway through the 1978-79 season. White, who retired from basketball early this season, has returned to his Lawrence home. His future, which he hopes includes coaching basketball, is uncertain right now. The alleged miscue of athletic department telephone credit cards by two KU basketball players and a former player was discussed Friday at a Big Eight Conference meeting of faculty members and athletic directors in Kansas City, Mo. No action was taken. The players involved are Darnell Valentine and Tony Gwike. Gibby Rose is a former player. and Tony Guy, Ricky Ross is a former player. The conference decided to accept mild penalties imposed on Oklahoma and Oklahoma State by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The conference had the option to impose harsher penalties. Darrell Valentine G 62 Sr. Tony Guy G 64 Jr. John Michell C 64 Jr. John Cameron F 67 Jr. David Magley F 67 Jr. PROBABLE STARTERS 1986 George Thompson Johnson, Gerald GF 7-12 FEB 4-7 A PF 23 T10 Acres. 7-12 7-12 7 0 7 0 TP Prusatour. 4-10 3-4 6 0 4 11 Bottleneck, Carl GF 5-17 4-4 7 2 11 Williams. 3-7 0-1 2 0 1 6 Dahl. 0-1 0-1 0 0 1 6 McGee. 0-2 0-1 0 1 0 1 McGee. 0-2 0-1 0 1 0 1 Totals. 27-71 10-15 17 7 16 66 | | FU | REB | A | PF | TP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Magley | 8-11 | 0-9 | 9 | 1 | 16 | | Crawford | 8-11 | 0-9 | 9 | 1 | 16 | | Mitchell | 9-11 | 0-0 | 5 | 2 | 18 | | Mitchell | 9-11 | 0-0 | 5 | 1 | 18 | | Valentine | 6-12 | 4-4 | 3 | 14 | 16 | | Valentine | 6-12 | 4-4 | 3 | 2 | 16 | | Houser | 8-11 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 19 | | Houser | 8-11 | 0-0 | 3 | 1 | 19 | | Summers | 1-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Wich | 8-11 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Wich | 1-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Knight, Mark. | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Knight, Mark. | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | Worrell | 0-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 19 | | Worrell | 0-3 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 19 | | Total | 39-10 | 17-14 | 63 | 18 | 35 -- | | Real Heritage | | | | | | Officials: John Van Why, Wayne Unrush Technical Fouls: Gerald Johnson Attendance: 14,400 Hadl withdraws from Aztec coaching race Sometime today San Diego State will announce new head football coach. It will be a men's team. the head coach of their football program. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, one of five finalists for the position head coach. In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadl said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as "However, I'm excited about the possibilities that we have at Kansas University for a successful football program. As a result, I have asked San Diego to make my name out of any further consideration for the head position." Hadi has been in San Diego for almost Spencer Museum Book Shop Books Magazines Posters Cards On the Visual Arts Open during gallery hours a week on a recruiting trip. On Thursday he met with the screening committee and the school's athletic director. The Aztecs are searching for a replacement for Claude Gilbert, who Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATION ■ CAR RENTAL ■ REPAIRS ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS CALL TODAY! travel service 900 MASS KANSAS UNION 843-1211 Winter Park '81 March 14-20 four days and nights all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign-up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 inter Park '81 was fired in mid-November before the final game of a 3-8 season. KU Head Coach Don Fambrough said Friday that Hadi had not contacted San Diego State officials, but was contacted by them. THE SWEDISH SHOP Scandinavian Importe Holiday Plaza 25th and Iowa (west of Kief's) UNIQUE SCANDINAVIAN GIFTS Take home unique Christmas gifts imported from Scandinavia. $1.50 up Jewelry, stem and barware, kitchen utensils, trays of all colors, teakwood products, tiles, candleholders, linens, teapots, wood carvings, clogs, stainless steel trays and bowls, pocket knives, book markers, letter openers, key chains, crystal items such as bowls, vases, pitchers, animals, paper weights and ash trays. See you before you leave Hours 10-6 daily Thur, til 8 Sundays 2-5 SALE Pre-Christmas clearance of outdoor gear Sleeping bags, backpacks, stoves and mini-lanterns all at least 25% off Coleman Peak 1: Also up to 50% discounts and more on some odd items and discontinued models of tents, boots,jackets, shirts,etc. . . Example: $89.00 0 degree bag now $60.00 $70.00 frame backpack now $49.95 Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 ROCK CHALK REVUE IN BETWEEN ACTS AND M.C.'s AUDITIONS Sun. Dec. 7th 4-8 p.m. Mon. Dec. 8th 5:30-10 p.m. Tues. Dec. 9th 10 a.m.-1 p.m. CALL BACKS Tues. Dec. 9th 2-6 p.m. Room 209 Murphy Bring a prepared song— Dance will be taught— Accompanist will be provided --- OPENINGS FOR SPRING I am so happy to see you. I love you very much. "Friendly people. Private bathrooms. The staff. That's what I like about Naismith." Amy Sheftel, Sophomore Prairie Village, Kansas Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843- Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features P10 11 11 14 11 14 4 0 0 0 0 @ P16 2 8 14 14 4 10 0 0 0 0 0 @ P16 2 8 14 14 4 10 0 0 0 @ University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas THE University Daily KANSAN Tuesday, December 9, 1980 Vol.91, No.73 USPS 650-640 JSA JRA JEA KJA SJA GSA RBA Happy Holidays e, ho Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher 8v KEVIN BERTELS ports Writer Guys like David Magley and Body Neel spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or out of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU top seven with 24 points, with both the Roat team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-65 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they go to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I think we can do it in the valley Confederate teams. They come in here without notetaker and play really well." TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why he'd come down but he did that his team needed better. MOREHEAR STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeat Tennessee State 88-80. Saturday night's game against Oral Roberta was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10-specier, cut out of much of the team as it scored Oral Roberta 48-35 and shot 67 percent. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline to get us going." KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot 2-uni guard Norris Beckley, 4-foot 6-juvenile forward Greg Coldron and 4-foot 6-sohmore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-enlightening pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Champion of the Atlantic Coast, he will play 57 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former team in a ceremony honoring that team. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 8-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10-bearer. If the Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their team will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. The 1986-87 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team included Mark Jackson, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-19 shooting, mostly from the 20 to 30-foot range. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't use only KU player who played well against Oral Warrior. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. SCHOLAR The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 Jersey at some future date. Chamberlain has admitted for more than a decade that he was ranked by the one But Morehead State should be aired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament. bt bt hc Vlnt st te H pl ar se we wa e B. m. fo M. fo M. "I The We ag Hadl withdraw Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It won't be John Hadl. the head program. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position until he withdrew his name Friday. In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadl said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as "Howevе possibilitie University program. Diego Stat further coach posi Hadl has Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Position On the Visual A Open during gallery H Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE - ENCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! AIRLINES --- Winter Pa March 14-20 four days and nights all options $271 or lodging. $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 Winter Pa March 14-20 A Page 2 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 CARL F. WEBB I'll just provide a short description of the image. The image is a black and white photo featuring two individuals standing side by side. On the left, there is a man wearing a dark suit with a light-colored shirt and a dark tie. He has a broad smile and is looking directly at the camera. On the right, there is a woman wearing a dark suit with a light-colored shirt and a dark tie. She has a soft smile and is also looking directly at the camera. Both individuals appear to be posing for the camera, possibly in an outdoor setting given the visible texture of the ground and the presence of a tree trunk behind them. ALFREDO A. ROMANO the holiday season in clothes from Mister Guy . . holiday ideas for men and women from famous designers Polo by Ralph Lauren, Gitman Brothers, Bert Pulitzer, and Bill Blass . Christmas hours: M T W Th F 9:30-8:30 Sat 9:30-6:00 Sun 1:00-5:00 MISTER GUY 920 MASS. 842-2700 Christmas hours: M.T.W. Th F 9:30 8:30 Sat 9:30 6:00 Sun-1:00 5:00 MISTER GUY 920 MASS. 842-2700 We will resume publication January 15. The stories in this edition may appear under some unfamiliar bylines. Several of the people who have worked behind the scenes to bring you each day's Kansan have come forward to write some of this material to read between exams or on the trip home. Wherever you spend the holidays, the Kansan staff wishes you a wonderful time. This holiday tabloid is the fall 1980 Kansan staff's farewell to its readers. We thank all of you for your attention and reply the past few months. We have enjoyed serving you. KU faculty recall holiday memories By ELIZABETH MORGAN Staff Reporter The eight-year-old, already crazy about football, was ecstatic that Christmas. Santa had left a complete football uniform under his Christmas tree. OF ALL THE DAYS of the year, December 25 is one that can usually be remembered years later. Some of those memories are more vivid than others, because they were joyful, days, and sometimes because they were sad days. The memory stands out among others as one of the best. He said he hadn't had a bad Christmas that he could remember, but, when he was 12 years old, it was in the service during World War II." "I'll never forget that, and that's a been long, long time," KU Head Football Coach Don Fambrogh said, "I knew when I was 15. He told me, that what's always wanted." Notables around campus shared some of their stories and worst memories of Christmas last year. William Warfield, Langston Hughes visiting professor of music, also remembered a lonely Christmas when he was in the service. The presents he received as a child were not extraordinary—usually clothing he needed—but he enjoyed Christmas with his family. He recalled looking forward to the cakes and pies his mother baked, and going to bed early on Christmas Eve to pass the time until Santa came. "There was a lot of activity and a 'beautiful dinner,' but it was lonely because it wasn't a place I knew." Acting Chancellor Del Shakel was too much of a good thing that was too much of a good thing. "I was somewhere between the ages of five and ten," he said. "Along with my parents, we visited my grandparents in Alberta, Canada. We got caught in a car crash." Chevy. The car froze over and broke down. It was a cold December night." One Christmas he recalled fondly was when his children were able to enjoy the holidays. It wasn't a white Christmas, but William Balfour, HOPE Award winner and professor of music, thought his student to Florence from New Mexico "away from the cold" was exciting. ONE CHRISTMAS, when he was about to pleaseant, he had. He had the mummy. Debbie Shumate, Lawrence theater graduate who played Sandra Dee in KU's recent production of "Grease," said, "All of my Christmashes have been wonderful!" But last year's celebration was especially nice, she said. "I spent it with a friend of mine and his Christmas. Christmas lasted all day. We opened one present at a time, and it took us five hours to go through them. I also was given a stocking that came up to my shoulder, and I had to go through that." Bert Coleman, student body president, couldn't remember a bad Christmas He recalled one especially enjoyable holiday seven years ago when there was 24 inches of snow on the ground at his home in Wichita. "It's the best time of the year." he said. The University Daily KANSAN Editor Carol Reel Wolf Business Manager Elaise Strahler Managing Editor Cynthia Hughes Editorial Editor Diana Lewis Campus Editor Judy Woodburn Associate Campus Editor Jolyen Sylver Associate Campus Editors Don Munday, Mark Spencer, Christian Gaynor Associate Sports Editor Gene Myers Sports Editor Pat McDonald Entertainment Editor Kevin Mills Make Up Editors Leslie Fengley, Ellen Iwanto, Tom Bedeck Wed Editors Toni Bedeck, Tom Woolman Copy Chiefs Gail Eggers, Ellen Iwanto, Tammy Tierney Scotographer Ted McDougall Staff Photographers Ben Bigler, Ken Combs, ScottHooker, Dave Krau, Drave Teresa Staff Reporters Kathryn Brunell, Cindi Curti, Ray Formanek, Arne Green, Vassica Herron Staff Journalists Bob McNeely, Jay Neumholt, Patrick Weensa Staff Writers John Vogrin, Patrick Weensa Columnists Mark Pitney, Ted Lickey, Fred Markham, Bill Menesa, Susan Scheiner Artists Joe Bartos, Bred Bolton, John Junki, Lena Nemuan Artist Sales Manager John Richardson, Kevin Koster Campus Sales Manager Caroline Huang National Sales Manager Nancy Claucon Club Manager Jane Clark Makeup Manager June Wendertorp Treasures Manager Joe Searle Staff Artist Bob Searle Staff Photographer Brian Watkins Retail Sales Representatives Rick Hankey, Sam Britton, Brandon Curtis, Terrie Fry, Bill Grupo, Larry Lebedow, Paul O'Connor Campus Sales Representatives Thiane Shaeffer, Anthony Tilson, Katie Wiese港 Campus Sales Representatives Julie Anderson, Dennis Honek, Mark Johnson General Manager and News Advisor Tim Schaffer, Howard Shanklay, Katie Wiese Rick Musch four days and night all options. $271 or lodging. $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 boots, jackets, shirts, etc. . . . GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Nasmith Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 3 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 3 The day after Thanksgiving is generally considered to be the first day of the Christmas season, but visitors to the Country Club Plaza in Kansas City got a head start on the festivities Thanksgiving night. More than 120,120 people jammed the Plaza that night to see the Plaza Lights come on for the first time of the year. A flip of a switch by Royals star George Brett turned the shopping area into a wonderland of color. Plaza lights blazing on By DOUG BURSON Staff Reporter After three months of preparation, shimmering lights once again adorn the many shops and stores that make the city a festive place. In 4, 8, a Christmas fairyland this time of year. Beginning on Memorial Day, four men worked every day on the lighting, constantly checking electrical lines that stretch nearly 47 miles. The crew spent 3,000 working hours ensuring that the 152,000 white, green, amber, red and blue lights that outline the Plaza were in working order. The Plaza lights have gained international recognition since 1925 when a single strand of Christmas lights was used in the area by the area by Charles Pitrat, a local resident. Today, the Plaza Merchants Association finances the project and sees to it that light sockets, condensors, and wiring are embedded into a package of beautiful color. "The single strand of lights that Charles Pitrat used as his way of contributing to the Christmas spirit has grown into the city's most beloved City," Catherine Rickbone, director of public relations for the Plaza Association, said. "Preparing and making sure the lights are assembled and working correctly has been a major challenge." The lights are traditionally turned on officially sometime during Thanksgiving evening and are lighted at 5 p.m. each day after. The lights are not actually turned on for the first time on Thanksgiving evening. Rickbone said that two days before the holiday, a symmetry, a lest run is made from 2 to 4 a.m. From the time the official lighting takes place until January 1, Kansas Citians and people from across the country and around the world see the renowned Plaza lights. "Before the Kansas City International Airport was built, some airplanes were intentionally routed so that passengers the lights from the air." Rickbone said. Some spectators even view the scene from the air. The Plaza lights have had a colorful history in more than one way. One year each of the buildings was done in blue lights alone. "We decided not to do that again because it looked so boring," Rickbone said. In earlier years, along with the spectacle of lighs, each building was lined with Only during World War II was the Plaza Association prevented from highlighting the Plaza with Christmas lights because of a mandatorily blackout. A number of well-known people have had the honor of switching on the lights over the years. Royals star George Brett and Nancy McBride, a 28-year-old woman from Shawnee Mission, flipped the switch this year. "Once we had the mayor of Seville, Spain, turn on the lights from his hometown through a hook-up we put together," Rickbone said. Clarence Kelly, director of the FBI; Charles Wheeler, former mayor of Kansas City, Mo.; foreign students and the mayor of Perth, Australia, have been some of the others who have participated in the lighting ceremony. Some people had made reservations for rooms at the Alameda Plaza Hotel, directly across from the Plaza, more than a mile away. The hotel could witness the lighting, ceremony. Beginning January 2, the long process of dismantling the lights and wire will begin and should be completed by Easter, Rickbone said. WASHINGTON—A consumer group last week singled out a plastic beagle that "pudderies" in its own pan as the most toy of the 1800 Christmas shopping season. "The only gimmick with this toy is that here's a dog that urinates," said Ann Brown, head of the Americans for Inventive Action Consumer Affairs panel. Puddling puppy wins '80 award as stupidest toy By United Press International The toy is called "My Puppy Puddles," and is made by Hasbro. The group also said that a stuffed teddy bear made by Sunkyng Ltd. in Seoul, Korea, was the most dangerous toy found in its annual survey. It said the bear's small nose was easily removed, revealing a plastic peg and rusty metal disc with sharp edges, any of which could be deadly if swallowed. A spokesman for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said that he did not know if the bear was under investigation, but that imported stuffed animals were a problem this year and shopper should examine them carefully. See PUPPY page 4 Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guy's like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or out of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU's top seven players were glad to sit and watch the Red team, which had not made a practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-65 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. th b "" hc v n t e H p l a s w e s b M b O f o M t h W a r MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player thus far has been junior guard Glenn Nieman, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-6/19 shooting, mostly from the 20- to 30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournaments. the head program. Sometimes today San Diego State will nounce its new head football coach. It Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, is one of five finalists for the position to be named next fall. Hadl withdra Howe possibilii Universit program. Diego Sta further In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Hadl ha Spencer Museum Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service - AIRLINE TICKETS - HOTEL RESERVATIONS - CAR RENTAL - EURAIL PASSES - TRAVEL INSURANCE - EXORGED TOURS TODAY "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Couch Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I ask you to play for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notesty and play really well." TITAN-COACH Ken Heyes wouldn't say why he needed bowtie but he did assume that his team needed better Saturday night's game against Orbella Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10 speedster, sat out much of the action in a scarcely observed Orbella Roberts 48-35 and shed 67 percent. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline CALL TODAY! MEXICO CITY - JANUARY 14, 2023 Winter March 14-20 1976 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 4-foot 6-junior forward Greg Coldron and 4-foot 6-sophomore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-8-0 freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-4-0 eight-1. If the Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their team will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. The 1968-67 76ers were voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball players. The team members of the team were Billy Cunningham, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't the only KU player who clashed well against Oral Giles. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-verything pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the 1965 NASCAR Championship, who played on the NBA championship 1965. Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. The team is expected to ask Chamberlin's permission to retire his 13 jersey, some of which were worn in World Cup games. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1972 Page 4 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Christmas symbols have historical link By KAREN SCHUELTER Staff Reporter Staff Reporter Christmas symbols, hundreds of years old, adorn doors and fireplaces during the holiday season, but the origins and origins of these symbols have often lost. Some of these symbols have origins that go back to the early days of Christianity, with some being derived from them. One of the most popular Christmas images in the United States, Santa Claus, descended from an actual historical figure. The real Nicholas was a bishop in the city of Myra, in what is now Turkey, during the first half of the fourth century, according to John Macauley, associate professor of religious studies. The wealthy bishop was known for his charitable gifts to the poor. By the ninth century, a fictional account of the Crusades, popular throughout the Western World. IN THE 10TH CENTURY, the shrine and relics of Nicholas were moved to Bari, Italy, after the Mosmas conquered Myra. The Byzantine army carried the legend back to Germany. From Germany, the story of Nicholas and his good works spread to Holland. In the mid-18th century Queen Victoria of England and her husband, Prince Albert, who was German, popularized the legend in England. Macaulay said. In the book Christmas Traditions, William Muir Auld traces the tradition of hanging mistletoe above doorways to ancient rituals in England. IN ANCIENT ENGLAND, the cutting of mistletoe was a sacred religious ceremony accompanied by sacrifices and festivals. When the celebration ended, the mistletoe was divided among the townpeople, who hung it above their doors. The plant was believed to have protective and curative powers against disease. Gradually, the significance of mistletoe was transformed from a symbol of healing to one of love and good will, and its purpose was to provide a virtual realm to the worldly use it now has. Auld believes the Christmas tree to be the creation of several historical factors. One was the ancient pagan worship of vegetation. Another factor was a legend that said that on the first Christmas night, all the trees bloomed and bore fruit. This legend started in Arabia in the 10th century and spread throughout Europe. The Christmas card, a more recent tribute to Christmas love, first appear in England in 1965. According to John Dinardo, manager of public information for Hallmark Cards, the first Christmas card was designed in 1843 by a British artist. John Calcott Horsley. A London businessman, Henry Cole, who had forgotten to write out the personal notes of good wishes that were customary, commissioned Horsely to design the card. He designed a card depicting a family Christmas, raising wine classes in a tavern. In 1875, a Boston lithographer, Louis Prang, made the first American Christmas cards. He was the first printer to use religious designs on the cards. Puppy From page 3 Federal investigators are finding wren, razor blades and a variety of other dangerous objects inside stuffed animals. The team found that in a dozen importers, the spokesman said. The toy dog criticized by the group in its ninth annual toy survey is a plastic beagle about the size of a man's shoe. When the neck is squeezed and his snout pushed up in his red plastic pan, the water is sucked up through holes in the dog's tongue. When the dog is placed in the back part of the tray, a peg sticks the dog's underside and the water puddles into the "training pan." "Here is a toy whose whole purpose is to make a dog go to the bathroom," the baby said. "And you can use the toy 'quickly' caught on the fact that you don't need all the paranormalia to make him go. This toy is based on a ridiculous and questionable concept." The group gave its "worst of the year" award to "Baby Cry and Dry," a Remco toy that is given water and cries until her diaper is chaned. Children, including two boys who played with the doll during the group's tests, quickly found that just pressing "activators" between the doll's legs caused her to cry even when no water was involved, it said. "We don't see that there's any play value in getting boys to press an activator between a doll's legs," Brown told reporters. Other criticized toys included: "Zany Zappers", play sunglasses the group said didn't work the way they are advertised; the "F-15 Eagle", a plane it called potentially dangerous; "Rodan", a plastic monster it termed "ugly and gross". --boots, jackets, shirts, etc. Boone's RETAIL LIQUOR A Fine Selection Of Imported & American Wines, Cordials, & GIFT BOTTLE Other Spirits. 843-3339 Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd Give yourself a treat—and your pocketbook too! Shampoo Haircut Blow Dry $11.00 HAIR LORDS styling for men and women 1017 1/2 Mass 841-8276 REDKEN open Mon.-Thurs. til 9 by appointment. Fr. & Sat. 11:50 all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864-3477 Best Wishes The University Daily KANSAN The staff of the University Daily Kansan thanks its advertisers and readers for their support during the post semester and wishes everyone a joyous and festive Holiday Season. 864-4358 Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 SMITN Hall Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 5 Dwarf Complementary Recondition-Blow Dry with a Hair Cut (offer good through Dec 19) Complementary Facials by Ann through the month of Dec. REDKEN® Visa & Mastercard Accepted hair gallery Grooming For Men Formerly Park Hill Plaza Studio 2430 Louisiana Phone 842-8372 hair gallery Grooming For Men Beauty For Women Farmers Park Hill Plaza Studio 23301 oustiana Phone Phone 842-8372 Jantzen WARMHEARTED IDEAS What sweaters is the about this year. Jantzen's Scotch Turtles combine the warmth and luxury of Shetland wool and the neat tart yarns of Diceon. Perfect companions for the end of warm down thermostats. Sweaters start at $21 in June 5, XL. Cassems 811 MASS. 843-3180 DON'T SIT ON YOUR BOOKS, SELL THEM! To Your I will always be here for you. Kansas Union Bookstores December 8th-19th At Two Locations: Main Store Level 2, Main Union Satellite Union Satellite Shop, or BEST QUALITY * BEST PRICES * BEST SERVICE YOUR KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORES Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guyts like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or bad at hands of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU's top seven players, Ned Benson and the Red team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konec, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to do them well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House on Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player thus far has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be aired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournaments. the head program. Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It won't be John Hadi. Hadl withdra Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position until he withdrew his name Friday. "Howeve possibilii University program. Diego Sta further In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as coach pos Hadl ha Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATION ■ CAR RENTAL ■ BUSINESS TICKETS ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS CALL TODAY! PITCH FIELD CALL TODAY! "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I wonder if we can play for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notoriety and play really well." Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10-speedeter, sat out much of the game, and his team recovered Oral Roberts 43-85 and shot 67 percent. Winter March 14-20 TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why that team better want to play, but that his team better want to play. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I am unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline." four days and nights all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SQA Office 864 3477 ALEXANDER The 1986-87 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team were David Stern, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-energypro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Chambers played for the championship team in 1966-67 Philadelphia 76ers, will play teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 jersey at some point. He has never done that. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post marter, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-8foot 10-freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10foot 9-singer. Ifangles are tired, as Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't Page 6 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Senior finds Santa role rewarding By LINDA ROSEWICZ Staff Reporter Santa Claus greets the children in a train carriage. There is more to being a good Santa Claus than donning a red suit and carrying a sack of cookies. And Frank Solkirk, Lawrence senior, has proved it. DAVE KRAUK+KRISMAN Staff Michael Krenger, 4, tells Sally Claus his Christmas wishes outside the First National Bank building at Nishat and Massachusetts streets last week as other children wait their turns. "Santa" is Frank Selkirk, Lawrence student, who played to role after being hired by the Downtown Lawrence Association. Selkirk said that the fact that he is black made no difference to the children he met. "Santa Claus don't have a certain color, he's just Santa Claus." Selkirk, 28, is patrolling the sidewalks of downtown Lawrence this Christmas season wearing crimson apparel, snow-white whiskers and a big smile. "This has to be the most inspiring job in the world," Selik said last week during a break from his job as Santa, which he got from the Downtown Lawrence district whose kids come up to sit on my lap. I just have to be jolly. It makes me so happy." Selkirk pulled the detachable board from his chin but kept a watchful eye for them. "In this job, I am a hero, a fantasy," he said. "Children have dreamed about visiting me, so I do my best to live up to their expectations." AS A GRRNNING, 3-year-old boy rounded the corner into Selirk's view, he quickly pulled up the fake whiskers and waved to the child. His 6-foot-4-inch, 300-pound frame dwarfed the beaming little boy. "And what do you want for Christmas, little man?" he asked. "Racing cars," gushed the wide-eyed boy, "lots and lots of them." Selkirk chuckled and told the boy to be sure and behave. He then promised to bring the cars on Christmas morning. "And don't forget to leave some milk on the ice cream." Kirkbride said as he handed the boy a cartoon. "There haven't been any problems because of that," he said. "Santa Claus doesn't have a certain color—he's just Santa Claus." Selkirk, who is black, said he had not encountered any difficulties because of his SELKIRK SAID he had not been sure that he could get a job as a professional Santa and had looked first for a volunteer position. Ann Yetman, a member of the board of directors of the DLA, said she hired Selkirk for the job because of his good humor and magnetic personality. "I really love children, and I love Christmas, so I knew I wanted to be Santa," he said. "I feel lucky to have been hired for this job." "He has a real knack for making people happy," she said. "One day, my 13-year old daughter was still laughing 20 minutes old. She was our house. His joliness is just infectious. Selkirk's love for children goes beyond his job as downstown's Santa. He is in bed in the Big Brother program, the Boys' and the Boy Scouts in Lawrence. "I find that helping kids is more rewarding than almost anyone else," he said. "It just makes me feel good. Being a Santa is the best job of all, though." --sportswear . . . I As you look forward to making your Holiday gift selections consider our collection of quality mens clothing and - PENDLETON . . . shirts, blankets, sweaters, & robes - SERO . . . dress and sports shirts - BYFORD . . 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Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Naismith Hall Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 7 Here's Your Chance to Really Save $$$ On Christmas Gifts for Him, Her, or Even You at KING Jeans LEVI'S Christmas Sale levi's Corduroys Today thru Sunday, Dec. 14 EE·CEE Overalls & Painters Pants King of Jeans will give you LEVI'S Blue Jeans BY APPENDAGEZ fashion Jeans Calvin Klein LEVI'S Recycled Jeans Male Kennington Knits 20% LEVI'S Movin' on Jeans OFF CAMPUS Knits BVD Pocket T Shirts EVERYTHING IN THE STORE (regardless of price) EVEN IF IT'S ALREADY ON SALE! Flannel Shirts HANES Underwear levi's Socks Junior Tops VICEROY Jeans 20% OFF EVERYTHING levi's LEVI'S Women's Wear (California Straight) Shirts SAVE UP TO $7 ON AN ITEM! Come in & SAVE a bundle 20% OFF EVERYTHING! KING of Jeans levi's 740 MASS. Lawrence's Largest & Most Complete Jeans Store OPEN NIGHTS TIL CHRISTMAS! Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Gays like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench an freshman, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or poorly in hand. They know the pledge of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU's top seven players, will watch the Red team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to do them well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful." he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee State 88-80. pl th b "u b Vi n st s t H pl a se w e a B m O f o M "I t h W ag Their top player than has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a dire team, with the Mountaineers and Saturday in the tournaments, and traveling Sunday. Saturday night's game against Oral Robers was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-4oot 1-speedster, sat out much of the game and scored inscribed Oral Robers 48-39 and shot 67 percent. TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why he joined down but he did say that his team needs more players. "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us, I. U. Ohio, Chicago, Iowa Conference teams. They come in here without notetty and play really well." "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline." Sometime today San Diego State will anounce its new head football coach. It won't be John Hadl. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-verything pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Champion of the league this season is 57 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team were Mike McCarthy, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hail Greer. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, has one five finalists for position until the draft. Hadl withdra All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two postmen, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-8-foot 10-freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-4-foot 9-senior. If they were threed, an Owens inspects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. 2013 Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. the head program. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 jersey at some point. The other two players will be retired. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't able to show that Owl was on Gull. "Howeve possilitieh University program Diego Sta further c coach poos coach Badi ha Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service ABIREL TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! CORRECTIONS Winter March 14-20 four days and nights all options $271 all options $119 or lodging. $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864-3477 OXFORDS $6.99 Classically styled long sleeve button' down oxford cloth shirts. ELSEWHERE $16 $18 Choose from a wide selection of solid and novelty pullowers including boucle's and sheltails. Plus holiday blouses including poly-silks and poly-cottons. Excellent gift ideas. ELSEWHERE $18-$30 BETTER SWEATERS & BLOUSES $12-$14 Page 8 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 BLAZERS $31.00 DENIM JEANS $11.99 Updated denim jeans to look great in Select a pair or two from a good assortment of styles. ELSEWHERE $18-$20. Our entire stock of winter blazers: flannels, tweed, velveteens, and corduroys reduced! The wardrobe item that goes the farthest! ELSEWHERE $50-$90. SALE Good thru this week only FADS and FASHIONS LAWRENCI 217 Mass Lawrence 890 0500 TOOPEA FAIR AWN MALL 51305 W. 127TH St. Toronto K4 S6600 Chris Craft the original rubber duckies royal college shop 837 massachusetts 843-4255 --boots, jackets, shirts, etc. PROBLEMS FINDING A GIFT FOR AUNT REBEKAH? © BOW MFG. Christmas Gift Assortments From $5.95 Meats, Cheeses, Coffees, Teas, Fruits We Ship UPS Stinky Cheese Shoppe 925 Iowa At Hillcrest Shopping Center 10:30-6 Mon-Sat 'til 7:30 Thurs SUR TRAVEL Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features --- University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 9 Postmarks add stamp of Christmas By DON MUNDAY Assistant Campus Editor Looking for a way to add a special touch to ordinary Christmas cards? How about giving them a special Christmas postcard, perhaps reading "North Pole" or It's simple. Prepare your Christmas cards normally, addressing and stamping the envelopes. But instead of dumping them into the nearest mailbox, put them inside a large outer envelope addressed to the master of all of the cities listed below Just make sure you put enough postage on the outer envelope to get it to the parcel carrier. The mails already are flooded with holiday greetings, and these special post offices Include a note requesting a hand-cancellation of the Christmas cards with your child. MONTVILLE POKE, DEC 25 PM 1800 --are bound to be swamped with such requests. For holiday-sounding names, Christmas, Fla. 32709, and Noel, Mc4845, can be beat. But there's also a North Pole, Alaska 97957; a Holly, Mich. 48442; and a Canaan, Iowa 48116. They can be found in the postmarks of Nichollsville, Ky. 40356 and Santa Claus, Id. 47579. Or if you'd like postmarks with a more religious motif, try Bethlehem—there's a Bethlehem, Pa. 18016, as well as Bethlehem in Connecticut (06751); Indiana (47104); Kentucky (40007); and New Hampshire (03574). There's also a Nazareth, Pa. 18064, and a Nazareth, Texas 79063. Carrying the nativity scene a bit further, there's Shepherd, Mich. 48883, Shepherd, Texas 77717, and even a Shepherdsville, Ky. 40156. To extremes, there are Star, Miss. 39167, Star, N.C. 27356, and Angels Camp, Calif. 95222. English prof gives gift idea By DALE WETZEL Staff Reporter The English department has a great gift idea for Christmas. Instead of scratching new stereo records, trying to stuff another pair of socks in the drawer or taxing your overworked, over-examined mind trying to figure out the directions for the Atari Space Invaders, the department recommends purchasing a well-chosen book or two... After all, bookstores are among the least affected by the last-minute Christmas shopping crush. Crowd restraints are seldom needed around the Shakespeare rack, and Ernest Hemingway qui gets group sessions more than 20 years ago. TO GSST ASSIST prospective book buyers, James Carothers associate professor of marketing at Cornell University. See LIST page 10 GIFTS THAT ARE ALWAYS APPRECIATED Jeanne Bouchever polishes every outfit with the neat, complete Bermuda Bag. Club Handle $16. Assorted wool or corduroy covers. $11. Personalized with a choice of three monogram styles. $5. The Anne Klein collection of gloves from Aris. all under $17. SDE SCOT'S 919 Mass. Downtown Lawrence, Ks. MasterCard Visa Christmas Hours: 10:8-30 Mon-Thurs 10:6 Fri & Sat THE CHRISTMAS IDEA STORE Let our book buy back prices make a merrier Christmas. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. THE CHRISTMAS IDEA STORE Let our book buy back prices make a merrier Christmas. Jayhawk Bookstore 1420 Crescent Rd. 843-3826 8-5 Mon-Fri 10-4 Sat. KU ku Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magill and Body Neal spend a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or simply of the hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second game. Mugley, Neal and the rest of KU top seven players on the team, but the Red Team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. "They deserve a chance to play," Neal said. "It is a good feeling to do them well." Magley gave a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful." he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREIEAD STATE will bring a team unin defeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeatning Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player thus far has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be aired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament. the head program. Hadi, Kanaas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position as head coach. Hadl withdra Sometimes today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It won't be John Hadl. "Howeve possibiltie University program Diego Sta. further *coach pos.* coach Hadi ha In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Spencer Museum Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTELRESERVATIONS ■ CARRENTAL ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS CALLTODAY! "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. 1 team, we are for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notetaker and play really well." Saturday night's game against Oral Robers was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Teens 4-50th speedster, sat out much of the game and scored four scorched Oral Robbers 48-35 and shot 67 percent. TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wasn't say why he Johnson down, but he did say that his team needed him more. "I'm not painting the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline Winter March 14-20 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Engles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldron and 6-foot-6 sonhombre forward Eddie Childress. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10-four senior. If they are tired, Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-enhancing pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Championed by the 1987 All-Star Team and 67 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. 1978 scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. four days and nights Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 12. He is at some point in his career. The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball players. The team members of the team were Billy Cunningham, Mike Waltley, James Lake Jackson and Hal Greer. Page 10 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Needy get Christmas help from Salvation Army Church By KATHY MAAG Staff Reporter all options $271 or lodging $119 Signt up Deadline Dec. 2 at the SUA Office 8643477 Grocery sacks of unwrapped gifts, stacks of applications and waiting lines fill the halls and rooms of the Salvation Army Museum. New Hampshire St. as captains Robe and Nancy Thomson frantically prepare for their busiest season. With the help of caseworker Susan Beers, the Thomisons are preparing to provide counsel and assistance for the needy in Lawrence. "We start preparing in January for next year's Christmas," Beers said. "We ornament the room and arrive last week. We have a shore ahead of us to get everything finished on time." --- CALL NOW 842-4000 "Last year, we helped about 750 families in some way or another," he said. "This year, we plan to help about the same number, if not more." The church aids as many families as their funds allow, then refer the rest of their applicants to area clubs, schools and The 115-member church has set a $23,000 goal to help assist as many families as possible, Thomson said. - reservations must be made before you leave for Xmas. Families seeking assistance must voluntarily come in and sign a release before they can be helped, he said. The church donates toys, presents and food vouchers to those who apply. But the money has been slow coming in this year, Thomson said. WE KNOW WHERE TO HANG YOUR HAT IN STEAMBOAT!! For only $19^{95}$ per night. This includes BREAKFAST & DINNER AVAILABLE FOR SPRING BREAK MARCH 15-21* 703 MASS. downtown SUNHOWER TRAVEL SERVICE 9-5 Mon..Fri. 12:30 Sat. List where even the torturers have their own labor union. English, has been busy soliciting title recommendations from English faculty members. He said that although the list was useful as a Christmas guide, its value is limited to "encourage people to read new works with merit that aren't too widely known." From page 9 "You won't find too many of these recommended authors on the Today show." "It's a guild, actually," Gunn said, "and they practice their craft with certain skill and good practices and knowledge. They get here from orphanages, if I remember correctly." James Gunn, professor of English and author of several works of science fiction, recommends Ursula Le Guin's "The Left Hand of Darkness." The book describes a world in which the natives have an "unorthodox sexual arrangement," Guinn said. "Gethenians have the capability to be either male, female, or neither," he said. Gethenians have sex only during their period of "kemmer," Gunn said, a condition not unlike a animal estrus or "heat." FOR HIS PART, Carothers is more concerned with strikeouts than with space stations. A devout baseball fan, he recommends the Baseball Enclocvedonia. "When one Gethenian in kemmer meets another, one of them automatically assumes the role of female, and the other the role of male. All Gethenians can either father or bear children, but most of the time they are neither sex." Gunn also recommends "The Shadow of the Torturer," by Gene Wolfe, the first installment of a planned tetralogy. The book portrays a highly specialized society “It’s a real desert island book in baseball fans,” Carothers said, speaking under the benevolent gaze of an enormous poster. He keeps the Babe in his office, aloose from attention at St. Louis Cardinals and a baseball autographed by KU writers-in-residence. The Encyclopedia is not for casual baseball fans, Carothers warned. "When we meet someone, we assign them a stereotyped role, a sexual role, concerning what we can expect of them. On Gethen this doesn't happen. Gethienus respond to each other differently," Gunn said. "It's absolutely incomprehensible to the lukewarm baseball fan. It's 2,000 pages of statistics on everyone who's ever played major league baseball, from Babe Ruth to Tc Cobb to Charles Victory Faust," he said. IN THIS WAY, Gunn said, Le Guin points out the perversiveness of sexism in our culture, "sometimes in ways that we don't understand or notice." Carothers also recommends "Winnie the Pooh" and "The House at Pooh Corner," by A.A. Milne. ONE OF PROFESSOR Richard Hardin's recommendations is Erasmus "The Praise of Folly" which he needs to be read "now more than ever." 23 "Each of the Pooh characters has an archetypal human characteristic. Piglet's怒器 is bouncy. Eeyore gloomy. Pooh—oh, muddled." Caradherns said with a chuckle. In the book, the main character, Folly, praises herself as the force that makes the world go round. Harding thinks the book is particularly appropriate because "there's a lot of folly around these days." In the Holiday Plaza Every home Basketball game 5:00 pm until tipoff Carry-Out and Delivery 842-5824 842-5824 Gabriel's Basketball Buffet 2449 Iowa Gabriek's $1.99 all 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 Good Luck Jayhawks! --boots, jackets, shirts, etc. . . . SUN TRAVEL Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 smith Nall Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features Stores need holiday sales By CINDY WHITCOME Assistant Campus Editor Ringing Christmas bells and Santa's "Ho Ho Ho" are familiar Christmas sounds, but there is one sound that holiday greetings are conscious of—the ring of the cash register. University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 11 The commercialization of Christmas has kept the celebration alive in modern times, but it is making people lose sight of the spiritual meaning of Christmas, according to Jack Bremer, director of the Ecumenical Christian Ministries Center. "There is no doubt that Christmas has become commercialized," he said. "I know it's an easy way by an industry that has its biggest selling season during this time." Radcliffe is the owner of the General Bank store, 1000 Massachusetts St., and 2500 North Washington Blvd. ACCORDING TO Bob Radcliffe, president of the Downtown Lawrence Association, the Christmas season is the biggest retailing season of the year. "There are some businesses that do as much as 60 percent of their yearly business expenses." Bremer said he thought the commercialization occurred through mass advertising that emphasized gift giving instead of the celebration of Christ's birth. Besides spending money on gifts, there is much money to be spent on the trimming of the roof. "First of all, there is a lot of emphasis on giving and receiving," he said, "and then there is so much emphasis on extravagance and lavishness." Christmas trees are a must for almost every household. Susie Hatfield, ad- vocate to the Office of Public Works, says Center, 15th and New York streets, said the Christmas season was the center's biggest next to the spring planting season. The store sells both natural and artificial Natural tree prices range from $15 for a four-foot Scotch pine to $200 for a 10-foot Norway pine. For the artificial version, prices are higher. ARTIFICIAL TREES can be decorated, in the FICTIONAL and displayed, but they will never small like the trees on a beach. One tree at the Garden Center, called a Superleaf tree, stands seven-and-one-half feet tall. In full decoration of 700 multicolor lights, five strands of metal garland and 52 ornaments, the tree costs almost $300. Artificial trees do not drop needles to be cleaned up after. They are not a fire hazard and they can be used from year to year. That is why most people buy them, according to one clerk at the Garden Center. Another tree has an extra feature—a revolving stand that plays "Jingle Bells" as it turns the tree. The price of the stand is under $40. Another less expensive addition to any tree is "The Light and Sounds of Christmas," a rectangular piece of electronic equipment that is attached to the lights of a stair. The box makes the lights blink on and off to the notes of popular Christmas carols such as "Silent Night" and "We Wish You a Merry Christmas." An alternative to picking out a Christmas tree at a nursery or buying an art gallery is to buy a plant in a pot. Chris Edmonds, who owns Pine Hill Farm with her husband Steve, said most people came to their farm as an event rather than just to get a Christmas tree. What could be more festive than a paper Santa Claus wrapped in cellophane? The perfect addition to plastic trees he's found peering out of a store window at Everything But Ice. HEARTS AND STARS UNDER ALL YOUR WINTER WEAR. Eclipse makes turtlenecks and matching long johns in stars, hearts and strawberries. Turtlenecks. 915. Long johns. 919. Christmas Hours We Wrap a Happy Package carousel We Wrap a Happy Package Free, Of Course View MasterCard Carousel Charge --- WINTER WUNDERS by Glov-Ett. IN REAL LEATHER WINTER WONDERS by Glov-Ett. IN REAL LEATHER Gordon's SHOE CENTER 815 Mass. 843-7628 Gordon's SHOE CENTER 815 Mass. 843-7628 --- Page 18 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guy's like David Magell and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or not well in hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas bleed out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU's top seven players, will watch the Red team, as the reserves are called practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-66 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play'. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley gave a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they get to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field house against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team unindefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeat Tennessee 88-80. pi th th " " ho VI no st th H pl as se we be M b Me O f o M " M th W ag Their top player thus far has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament and traveling Sunday. TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why he'd come down but he did say that his team needed better defenders. Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10-speeder, sat out much of the game. He scored 6 ticks scored Oral Roberts 48-38 and shot 67 percent. "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I think we will do it for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notetaker and play really well." Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, for position to withdraw with dewalt. Fr Hadl withdra the head program. In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadli said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as "Howeve possibilis University program. Diego Sta further coach pos Had he scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post-master, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-0 freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10-8 senior. If Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 4-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldron and 4-foot-6 sohomore forward Eddie Childress. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't allowed to leave until well ahead of Crowl Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery PASADENA WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-verything pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Chambers was a graduate of St. Joseph's and 87 Philadelphia '76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Maupintour travel service Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CARRIER RIDE EURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! CARLISLE Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. Winter Pa March 14-20 The 1968-67 76ers were voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team included Billy Jones, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 Jahre at some point. Winter March 14-20 Page 12 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Fill your stockings this Christmas with great stocking stuffers from Saddlebrook. We've got a wide selection of perfect gift ideas, starting from $3.00! Come to the traditional Christmas Shop . . . Saddlebrook. Stocking Stuffers from Saddlebrook The Traditional Christmas Shop A Saddlebrook 710 Massachusetts Hours: Mon. - Thurs. 10:00 - 8:30 Fri. - Sat. 10:00 - 6:00 Sun. 1:00 - 5:00 four days and nights all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864-3477 boot, jackets, shirts, etc. . . . Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas SMITT 843-3328 Hall Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 13 Going Somewhere For The Holidays? Send Flowers Ahead. MERRY CHRISTMAS Order your out-of-town flower orders early! When you order early, the recipient is sure to get the full enjoyment of your gift. Have your flowers through the holiday season. Beat the last minute rush and enjoy the full beauty of your holiday gift. POINCETTE BORNO Owens FTD 9th & Indiana 843-6111 FLOWER SHOP --- Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magley and BODY Neel spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or not. In all of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas bleed out the Titans in the second goal and the rest of KU's top seven players were glued together. The team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konke, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feel to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. pl th th " " ho hi nst te he pl an se we ae be M be O fe M " M th th ag "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they get to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field house against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles own their tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeat Tennessee 88-80. Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, but they also played on Saturday in the tournament and a waving ceremony. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position until he withdrew his name Friday. the head program. Sometime today San Diego State will announce and football coach. It will be John Hahn. 'Howeve possilitiun University program. Diego Staif further (coach posit) Hadi ha In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Hadl withdraw "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I would like to play for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notetaker and play really well." Books • Magazines • Post On the Visual A Spencer Museum E TITAN COACH Ken Haven wouldn't say why he needed better play from the guard. That his team needed better play from the guard. Open during gallery Saturday night's game against Oak Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-4oot 10-speeder, set out much of the game. He scored 3-footed scored Oak Roberts 40-38 and shot 67 percent. Maupintour travel service "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline ■ BIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CARRENTAL ■ UBILIA RAILWAY ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS CALL TODAY! ALPHA BLAZE March 14-20 The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball players. The team's members of the team were Billy Cunningham, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Green. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-verything pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Chamberlain is named to the All-Star 87 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. B All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-4-0 fowl freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-4-0 fowl senior. If the Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their team will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. four days and nights Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. The team is expected to ask Chamberain's permission to retire his 13 Jersier at some age. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. four days and night all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't well-connected and well worn. Orn scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. Page 14 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Order any one-topping 12" pizza and get one FREE Coke for FINALS SPECIAL $5.25 with coupon only. Save $1.25 Order any one-topping 16" pizza and get two FREE Cokes for $6.50 with coupon only. Save $2.05 16 oz. Cokes for $.40 with: the purchase of any size pizza. Expires 12/23/80 Pyramid Pizza ALIENS EXPLOITED BY THE UNIVERSE. Pyramid Pizza 842-3232 FREE, Fast Delivery!! 507 W. 14th Open 'till 1:00 AM Every Night! Wipe Pile On! Going home's not the same By CATHERINE BEHAN Staff Reporter Thomas Wolfe said you can't go home again, but KU students disagree. After being home for Thanksgiving and with finals ahead, many students are looking forward to going home for Christmas break. Gretchen Day Sioux Falls, S.D. freshman, on the basketball falls, but wouldn't dare to stay away from here. She said she was closer to her friends here than those at home. Commercial See HOME page 15 From page 11 "It is usually a family affair," she said. "It is a fun event for them to do." The Pine Hill Farm is east of Lawrence off Highwade 10. BESIDES CHRISTMAS trees, wreaths on hang on doors and in windows can be found in almost every store. The wreaths are plastered with plastic pinecones and acorns. For the finishing Christmas touches, there are cans of spray snow and pincered room freshener. To set the Christmas mood in music, albums by artists range from the Statler Brothers to Ray Conniff are available. One album is titled "Christmas in the Stars" and is a spin-off of science fantasy movie, Star Wars. One of the featured songs is "What Can You Get a Wookie for Christmas When He Already Has a Comb?" Santa Claus can be seen in countless forms and made out of a variety of materials. In foli, he is wrapped around Christmas candy. In plastic, he is wrapped around a rolled-up cardboard. In metal, his nips light up when a string attached to his face is pulled. NOT ONLY the commercialization of Christmas season bothers some people, but also the advent of Christmas, which comes to come earlier and earlier every year. The retail Christmas season usually starts the day after Thanksgiving, according to Radcliffe, and that Friday is usually the biggest retail day of the year. "Of course there are always those who are going to start the day after Halloween," Radcliffe said. "That is the way it's always been." Bremer said he believed the time before Christmas should be a time of quiet preparation for the celebration of Christ's birth, not a time of celebration in itself. "The families need to get together and agree to simplify things," he said. "They could agree to give handmade gifts or money so they don't spend as much money." "The commercial peak of Christmas comes sooner, like a week or 10 days before Christmas," he said. "By the time the most meaningful day, Christmas day, comes, people are ready to throw away their trees and decorations." Bremner suggested some things to do to prevent getting caught up in the community. Bremer also said that toys for children should be carefully screened so that children don't get confused about the meaning of Christmas. The best way to celebrate Christmas is to carry on the tradition of Christmas by giving gifts. There's a Campbell's Gift for all the Men and Women on your Christmas list... 1976 Mothers - Dads, Sisters - Brothers, Boyfriend, Girlfriends, Aunts - Uncles, Friends - Neighbors, and so on and so on. -FOR HER- Blazers - Skirts Sweaters - Shirts Slacks - Ties Dresses - Vests Purses - Belts Headbands - Pins Long Socks - Velours Watchbands - Izodes Turtlenecks WE WISH YOU A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON: like Someone Happy this Christmas with a Gift from Campbell's. -FOR HIM- Sweaters - Shirts Jackets - Slacks Sport Coats Ties - Wallets Turtlenecks - Belts Robes - Colognes Gloves - Suits Umbrellas - Jewelry Raincoats Lady Campbell's Personalize your gift selection with a monogram - where possible. BILLIE SMITH 841 Massachusetts and Moon Campbell's Men's Wear Downtown Lawrence TRAVEL woots, jackets, shirts, etc. Sale begins Mon. Dec.8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 milen Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Nall Hall Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9,1980 Page 15 Home From page 14 "When I went home for Thanksgiving, people seemed to be different, more low key than my friends here, " Day said. "We were all nervous about the contrast between us more clearly." Dennis Karpowitz, assistant professor of psychology, said that after living away from home, students' perspectives versus the students themselves changed. "It's a different world when you are on your own and making your own decisions. Students are bombarded with new ideas that they don't understand the world may change," Karpowitz said. HE SAID GOING home was different for different people. "Some go home and it's the same, but what matters is how both the student and his parents view his independence," Karpowitz said. "If the parental hooks are still there and parents don't acknowledge the students' independence, then going home can be especially difficult." Marian Weenink, Eerebek, Holland, freshman, said she would not go home until the summer. She said she looked down before going home, but did not expect it to be easy. "I've changed and I think it will be hard to go home. Holland seems so far away and everything here in the states is so new and exciting." Wewinka said. Karpowitz said the stress of school may force students to do things that they may otherwise not do. He said this sometimes led him to ask his friends from home who did not go to school. "We are forced to live under similar conditions and the expectation to make new friends leads us to change where those old friends lead us to out these new ideas," Karpwitz said. John Jezk, Gladstone, Mo., freshman, said that when he came back from school, he would like to play softball. "It seemed like all my old friends were acting different, but I realized that I was the one who was acting different. I did things that I would not have done if I had been away, like renting a motel room so my friends and I could have a party," Jezak said. Martin Volker, Wichita senior, said, "Going home was unusual because I was not a part of the daily routine. I was surprised by how quickly things changed. "Now instead of expecting what's there, I look forward to seeing what's new." JOEL THORNTON, Lincoln, Neb, freshman, said his relationship with his parents was more relaxed than it was before he left for school. "It's better when you go back, but it's probably better because you aren't a part of the mainstream of everyday life there," Thornton said. Karpowitz said sometimes old roles came back quickly and the parent wanted to be more careful. "Once the student has been on his own," Karpowitz said, "he can't go back to the old parent-child role because the student is responsible for his own decisions for his life too long. "Some therapists recommend going home and trying to tie up loose ends with parents. For example, tell your parents that when they tell you to write a thank-you note, it bothers you because they don't let you use your own initiative." He said that students should bring a problem to their parents and discuss it. "Explain to them that even if you did a wrong thing, you need to live your own life," he said. "Say to them, 'Thanks Mom, but let me handle this.'" Christmas DOLLAR DAYS WOOL BLAZERS continents, hacking styles. sizes 5 to 15 reg. to $75, as low as $35 COLLEGETOWN COORDINATES SWEATERS classic sportwear in blazers, pants, skirts up to 50% off selected cowels. V-necks nd crews SASSON IUMPERS all 50% off wool flannels, worsteds. in many colors and styles. AVANTI LEATHER JACKETS, BLAZERS reg. $60 $29 fineest smooth and sueded imported skins, classics, sizes 6 to 16 as low as $78 GANT SHIRTS plaids, stripes in classic styles, sizes 8 to 16 reg. to $29 20% off Seigert 821 MASS. Selferts FREE GIFT WRAPPING 821 MASS. FREE GIFT WRAPPING Majestic Gifts From MANE TAMERS FREE GIFT WRAP SERVICE HAIR STYLING TOOLS Brush Irons Curling Irons Blow Drivers Curling Irons Brushes HAIR CARE BASKETS Blow Dryers Made to Order PIQUE FRAGRANCE LINE Perfume Open Late Most Evenings Cologne Bubble Bath Bubble Bath Scented Candles Dusting Powder lasting Powde GIFT CERTIFICATES For all Services and Products 1004 Mass 841-0906 NUMEROUS "Stocking Stuffer' Ideas Washington Square Geneva of James Ludwig Mies van der Rohe The Paulson's Foundation Broadway Fox Theater Honor Society of Arts Museo numerico Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Museum of Archaeology City University Hospitality Faculty Department of Archaeology --- Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1960 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magley and Body Neptem speak a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or out of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, blew and the rest of KU's top seven players, watched the watch the Red team, as the reserves are called to practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' *play*. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player than far has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-6/19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. pl th bh “” ho Vi no ne He Hi pl an se we be Mb Os Fe M. “I th w ag But Morehead State should be aired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournaments. Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It Hadl withdrawn Hadi, Kanas’ offensive coordinator, is one of five finalists for position winner in the 2014 CWBPA. "Howeve possibilitis University program. Diego Sta further coach positi He" In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Hadl ha Spencer Museum B Books • Magazines • Pos "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I think it's important for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notoriety and play really well." On the Visual Open during gallery Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS EURAIL PANSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! Saturday night's game against Oral Robers was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the new coach of the Detroit set, sat out much of the second half when I scored Oral Robers 48-35 and shot 67 percent. TTTAN COACH Ken Haven wouldn't say why TANCHAN he but he did it with his team need. He play better play than I did. UNITED STATES AIRLINES Winter P March 14-20 "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I am unhappily with our offensive options," he added. "I think we're going to have to fight." KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napar to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 4-8foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 4-8foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two postmen, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10 fowlman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10 fowl senior. If they are tired, as Wema expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't satisfied with the result of Carl scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-verything pro and KU colleague, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Chamberlin, who played on the NBA champion 1966-67, will also head the teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team were Rickey Henderson, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. The team is expected to ask Chamberlin's permission to retire his 13 jersey at some point. The team has a deal with him. four days and nights 1983 Page 18 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 four days and night all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. at the SUA Office 864 3477 Fans awaiting holiday bowl games By PATTI ARNOLD Associate Sports Editor Analysis see on television this holiday season. But sugar, roses and oranges abound. Cereal, soup, mixing and toilet bowls are just about the only kind of bowls you won' breath. Strange things are known to happen in college football. All the conference affiliations make it top two teams in the country at pool 7. Bowl time has come again to America— the land of mythical national champions. Some sportscasters have attempted the nearly impossible. They have tried to guess what the wire services will do at the season's end. Shame, shame. No one knows what runs through the heads of the coaches who vote. FOR INSTANCE, if the Big Eight champion was No. 1 at the end of the regular season, and the Big Ten champ was No. 2, there would be no way to win. But if the Big Eight champion goes to the Orange Bowl, the Big Ten to the Rose. The wire services are anxiously awaiting the big moment: the moment all football fans love to hate. Those services, you see, determine who's No. 1. See BOWLS page 18 "Expert commentators" will be brought in to add some color to the bowl games. Those could include former coaches, coaches whose teams didn't quite make it to a bowl and some former players who haven't made it in the pros. Maybe even Woody Hayes will be asked to add his wisdom during the Fiesta Bowl, which nits Usually, the Associated Press picks one team and United Press International picks another. Then the great debate starts. The top two teams play off system to replace the game rounds? But despite that confusion, this season everything could work out. Georgia is No. 1 and Notre Dame B. Two. These two teams meet in the Sugar Bowl, because that bowl is a doubleheader between another bowl. Could it be that there will be a consensus N. 1 ranking? Don't hold your Newspapers across the country start being in "7"—especially in the No. 2 city, San Francisco. The national championship is supposed to go to the best collegiate team in the country. But that is often hard to determine, because there is no playoff system. Electronic games become adult toys Rv KARIELLIOTT Staff Reporter While Grandmother is cooking Christmas dinner, laughter and high-pitched squawals are heard from the living room. They are playing with their new Christmas toys. That is, the 35-year-old "children" are electronic football or pinball games. It used to be that Dad got his 4-year-old a train for Christmas so Dad could enjoy playing with the toy for years. Dad would bring me a train and I would up the train. "Helping" for several hours. Today parents will buy diesel train sets or doll houses for their children, but many of this year's Christmas toys may be electronic games or radio-controlled cars. "The 'Space Invaders' and 'Touch Me' electronic games are the most popular at our store," said Larry Cornell, manager of Fun and Games, 1022 Massachusetts St. ELECTRONIC BASELEAND football are the games most people ask about, according to Mike Shurtz, manager of Radio Shack, 711 W. 3rd St. Today's toys are more electronically sophisticated, which makes it easier for Mom and Dad to justify "helping" with the toys. Even the toy advertisements maintain that playing with children's toys is all right for parents. A television commercial for radio-controlled toys shows an adult using the toy (with the kids in the background) and explains their "sayings" for kids and adults." Newspaper ads for toys say, "Games for all ages . . . young and old" or, "Gifts for kids of all ages." Some toys just seem more suited to adult tastes. Also, manufacturers persuade parents to buy their products by making the suggested age of the user all-encompassing. But a toy manufacturer of an electronic brain with a voice hedge the age issue and lacks the intelligence to make decisions. "We get college-age kids buying many of the electronic games," Cornelius said. "I assume they are buying the games for themselves." An electronic "pursuit-and-shoot" game is for age 6 and up, but many times it is the "and ups" who play with the game. The simplest solution, and possibly the least embarrassing for parents caught TO MAKE IT easier for parents to use the toys, they can rationalize that electronic baseball and hockey are really not "toys," but games for anyone. Besides, an adult knows more about sports than a child. Also, 'toys' don't cost $50 or $60, which is the price tag on some electronic games. The $7.98 dollar or carpenter chest are toys. Again, parents can rationalize that expensive games made with computer chips are for adults. Although advertised as "kids" games, other electronic games are advanced for a child. One company makes electronic blackjack, or 21, and computerized chess with these machines, with these "toys" may be slightly older than the Tinker Toy or Play-Doh set. using the child's toy, is not to have any age restriction printed on the box. Free Gift Wrapping On Sale Dec. 9-14 Selected Sweaters & Vests Buy one at regular price- 2nd One only 99* Cord Blazers $29.99 reg, $50.00 wine, teel, mahogany the VILLAGE SET Corduroy Pants assorted styles and colors Buy one at regular price- 2ndPair only 99* 922 Mass. 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Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Hall Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 17 WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO Holiday Plaza 842-1544 Columbia Classical Catalogue Sale Mfg. List $8.98 per disc Kief's $5.99 per disc GREATEST HITS OF 1721 THE FILM COMPANY SANDY SMITH AND THE COMPANY BROADWAY AND MIDTOWN NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY USA FILM RELEASE DATE: NOVEMBER 19 PRODUCED BY: SANDY SMITH AND THE COMPANY BROADWAY AND MIDTOWN NEW YORK, NEW JERSEY, USA AUTHOR: BETWEEN THE LITTLE THINGS AND THE LARGEST THINGS THE WINNER OF THE WORD'S CUP OF FUNNY PRODUCTION PATTERNATIONAL VIRTUAL, N.Y.C. 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Bach: Brandenburg Concerti 35103 - Leonard Bernstein-National Orchestra of France, Ravel: Bolero 34544 - "Greatest Hits of 1720," Philharmonic Virtuosi of New York, featuring Pachelbel: Canon D 30649 - Aaron Copland directing London Symphony on his works: Lincoln Portrait & Appalachian Spring 31822 - Bernstein-New York Philharmonic, Beethoven: 3rd Symphony, "Eroica" the GRAMOPHONE shop 842-1811...ASK FOR STATION #6 913-842-1544 25th & IOWA 913-842-1544 --- Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher 172111094 By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magley and Body Neal speak a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or in hand of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas bleed out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the kU's top seven players were glad to sit and watch the Red team, as they did in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes 'play'. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." "The heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee State 88-80. pI th bt bt " ho VI no st he pl an se wi es bs Oo fo M "I th W ag Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-1f 19-shoot, mostly from the 20 to 30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament and traveling Sunday. the head program. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, will assist the position when he is withdrawn. Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It "Howeve possessibility University program. Diego Sta further coach positi Badi he Hadl withdra In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Spencer Museum Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CAR RENTAL ■ EURAIL PASSES ■ TRAVEL INSURANCE ■ ESSTORGED TOURS MIDDLESEX "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I wish they could for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in here without notebooks and玩 really well." CALL TODAY! Winter P March 14,20 Saturday night's game against Oral Roberta was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-foot 10 speedster, sat out much of the game and scored scored scored (Oral Roberta 48-35 and shot 67 percent). TTTAN COACH Ken Heyns didn't say why he needed better play from him, he did that his team needed better play from him. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I am unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I feel very bad." four days and nights All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-8-foot eight. If Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-overly pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Champion of the state, he'll play 57 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't the only woman who worked against Hillary. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. 1980-81 The 1986-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team include Mike Bibby, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. The team is expected to ask Chamberian's permission to retire his No. 13 jersey at some future date. Chamberian has admitted for more KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. all options $279 $119 or lodging $119 Deadline Dec. 23 Page 18 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Texas Reggae with TheLotions WEDNESDAY NIGHT Only $2.00 For Students & Members SPECIAL $1.00 Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 THE SUNSET FALLS 8643477 DEBS AND MORELIS THURSDAY Rock & Rockabilly Dance, Party Rock Party Friday & Saturday the Secrets $ ^{*} $ with guests Pedestrian on Friday The Deal on Saturday DON'T FORGET: Sign up Dea SUA Office Christmas Show Featuring BRYAN BOWERS 7th Spirit Recession Relief Specials Every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Opening The Show NEW REFLECTIONS ...ew Years Eve With THE LYNCH & McBEE.BAND TIONS New Years. Eye With THE LYNCH # Cheap Pitchers & Drinks 8-9 All Week 1.25 Highballs 1.50 Pitchers Where the stars are 7th & Mass. 842-6930 lawrence Opera House Territory House Bowls From page 16 his former Ohio State Buckeyes, a preseason No. 1 team, against Penn State. But Woody hasn't been to an Ohio State game in 1978, and he probably won't start now. BUT NO MATTER who's doing the task at hand, we'll go on to watch. At least she is a good year for food. This was the year a defensive lineman, Hugh Green of Pitt, almost won the Heisman Trophy. It was the year a freshman running back named Herschel Walker stunned the country by placing third in the Heisman voting and took his Georgia team from obscurity to the No. 1 ranking. And in Kansas, it was the year at the California Kids, Frank Seurer and Kwerin Kid, and the almost Peach Bowl bid for a team kicked to fight it for the Big Eight cellar. It was the year of the probation bowl, with two perennial powers, USC and UCLA, left out in the cold during the fight for the title. It was the year Dan Devine announced he would not return to the Irish next season. But Notre Dame scored big in Class A high school when it hired Gerry Faust, a high school coach from Cincinnati, Ohio. Speculation arose that running back Walker might turn pro this year. That way, some said, he could avoid injury and a possible bad second year that could hurt his future chances of going high in the draft. front of the television, and expect to miss a few games. Try as they might, the network execs can't avoid overlapping a few games. The prime bowl match-up this season should be George Rogers of South Carolina, the Heisman winner, against Arizona, who will go head-tohead in the Sugar Row. Fans watching these holiday football follies should take some precautions. First, they should plan to spend hours in Before the bowl boom, the traditional family at Christmas was seated around a wooden bench. New Year's Day, usually reserved for recuperating from that big night before, is also the grand finale for college football. All the biggies are played before bleary-eyed viewers. Maybe so many fans aren't team not winning the title of champion because they're too hungover to remember which队 they're rooting for. Halftime is perhaps the most important time of the games. That's the time to gat the ball up and make a save. AND WITH THE holiday games come the holiday parades. Rose and Sugar Bowl queens, Mickey Mouse and Santa Claus prevail. Everyone and his dog is a grand marshal of some parade, and undoubtedly George will be on hand to lend her knowledge of the parade. Too bad they can't keep her on that parade. She got to know more about flowers and marching bands than she does about football. in the games themselves, we'll see whether BO Schembacher can redeem him from a penalty game in seven tries when his Michigan Wolves take on Washington in the Rose Bowel. After all the leftovers are gone and the eyes have cleared, after the final touchdown and congratulatory handshake, America will have a new national champion. Or maybe there'll be two. Only time and the wire services will tell. Now, let friends are placed on TV trays and eaten day and night. Christmas trees are trimmed during halftime of the games between teams, and players down between games on New Year's Day. ENTIRE STOCK- ½ Price! You Held over for Christmas Gifting Skiwear Sale "Where Retail Men's & Women's Fashion Alley Limited 927 Mass. 2-piece suits Knickers Featured Specials Jumpsuits $14.00 Price Large Group Of Sweaters reg. values to $49.95 Famous Name Brands Lace Trim Cotton Shirts Jackets Bibs Roffe $14.99 reg. $24.00 ALL JEANS! Bogner $12.00 No.1 Sun Insulated Underwear Innsbruck Mother Karen's 1/2 Price! OFF Wear Entire Stock of Fashion Alley Ltd. for Women Serak Women's 30% to 75% Blouses Skirts Long Dresses Sweaters Pants Nightwear Vests Blazers Suits, Robes and more! Nightgowns Fashion Alley Ltd. 927 Mass. ● MC & VISA Gift Certificates Available ● Christmas Hours: 10-8:30 M-F 10-5:30 Sat 1-5:00 Sun SUN TRAVEL boots, jackets, shirts, etc. Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Naismith Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Hali Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 19 Santa tops in kids' hearts By PAMHOWARD Staff Reporter Staff Reporter A child's world is one of magic and make believe. It is a world of simple solutions where persistent problems do not exist. A child's world is the world in which is the one made especially for children. Children soak up the Christmas legend quickly, without question and sometimes add their own perceptions of the season. The result is a sometimes amusing, often confusing, but always sincere interpretation of the holiday. Four-year-old Jaime, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Barnhart, 209 Wagon Wheel Road, has very definite ideas about Christmas. She said her Christmas tree this year was going to be bigger than her house. Surprized that anyone would suggest that she made it taller, she made it clear that the tree would fit. "I would like to put a kangaroo on my tree," she said smoothly. "I would like a fissassh and a whaaaale!" she concluded. Santa Claus, who has lived in the fantasies of children for centuries, lingers on in young minds to bring presents in a room and place them beneath glittering trees. JAIME SAID THAT she also would like to护星, a wabbit and a dog and a cat. Jaimie knows a lot about Santa Claus. He knows he is the one to talk to about Christmas. He can honor requests for particular playthings that fall on deaf ears during other seasons. He also can make restless to remember that only the good get gifts. "I saw Santa Claus at one of those stores with my grandma and my mom," she said. Jaime is not the only child to have spoken with the man in red. "I saw Santa Claus in North Lawrence" was written by the architect of Marlyn Roberts, 1801. Maple Lane Lona said she told Santa Claus what she wanted for Christmas. "He said okay." she added. Shelly Miller, four-year-old daughter of Michael and Sarah Hill, said that she also had spoken to Sten. "He said 'Ho, ho, ho!' Merry Christmas!" , she said. Quentin Rials, four-year-old son of Louse Rials, 1906 E. 19th, knows how Santa will enter his house to leave presents. He said that because his house lacked a chimney, Santa had to come in through the door. He knew that he needed the door for him on Christmas Eve. "But he can come in when its locked," he said. Quentin also knows how Santa makes his other deliveries. He said the man in red got around in a sleigh that flew through the air. "A reindeer with a red nose makes it go," Quentin explained. DESPITE COMMENTS from other children, Quentin insisted that the red-sided reindeer named Rudolph pulled the sleigh all by himself. Jasper Greenfield, 1900 W. 31st., has a genial grandfatherly air about him and works as a Santa Claus at Weaver's Department Store, 901 Mass. St. He said children made the most interesting comments about Christmas. "You never know what they are going to come up with," he said. One boy, he said, was worried that he could not squeeze through his chimney. He told me that he was saying, "I can fit in the chimney all right, but my bag might be a bit large." A Most Appreciated Gift - Wearing Apparel A Most Appreciated Gift - Wearing Apparel A Few Suggestions - • Oxford Cloth Phirts • Lacy Blouses • Cord Slacks • Monogram Poweaters • Blazers • Night Wear • Jogger Jamas • Initial Pins FREE GIFT WRAPPING Jay1 SHOPPE DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING PROJECT 800 835 MASS. • 843-4833 • LAWRENCE, KANS. 66044 THE NEXT Whole Earth On Ice Randy J. Olsen THE NEXT Whole Earth ON WEEK OREAD BOOK SHOP Level 3 KANSAS UNION OREAD BOOK SHDP Greeting Cards GIFTS THAT LAST A LIFETIME Books • 1981 Calenders COSMOS CARL SAGAN Based on the 13 Week PBS TV Series THE NEW FILM OF AN ETERNAL JAMES ROWLBURY OUT A BOOK IN THE HISTORY OF MUSIC BY ANDREW G. CRAVEN IT IS NOT A SEASON, IT IS A MAGIC AND A MASSIVE BACK TO THE METRO CITY OF AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS GODEL, ESCHER, BACH: AN ETERNAL GOLDEN BRAID DOUGLAS R. HOFSTAUTER A METAPHORICAL ENTRANCE ONLINE AND MACHINE IN THE SPIRIT OF LEMIS CANCEL Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guya like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bach as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or out of hand. They know the plight of the subhitts. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Magley, Neal and the rest of KU top seven as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they get to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. pl th bt he hc nse te he pl anse wi be mB oF M "I th wB ag MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeat Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament and traveling Sunday. the head program. Somebody today San Diego State will play football and football coach. It won't be Jobe Hardt. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position in 2016. Hadl withdra "Howeve possibiliti University program. Diego Sta further c nouch posi In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadi said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Hadl ha: Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS APARTMENT KURAIL PASSES TRAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I have great request for Ohio Valley Conference players in here without notoriety and play really well." AIRLINES Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-10 foot speedster, sat out much of the game while he intercepted Oral Roberts 40-38 and shot 67 percent. "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why team needed better play from the guards. Winter March 14-20 Winter Pa March 14-20 four days and nights all options $271 or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-everything pro and KU colleague, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Chambers joined Philadelphia in 1965-67. Philadelphia 76ers, will join his teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-foot-10 freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-foot-9 senior. If our team are tired, as Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 4-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldron and 4-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't the only player who played against Grit Greg. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 jersey at some point. The 1966-67 78ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team who were drafted in that year, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. CITY BASKETBALL Page 20 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Rocky Boots built to climb the hills FULKY BOOTS Depression dampens some holiday spirits 837 massachusetts royal college shop 843-4255 By PATRICIA WEEMS Staff Reporter Shoppers rush around, busily searching for the perfect gift, parties are held almost daily and warmth and cheer are felt everywhere—almost. Staff Reporter Christmas is the loneliest time of the year for some people. to correct it can either lead him to professional help or to feeling better. Everyone experiences loneliness or depression at one time in his or her life, but Christmas can bring out feelings that are hidden other times, said Gary Bryant, leader of a Coping With Christmas Workshop conducted in Lawrence. A person is able to cope with the loneliness and the depression, only after he has admitted that he or she feels lonely and is able to accept it. Bryant said. The symptoms of a depressed person are sadness, apathy, inertia, fatigue, hopelessness, increased self criticism and generosity of interest in usual activities, he said. THE WORKSHOP deals with loneliness and depression felt before the Christmas season, not the ledown that everyone goes to for Christmas. The season of partying and togetherness, he said. "That letdown experience happens behind the taper off so quickly." Bryant said. before a death of a loved one, fear of loss of job or the loss of a job a can depress a person before a death of a loved one. A lonely person usually is one who feels misunderstood and abandoned by family, friend or teacher. Once one accepts the fact, then he should be able to plan Bryant's plans to correct the error. Also, when handicapped or elderly people suffer physical ailments that may cause them to lose functions they once had, it can lead to depression, he said. An individual's handling of the problem and whether or not he makes up his mind CHANGING ONE'S pattern of living, learning to be alone and developing an inner life, can solve the problem, Bryant said. Her father, she said, becomes depressed shortly after Thanksgiving, and stays that way for the rest of her life. An inner life can be developed from such activities as religious meditation and the development of spiritual skills. Changing one's life pattern can include becoming more focused in the type of volunteer work an individual chooses, he said. However, if the situation does not improve, then the individual should seek permission. Until finals are over, many students have nothing but studying and loneliness to look forward to. Christmas lights strung across a 25-by-15-foot room are almost a parody of the decorations back home and can put a damper on the holiday season. See DEPRESSION page 21 ONE KU STUDENT said that for her Christmas probably was the worst time of the year, because things did not go well for her family then. TriPods Flash Bags Christmas Wrap Ornaments Everything You Need To Get Started In SLR Photography Vivitar System 35 Kit ... Featuring the Vivitar XV-1 35mm SLR Vivitar $259.95 FRAMED PRINTS Pense Clocks BASKETS & BOXES Ask About Our Daily SPECIALS TOTE BAGS KU Souvenirs PLUSH TOYS DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. ZERCHER PHOTO... Have Your Picture Taken With Santa $2.50 Sun 1-5 Hillcrest HILLCREST 919 IOWA WE GIVE DISCOUNTS ON PHOTO EQUIPMENT H Kodak 70mm A Kodak Film DOWNTOWN 1107 MASS. Mon Sat 9 10 3 30 100 -10:35 Ask About Our Daily SPECIALS COMPUTER TOTE BAGS KU STAR ZERCHER PHOTO 7th & Arkansas boots, jackets, shirts, etc. . . . Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 843-3328 GRAN SPORT Hall 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9.1980 Page 21 Some won't go home for holiday By JANETTE HESS Copy Editor Copy Editor Thousands of miles—and hundreds of dollars—separate many of the University of Kansas' international students from their homes. Many of the students say they won't be going home for the holidays because a three-week break doesn't justify spending more than $1,000 for a round-trip plane ticket home. More than 1,600 international students representing 93 countries attend KU. Krupadanam Billa, India graduate student and professor of the International Club, said he wouldn't be going home because a round-trip ticket would cost $1.300. "A lot of international students can't afford to go home," he said. "Usually Americans think of them as being rich, but many are from non-Arab countries, and very few are here on government scholarships." About a percent come from middle-income families. "Sure, we'd like to go home and spend time with you." We missed four Christmas new, and it's been a blessing. FOR SOME international students, lifting the phone receiver and dialing a number isn't always the next best thing to behre there. Said Billa, "I can't even make a phone Billa," I have to wait two days and get a call through. During the holidays, he said, placing a phone call through an overseas operator sometimes takes even longer than two days. Instead of spending the holidays in Lawn- bury, Billa said he was planning to attend a workshop for international students in Lansing, Mich. "The majority of international students at KU would like to leave Lawrence and go other places," he said. "Many will visit friends in other parts of the country." Once some international students get to America, they're here until they graduate. Pouran Esrafily, Iran senior, said she probably wouldn't be going home until she had finished her studies at KU. That might not be for three and a half more years. Earifly said that she occasionally talked to her family on the phone, but that her parents were busy with work. "It costs about $30 to $35 for 10 minutes," she said. "You just have time to say hello, nothing important," she said. HSI-CHIN JANET CHUa, Taiwan graduate student, agreed that phone calls were helpful. Chu said that although she wouldn't be going home during the break, she was planning to move out of her room in McColum Hall. "I think most of my friends will move out of the dorm. Some will go traveling. I'd say half will travel and half will stay in friends' houses." "I'to too expensive to stay here," she said. "We'll be $160 for 20 days, with nothing to eat." Chu said she might visit relatives in Oklahoma. Fred McElhenie, director of residential programs, said the University had to charge each student staying in a hall $8 a day to cover the cost of keeping the hall open. Even then, the hall must house an average of 50 students a day during the See STUDENTS page 22 Depression From nage 20 Another KU student said that she usually was depressed before Christmas because of finals. Since becoming a student she has seen the realization that the gifts that she would like, she said. There are many kinds of depression, Bryant said, including masked depression. he might look all of them arouse behind a smiling facade, Brady said. "Omaura sure is." ADM said. ADM said, "The DEPRESSION CAN LEAD to injury if the problem is not caught in time." Bryant, an associate minister at the Plymouth Congregational Church, has recently completed special training in attending the Meninger Foundation in Topeka. This is the first year for the workshop, which was held after several Adult Life Resource Center workers developed the idea. The workshop is sponsored by the Center, section of KU's division of coursework. The workshop's final session will be from 7 a.m. on March 15 in the south Compound at 929 Vermont Ave. At the workshop's first session Dec. 2, 14 adults participated in discussions about their experiences of loneliness. There also was a lecture on the experience of loneliness and how to cope with it. Objectives for the workshop participants are developing a better understanding of the experience of loneliness, being able to admit their own loneliness and knowing how they can be in the community to help others or themselves through a critical episode of loneliness. HELP! WELL PO! We're ready to help you solve your literature problems with a complete block of Cliffs Notes covering frequently assigned novels, plays and poems. Cliffs Notes are used by millions of students nationwide to earn better grades in literature. GET CLIFFS NOTES HERE: The Bookmark In the Malls Shopping Center • Hallmark Cards • Books • Gifts 842-7152 BARNELT Cliffs Orientation The Bookmark Cycling Gifts tools lights backpacks racks Come see our selection of over 400 Bicycles Exercise Bikes Too! Franchised Dealer For: RALEIGH - PUCH - AUSTRO DAIMLER CENTURION RICK'S BIKE SHOP We Service All Bikes 841-6642 1033 Vermont Lawrence KS 60411 tools lights backpacks racks Looking For A Gift That Is Just Right? Choose A Crazy Horse Shetland Sweater. Many Colors To Choose From, Available In 3 Styles Starting At $22.00 Clothes Encounter in step with your style Holiday Plaza 843-5335 25th & Iowa Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guy's like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or not at all of hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second half. Mangley, Neal and the rest of KU's top seven players took to the court to match the Red team, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konke, a freshman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that were just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." th bt "i he vi st st He pl as se wa be M be F o M "I th w ag The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undefeated in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeatline Tennessee State 88-80. Their top player thus has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who has scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20- to 30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament and traveling Sunday. Hadl withdra Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It won't be John Hadl. the head program. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, was one of five finalists for the position in the upcoming draft. "Howev possessibilis University program. Diego Stat further coach positi Hedhla In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadli said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as Hadl ha Books Magazines Post On the Visual Z Spencer Museum Open during gallery Maupintour travel service "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I have great respect for Ohio Valley Conference games in here without notoriously and play really well." Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy, Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-6ot speedster, sat out much of the game, while outscored Oral Roberts 49-38 and shot 67 percent. TTTAN COACH Ken Hayes won't say why he injured him, but he did say that his team needed better play from players. ■ AIRLINE TICKETS ■ HOTEL RESERVATIONS ■ CAR RENTAL ■ EURAIL PANSES ■ TRADING ■ FINANCE ■ ESCORED TOURS TO OWN "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I'll be sitting in the office." AIRLINES OF THE UNITED STATES CALL TODAY! Winter P March 14 20 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldiron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two post men, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 4-10-bow 9-sienner. If the Eagles are tired, as Owens expects, their team will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't cautious. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all- everything pro and KU collegan, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Championed by the U.S. men's soccer team, 75 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. 10 The 1966-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team included Jeff Williams, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Greer. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his 13 jersey at some point. --- four days and nights Page 22 University Daily Kansan, December 9.1980 Students From page 21 vacation period to meet expenses. For this moment, you must stay in the dorm room until arrival. MECOLLUM IS THE hall that usually remains open, McEhlene said. Food service workers can enter the hall from the elevator. None of the costs incurred in keeping a hall open during the break are covered by the insurance policy. Youssef El Shoubary, Egypt graduate student and a resident of McColum, said he was planning to spend the break in the apartment of some friends. The trip home would cost $1,000, which was too much to pay for what would have been a reasonable fare. Also he said that if he returned to Egypt, he would have to re-apply for permission to travel. "In Egypt, If you want to get out of the Instead of celebrating during the break, Shobuary said he probably would work on a big project. Shebary said that although Christmas was not observed in his country, the New Yorker noted. country, you have to begin the paperwork 10 days in advance," he said. But he said he would find it difficult to get into the holiday spirit in Loverson. "It's hard to celebrate when you're away from your family," he said. "I won't have anything else to do," he said. all options $27 $119 Gerhard Ulmilman, West Germany special student, said he was planned to spend a week in Germany. FARMING "So far I haven't had much time to think about it because I've had to study too much," he said. But he said there was one thing he had considered. Pollock King Crab Abalone Fish Sauce Prairie Schooner SEAFOOD Market 841-6610 Across From Raney's At Hillcrest four days $277 *Rock Shrimp—look like candy canes and taste even better. Only $2.80 lt* *Package: 1 lb* TAKE SOME SEAFOOD HOME TO THE FOLKS FOR CHRISTMAS all options or lodging $119 Sign up Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 *King Crab—25% Off 5 lb, packages $4.49 lb. *Fresh Maryland Oysters $4.49 lb. *Boiling Shrimp* - 10% Off in 5 lb. boxes . . all sizes *Breaded Shrimp—20% Off 4 lb. boxes $4.70 lb. Scandinavians will appreciate this Christmas Tradition We Also Have: *Genuine FRESH LUTEFISK *Mississippi Catfish 1.99 lb. *Indian Froglegs $3.71 lb. Stephanus Dharmapti, Indonesia graduate student, said: "I see the coming holidays." "It's too expensive to go home," he said. "I want to travel and see something of America." "THERE WILL BE NO Christmas atmosphere in Florida because there will be no snow." Norbert Gasten, West Germany special student, said he also was going to Florida. "On one hand, I can stay in the dorm and do a lot of academic activities. But on the other hand, I'm really tempted to see America." "I could go home, but I don't think it's worth it," he said. Dharmaanto said he had applied to participate in the International Student Service's VISIT program. The program is one of several programs for international students who stay in the United States for four or five years; the programs, international students are provided in colleges and in churches, in church student centers and in homes all across America. A trip home would cost $600 to $700, he said. Geir Skjern, Norway graduate student, who is studying through the West and Southwest of Norway. SO INSTEAD, Skjong is going to spend Dharmanto said some international students stayed at their universities during the holidays because they wanted to use them for classes and other academic resources. "Being here is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," he said. "Academic benefits are very important to us." his money seeing Mexico, the Grand Canyon and San Francisco. "Actually, I don't know about very many tourist attractions," he said. "Once you get to a city, particularly a smaller one, it's hard to get around unless you live in the city." Skjöning is going to travel by car, which he is the "only way to travel in this country." Sophie Dahlah, Kuwait senior, is among the minority of international students who were taught in English. "If Americans can celebrate, why can't we?" he asked. "I have come here with an open mind. We're here to learn, study, absorb and imbibe as much as we can." Uwe Geissel. West Germany graduate student, said that staying in America for the first two years was hard. sent my sister something really America said, "a KU sweatshirt with a Jawhawk." Geissler said he already had sent some presents home. "It's harder for my parents than it is for me," he said. Although Christmas and New Year's are not observed in Pakistan, which is an Islamic nation, Khan said he and his wife would celebrate the holidays. "It's going to be my first Christmas here," he said, "but I don't think I'll be lonely because I have my wife with me." Fazal Khan, Pakistan graduate student, said he would be staying in Lawrence during the holidays. "I'm really lucky," she said. Khan said, "he and his wife missed their 1-year-old son, who is being cared for." WAXCAN Candles Inc. Hours. 9:00 till 8:00 M thru Thurs. 9:00 till 5:30 Fri. & Sat. 12:00 till 4:00 Sunday 1405 Massachusetts Diahad said she felt bad when students who could not, go home ask her if she was feeling sick. Interested in Dance Theatre or Music? II We carry a wide selection of books, posters, records music, calendars, puzzles and much more... ... for you or for that special gift. 10 to 6 Saturday ACT ONE, Ltd. Theatrical Books & Supplies 925 Iowa Street Lawrence, KS 66044 (913) 841-1045 9 to 5 Mon.-Fri. Hours: TRAVEL boots, jackets, snirts, etc. Sale begins Mon. Dec. 8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Hali 1800 Naismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 Page 23 Bell ringers endure cold to collect funds By MARK PITTMAN Steff Writer Staff Writer Bernice Van Gosen looks comfortable enough, shielded from the sub-freezing temperatures by a huge overcoat, three pairs of socks, galoshes and a stocking cap. She stands in front of the J.C. Penney store on Massachusetts Street, ringing her bell with vigor who volunteers from the Inland Church pass out leaflets nearby. Bernice, 63, is a professional bell ringer for the Salvation Army's annual Christmas fund-raising campaign. She makes minimum wage and works 15-20 hours a week. She says she will use the money she earns to nurse her heating hills this winter. In half an hour a captain from the Salvation Army will drop by and pick up the red bucket full of bills and change that money. He'll hand her out. Her afternoon's take may reach $30. BUT THERE is no heat on the sidewalk of Massachusetts Street. Bernice has only a plywood and plexiglas booth to escape the heat, but its coats as they march from store to store. "The only parts that are my feet and hands," Bernice says, glancing at the camera. On the other side of the street and down a block, in front of Raney Drugs, stands another Salvation Army bell ringer. Like Bernice, Kathy Hibbs, a 16-year-old Lawrence girl, answered an ad in the paper to get her position. It's a little cooler than it seems, she says she spends most of her time inside the small wooden shelter provided for her. "I shake the bell to stay warm," she says, shivering a little. “Sharing is Caring.” Read the sign on her booth. “Need has no season.” According to Susan Beers, a caseworker with the army, a helping hand always lies behind her. Beers said the army's Douglas County chapter hoped to raise $2,000 this year to pay for its holiday activities and ongoing operations, however, the $3,000 raised thus far in the campaign was far short of expectations. The money raised by workers like Kathy and Bernice and volunteer groups is added to a mail solicitation campaign for the army's Christmas fund. The eight kettle sites in Lawrence are: Rusty's Hillcrest, 901 Iowa; Rusty's Westridge, 6th and Kasalid; Gibson's Discount Center, 2525 Iowa; K-Mart, 31st and Kroger, 23rd and Naismith; TG&Y, 711 W. 23rd; Rardian Drug Store, 921 Department Store, 830 Massachusetts Department Store, 830 Massachusetts There are 15 to 20 volunteers and 32 paid workers helping the army this holiday season, Beers said. THE SALVATION ARMY tradition of the war against the Germans to pay for (la programa goes back to 1891) In that year, Capt. Joseph McFee of the army's San Francisco hit unit upon the unique idea of setting up a kettle for contributions near the Oakland Ferry. McFee's goal was to provide Christmas dinner for the city's needy. sharing is caring GOD bless you THE SANITARY MILITARY need has no season" The idea spread to cities in the East, where the kettles needed to have someone stand by them to make sure they weren't stolen. Later, refinements such as having a metal canopy on the Claus suit were made. Today, kettles in larger cities still have Sanitas ring, but BEN BICOLERIKANSAH tallf The Salvation Army bell ringers are a familiar sight to shoppers during the Christmas season. Their many hours of hard volunteer work and contributions provide the poor with happiness during the holidays. some have automated bells and bulletproof glass. The money gathered from the Douglas County effort, Beers said, will be used for the army's annual Christmas dinner at McCormick Field. The president of a Douglas County pursuing home The money gathered from the Douglas County effort, Beers said, will be used for the army's annual Christmas dinner program, to provide gifts for every resident of a Douglas County nursing home and to needy youngsters this Christmas. --- TYPING COPYING BINDING WORD PROCESSING ENCORE! ENCORE COPY CORPS 25th & Iowa—Holiday Plaza 842-2001 Your hair reflects on you. Get ready for the holidays with a visit to REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN Berniece Garber & Lynn Carlson, stylists Carol Blubaugh & Karen Blubaugh, receptionists $5.00 off hair design, permits, and highlighting. Good until Dec. 20, 1980 with this coupon. 2323 Ridge Ct. 841-5999 Cimeng Cuny Pang Kuala Lumpur Borneo Real Estate Your hair reflects on you. Get ready for the holidays with a visit to REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN Iowa St Reflections 23rd St Ridge Ct Berniece Garber & Lynn Carlson, stylists Carol Blubaugh & Karen Blubaugh, receptionists $5.00 off hair design, permits, and highlighting. Good until Dec. 20, 1980 with this coupon. 2323 Ridge Ct. 841-5999 REFLECTIONS HAIR STYLING FOR MEN & WOMEN H Page 16 University Daily Kansan, December 8, 1980 0123456789 Walk-ons finally play in KU laugher By KEVIN BERTELS Sports Writer Guys like David Magley and Body Neal spent a lot of time on the bench as freshmen, appearing only when the game was either well in hand or not in hand. They know the plight of the substitute. Saturday night against Oral Roberts, the opportunity arose for the substitutes to play when Kansas blew out the Titans in the second goal and the rest of KU's top seven players were glued into the team's dream, as the reserves are called in practice. All were pleased with what they saw. They saw Jeff Konek, a freeman guard, score 2 points and provide some fancy ballhandling. They saw Mark Summers, a sophomore junior college transfer, score a basket. They saw every player on KU's bench play, down to the last walk-on. "They deserve a chance to play." Neal said. "It is a good feeling to see them do well." AFTER THE GAME, a 90-68 KU victory, few of the regulars would talk about their personal performances. All were excited about the substitutes' play. Magley went a bit further in defining the role of the substitute. "They hit some shots that are just beautiful," he said. "Those guys play the bench role well, waiting until they get a chance to play, keeping fired up and playing hard in practice. It's just beautiful that they got to play. They deserve a lot of credit. They are the heart of the team." The "heart of the team" should get the chance to play a bit more in tonight's game at Allen Field House against Morehead State. Tipoff is at 7:35 p.m. MOREHEAD STATE will bring a team undeafed in four games to Lawrence. The Eagles won their own tournament, the Eagle Classic, Saturday night defeating Tennessee States 88-80. pl th bt bo ho vi ne st te Hi pl an sw awe be me Bs Oo f m J t w ag Their top player thus far has been junior guard Glenn Napier, who scored 30 points in the first game of the Eagle Classic on 9-of-19 shooting, mostly from the 20-to-30-foot range. But Morehead State should be a tired team, after playing Friday and Saturday in the tournament and traveling Sunday. Sometime today San Diego State will announce its new head football coach. It Hadl withdra: the head program. Hadi, Kansas' offensive coordinator, position to be withdrew his name F1F2. "Howeus possibilis University program. Diego Stat further coach posi Hadi had In a prepared statement released Friday afternoon, Hadli said, "I was very honored that the people at San Diego State were interested in me as "It will be a problem for them that they play Friday and Saturday and then travel here," KU Head Coach Ted Owens said. "That will be tough for them and it should be an advantage for us. I want them to play for Ohio Valley Conference teams. They come in without notoriously and play really well." Saturday night's game against Oral Roberts was surprisingly easy. Gary "Cat" Johnson, the Titans 5-4oot 10-speeder, set out much of the game on a fast-footed escorted Oral Roberts 8-35 and shot 67 percent. Spencer Museum B Books Magazines Post On the Visual A Open during gallery "I'm not pointing the finger at our guards, but I'm unhappy with our offensive options," he said. "I've got to find somebody with discipline TITAN COACH Ken Hayes wouldn't say why he not Johndown how he did say that his team was better. Maupintour travel service AIRLINE TICKETS HOTEL RESERVATIONS CAR RENTAL EURAIL PASSES TREAVEL INSURANCE ESCORTED TOURS CALL TODAY! scoring most of its points on layups in the second half. Louisville plays K-State in Manhattan Jan. 3 and Missouri in Louisville Jan. 18. Winter Pa March 14.20 KU's next opponent, Morehead State, has been a slowdown team, relying on the shooting ability of Napier to make the offense work. If his shooting is off the Eagles will go to any of the other three returning players from last season, 6-foot-2 junior guard Norris Beckley, 6-foot-6 junior forward Greg Coldron and 6-foot-6 sophomore forward Eddie Childress. WILT CHAMBERLAIN, the former all-重要pro and KU collegian, will return to Philadelphia's Spectrum Wednesday night for the first time since his playing days. Championed by a 76ers teammate, 57 Philadelphia 76ers, will join his former teammates in a ceremony honoring that team. Chamberlain has declined various invitations to return since his retirement in 1973. All scored in double figures in the Eagles' victory in their tournament as did the two postmen, starter Jeff Tipton, a 6-10-four freshman and backup Albert Spencer, a 6-10-bourn 8-senior. Ifugas are tired, as Owens expects, their problem will be compounded by a lack of proven depth. 1985 JAYHAWK NOTES: Victor Mitchell wasn't the only player who壁 walled Oceal Ciel The 1968-67 76ers was voted the greatest in NBA history in a special poll of basketball writers this year. Other members of the team were John Woods, Wally Jones, Luke Jackson and Hal Algeer. The team is expected to ask Chamberlain's permission to retire his No. 13 jersey at some point, according to reports. Winter Pa March 14-20 four days and nights all options $271 or lodging $119 Signup Deadline Dec. 23 at the SUA Office 864 3477 Page 24 University Daily Kansan, December 9, 1980 shop GRAMOPHONE Artistry in Sound ONKYO - ONKYO CP-1010A automatic return turntable Semi-automatic, single play Motorized, semi- motorized belt-drive, straight- line low-mass tonearm, intended for concussion, and front panel $138^{80} ed at WE STOCK THE ENTIRE ONKYO LINE! KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO WE GIVE BIG DISCOUNTS! the GRAMOPHONE shop AudioVideo VIVIDE The 1979 Hi-Fi Grand Prix Awards Bee Pollinators Pollinating Bees and Other Insects Cape Town, South Africa AudioVerbs experience has maintained the results of their form from audio directors and experts in the field. AudioVerbs is specifically designed to be used by audio directors, experts in the field, technologists, industry experts, research scientists, receptionists, customers, and others who need to create audio content that meets the needs of the audience with the results of their work. The transcription team is particularly dedicated to ensuring that audio content produced by AudioVerbs meets the needs of the audience, not only the real users but also the producers. VALUE RECEIVER OF THE YEAR: YAMAHA CR-2040 NEW YAMAHA P-350 SEMI-AUTOMATIC BELT DRIVE TURNTABLE Incredibly prized at: $238 Incredibly prized at: $135 TWO OUTSTANDING MODELS FEATURED: YAMAHA QUALITY 913-842-1544 25TH & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA 913-842-1544 SHOP EVERY MAJOR AUDIO DEALER IN THE MIDWEST COMPARE MORE LONGS OF QUALITY AUDIO KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO 25th & IOW A HOLIDAY PLAZA KIEF'S DISCOUNI RECORDS & STEREO WE STOCK THE ENTIRE MITSUBISHI LINE! the GRAMOPHONE shop 842-1811... ASK FOR STATION #6 MITSUBISHI AUDIO SYSTEMS The first $275 speaker you should audition is $200. The price is £290. But the smaller speaker can be purchased for less. The product is a portable speaker that is ideal for outdoor use or in a compact location. When it comes to the point of sale, the product is a portable speaker that is ideal for outdoor use or in a compact location. When it comes to the point of sale, the product is a portable speaker that is ideal for outdoor use or in a compact location. KIEFS 9135425154 25TH & IOWA—HOLIDAY PLAZA GRAMOPHER HLISLAM ADVANTAGES— Advantages and disadvantages of all mail order programs: ADVANTAGES STEREO BUYERS Mail Order Programs- 1. The cheapest method of buying mass manufactured steering equipment. 2. A choice of steering equipment that store will not stock. NOTE - Our most current users are not "Tactium Edition" or version they are favorites and full work with all management parameters. DISADVANTAGES- STATEMENT- You should mail to order mail. Kid's can help ease the pain. Because of our volume purchase with most reputable manufacturers, we are happy to provide the required insurance, insurance charges and will light the lost and damaged freight clean baitery, experience and knowledge, we are sure other mail order establishments 1. Advance payment in full is required. 2. Mail order and waiting time is approximately three to six weeks. 3. Freight and insurance charges for small orders is high. 4. Defective units must be transported to service centers at the customer's request. 5. Lost and damaged shipments are the customer's responsibility. Warehouse Sound CO. KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO MAIL ORDER TERMS— 1. Payment in full with order. 2. A 10% service charge for change or cancellation of order. 3. A normal delivery time is two in its ten weeks. We assume no responsibility for any delay in delivery. 4. All units are subject to manufacturer's warranty term. Mail order units must be serviced by the manufacturer's warranty center; it will determine the cost of replacement. Phone 913-842-1811 EXC 10 P. O Box 2, Lawrence Ks. 66044 Sale begins Mon. Dec.8 GRAN SPORT 7th & Arkansas 843-3328 Hall 1800 Neismith 843-8559 Private baths—Weekly maid service—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV--Close to campus—Many other features The image provided is too blurry to read clearly. It appears to be a grayscale photograph or a scan of a document. The content is not legible due to the quality of the image. If you need more details about this, please provide the actual content.